Clockwise:
Afreximbank President Prof. Benedict Oramah, AU Trade
Commissioner Amb. Albert Muchanga, and Rwanda Trade Minister Soraya
Hakuziyaremye addressing guests at the launch of IATF2020 in Niamey.
The
organisers of the Second Intra-African Trade Fair (IATF2020) expect
it to surpass the achievements of the inaugural trade fair held in
Cairo in 2018 by attracting 10,000 participants and generating
intra-African trade and investment deals worth more than $40 billion,
Prof. Benedict Oramah, President of the African Export-Import Bank
(Afreximbank), has said.
Prof.
Oramah was speaking on Saturday at the formal launch of IATF2020
during the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Business
Forum 2019 held on the sidelines of the 12th Extraordinary Summit of
African Union (AU) Heads of State in Niamey. He told guests that the
trade fair, scheduled for Kigali from 1 to 7 September 2020, would
attract more than 1,100 exhibitors from over 55 countries.
“Working
with our esteemed partners, we will exceed the achievements of 2018,”
he said, describing IATF2018 as a resounding success, not in the
colourful displays exhibited, but in the showcasing of diversity of
tradable goods by about 1,100 exhibitors from 45 countries and in the
execution of deals worth about $32 billion.
That
trade fair resulted in a Nigerian technology company winning a
$100-million contract to provide technology-based solutions to the
South Sudanese government; an Egyptian company winning contracts in
many African countries to supply and install energy generation and
distribution equipment worth close to $1 billion; Egyptian and
Tunisian companies signing a $50-million partnership deal to create a
joint venture for assembling home appliances; and the signing of a
$3-billion energy generation project between an Egyptian company and
an African government, the largest-ever intra-African project
executed exclusively by African entities, including financial
institutions, he noted.
“The
momentum created by the maiden IATF and the historic launch of
the African
Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) will
sustain the growth of cross-border trade and investments,” he
affirmed.
Also
speaking, Amb. Albert Muchanga, the AU
Commissioner for Trade and Industry, said that the IATF was one of a
set of activities planned by the African Union Commission to support
implementation of the AfCFTA. The others included the African Trade
Observatory, a portal for real-time information on business
opportunities.
Soraya
Hakuziyaremye, Minister of Trade and Industry of Rwanda, said that it
was important for the African private sector to take advantage of
IATF2020 to present and exchange their products and for entrepreneurs
to use it to boost their visibility.
The
Second Intra-Africa Trade Fair (IATF2020), which will take place in
Kigali from 1-7 September 2020, is expected to attract more than
1,100 exhibitors from 55 countries and to provide a platform for
sharing trade, investment and market information. It will enable
buyers and sellers, investors and countries to meet, discuss and
conclude business deals as well as provide an opportunity for
exhibitors to showcase their goods and services and to engage in
business-to-business exchanges.
The
key features include an IATF2020 Conference, a Creative Africa
initiative, which will showcase Africa’s creative economy, Country
Days dedicated to specific African countries, and an interactive
online Virtual Trade Fair.
IATF2020
is being organized by Afreximbank, in collaboration with the African
Union, and is hosted by the Government of Rwanda. The event partners
are the African Development Bank, United Nations Economic Commission
for Africa represented by the Africa Trade Policy Centre;
Afrochampions Initiative; Pan African Chamber of Commerce and
Industry; World Trade Centre Miami; Export Development Authority of
Egypt; and International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation.
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