News Categories: Tanzania News

East African trade promotion agency seeks to develop green transport corridors in the region

NAIROBI, March 5 (Xinhua) -- Trademark East Africa, a regional trade promotion agency, said on Thursday it will raise 16.3 billion shillings (about 160 million U.S. dollars) to promote the development of green transport and logistics corridors in the eastern African region. Anthony Mveyange, director of the research and learning, Trademark East Africa, told a trade forum in Nairobi that it will source the funding from international development agencies to ensure that the transport sector in the region reduces its carbon footprint. "We will partner with national governments to implement measures that incentivize the adoption of green transport mechanisms in the eastern African region," Mveyange said during the launch of a report produced jointly by United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and Trademark East Africa in Nairobi. Mveyange noted that the region is served with two key transport corridors that link the area to the rest of the world. The northern transport corridor links Kenya's port of Mombasa to Uganda and South Sudan, while the central transport corridor runs from Tanzania's port of Dar es Salaam and serves Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Mveyange added that the transport sector is one of the key sources of greenhouse gas emissions hence the need to promote green methods of transportation. He noted that regional integration has facilitated cross border trade meaning the volume of goods being transported has also increased. "We want to counter the emission of pollution caused by more vehicles on the road as well as...

East African industries to gain from continental free trade – study

The greater East Africa region could gain two million new jobs if the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) - due to start in July - works as planned, according to a study the United Nations released on Thursday. The AfCFTA, which is the biggest trading bloc in the world after the WTO, is designed to bring together Africa’s 55 countries into a single market of 1.3 billion people with an annual economic output of over $3.4 trillion.That will drive industrialisation, the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) said in the report, although the planned removal of tariffs on more than 90 per cent of goods alone will not be enough.Officials must make sure businesses can move goods freely across borders and customs rules and procedures are consistent, the study warned.“What will have a big impact is making sure our borders operate seamlessly,” said Frank Matsaert, the head of Trade Mark East Africa, an organisation that promotes free trade in the region and co-produced the report with UNECA.Massive red tape and delays have crippled past attempts to integrate economies on the continent through existing smaller trade blocs like the East African Community.The 14 countries in the greater Eastern African region have some of the world’s fastest growing economies, such as Ethiopia, but the region suffers massive trade deficits. Importing large amounts of finished goods puts pressure on national currencies and hurts local industries, which are operating 20-40 per cent below capacity because imports are cheaper, the report said.Betty Maina, Kenya’s...

New report highlights significant gains from AfCFTA implementation in East Africa

Nairobi, 6 March 2010 (ECA)- The implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) in Eastern Africa could result in welfare gains amounting to USD 1.8 billion for East Africa, boosting intra-African exports by more than USD 1.1 billion and creating more than 2 million new jobs, says a new report. This report, entitled: “Creating a Unified Regional Market - Towards the Implementation of The African Continental Free Trade Area in East Africa” jointly published by the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and Trademark East Africa, was launched yesterday in Nairobi, Kenya. The launch event was attended by more than 130 experts, including Ministers, ambassadors, government officials, trade economists, university lecturers, development partners and youth and women’s representatives from Kenya, Burundi, South Sudan, Somaliland, Tanzania, Rwanda and Ethiopia. Betty Maina, Kenya’s minister for trade and industrialisation, explained that her country pursues growth in trade by identifying different markets to its products. She stressed that to maximise benefits from the AfCFTA, greater attention must be geared towards supply chains in agricultural commodities and processed food products to scale it up to the continental level. “We need to up our game and I am glad that large numbers of young people enter the food processing industry, which provides a lot of jobs for our youth”, she said. Stephen Karingi, Director Regional Integration and Trade Division at the ECA, who also attended the event, said that by 2040 the AfCFTA has the potential to increase the value of agricultural and food...

Africa’s Free Trade Area: What we must do for a smooth take-off on July 1st

Trading in Africa’s free trade area is scheduled to begin on July 1. [caption id="attachment_52480" align="aligncenter" width="656"] The African Heads of States and Governments pose during African Union (AU) Summit for the agreement to establish the African Continental Free Trade Area in Kigali, Rwanda, on March 21, 2018. AFP PHOTO[/caption] This ambitious initiative creates a single market for goods and services and a customs union with free movement of capital and business travellers–the world’s largest given Africa’s 1.2 billon population and combined GDP of over $2.5 trillion. A recent article by Landry Signé in Foreign Affairs titled “How Africa Is Bucking the Isolationist Trend,” noted that if the continental trade agreement is successfully implemented, Africa will have a combined consumer and business spending of $6.7 trillion by 2030. The stakes are high. The newly-appointed African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretary General, Wamkele Mene, and his team must, by necessity, prioritise communication and advocacy. In recent months, decisions have been made at an unprecedented rate, meaning that many member states are yet to fully appreciate the implications of this mammoth project. Hence the need to inform and educate on what it entails. It is imperative that before July 1, 2020, there be strategic engagement with all Ministries of Finance, Trade/Industry and Immigration on the continent to arrive at a common understanding of what lies ahead. Africa has made tremendous strides in information and communication technologies (ICTs) having heavily invested in fibre optics that would be instrumental in developing an effective communications strategy....

TPSF-led trade delegation set to leave for DR Congo

​​​​​​​A DELEGATION is set to leave for the Democratic Republic of Congo this Friday to explore trade and investment opportunities in a three-day tour, Tanzania Private Sector Foundation Chairperson, Angelina Ngalula, announced in Dar es Salaam yesterday. She did not give the number of delegates because, she said, a final list had not been finalized, but said the response had been impressive.‘’Tanzania is producing quality goods that have a ready market in DRC. But Tanzania has many economic opportunities. We want these things to be known to our colleagues in the DRC. Tanzania currently chairs the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) Business Council, meaning we have the duty to encourage and promote business among ourselves. This is the background behind this tour,” she explained. Ngalula thanked Tanzanian Embassy in Kinshasa for identifying areas of focus. She praised government workers for timely cooperation and blessing the tour, explaining that the transportation infrastructure was excellent, hence the importance of taking advantage of this fact to promote trade between Tanzania and her neighbours. “TPSF recognizes the immense focused efforts of the government in building this enabling infrastructure and we thank the government for this great job,” she said. The Chairman of Tanzania Food Processors Association, Suzy Laiser said processors would use the visit to enlarge the geographical market area for their products.“We have been in the processing field for a long time. So we are taking with us products we believe will impress Congolese customers so that we can cement trade that will...

EU: Tanzania appeals for investment in infrastructure development

This was revealed in Dodoma by the Minister for Finance and Planning Dr Philip Mpango when he met and held discussions with the EU ambassador to Tanzania, Manfredo Fanti on the economic development cooperation. Dr Mpango said in the new economic development cooperation agreement between Tanzania and the EU set to start 2021 it would be better for it to strengthen areas of development which the government has begun implementing in particular in the sectors of education, health, infrastructures and others so at to attain sustainable targets. "We have a huge task investing in human resources because infrastructures development for example cannot attain the target set thereon without investing in the human resources and that is why we in the government have decided to offer free education from primary to secondary levels,” explained Dr Mpango. He said on the issue of infrastructures, the government is looking for the possibility to start construction of a railway line from Mtwara port on the Indian Ocean up to the port of Mbamba Bay on the eastern shores of Lake Nyasa to ease freight transport woes as well saving the government a lot of money used in repairing roads that are persistently damaged by freight trucks. He further said the railway infrastructure will have branches to Liganga iron ore mines and Mchuchuma huge coal deposits and added that the railway will also ease transport of goods to neighbouring countries including Malawi that will spur trade between the two nations and increase of revenue. On...

After talks fail, Cotonou pact extended to December

The European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries are extending the Cotonou Agreement to December this year, after failing to reach a consensus on the structure of future relations. When the EU and 79 ACP countries adopted the Cotonou Agreement in 2000, they aimed at reducing/eliminating poverty and integrating ACP countries into the world economy. EU chief negotiator Jutta Urpilainen said the blocs are looking at a post-Cotonou partnership that addresses today’s realities, meets mutual needs and champions a common vision of solidarity and progress. The current agreement that governs trade and political relations between the two blocs was set to expire on February 29. It is based on three pillars: Development co-operation, economic and trade co-operation and political dimension. Formal negotiations between the EU and ACP countries have been ongoing since October 2018 but differences on the issue of migration and trade regimes has made it impossible for the groupings to reach a consensus. Analysts say that following Brexit and with new realities particularly the emergence of China in world trade and geopolitics, ACP countries want to push for a binding agreement that addresses their interests. For Africa, mutually beneficial strategic partnerships akin to those being pursued with individual countries like UK, US, China and Russia are key. Failure to reach agreements on the economic partnership agreements, a key component of the Cotonou Agreement has exposed structural weaknesses in EU’s relationship with ACP countries, leading to prolonged stagnation in trade. “The Cotonou Agreement has benefited Africa in...

Trademark East Africa disrupts inefficient trade chains by creating transparent transactions from field to shop

Spotted: African company, Trademark East Africa, has created an information network for small businesses in East Africa. The network aims to make their goods more competitive, by reducing trade barriers and improving transparency. Trademark’s Trade Logistics Information Pipeline (TLIP) was created to reduce barriers for trade. Traditionally, there has been no communication between all the actors involved in cross-border trade in East Africa, and this has meant that goods and services are nearly impossible to track. No individual actor along the chain can account for where a product is or how long it will take to ship. The TLIP connects small producers to foreign buyers and provides an easy-to-use information network that facilitates transparent and timely cross-border trade. Small business owners can communicate directly with foreign buyers and both parties can see how the product moves through the trade chain. This system ensures all steps in the process are synchronised, meaning that the products move from the producer to the buyer faster and with more transparency. TLIP uses blockchain technology, so all parties involved in the transaction are looking at the same source information. https://youtu.be/nxhnjUq2jx4

EAC, Germany Discuss Economic Integration

The Personal Representative of the German Chancellor for Africa, Mr. Guenter Nooke who was on a working visit to Tanzania, yesterday held bilateral talks with EAC Secretary General Amb. Liberat Mfumukeko at the EAC Headquarters in Arusha. The two leaders discussed development cooperation between the Federal Republic of Germany and the EAC on matters relating to regional economic integration, with particular focus on Health and Agriculture, as well as Customs and Trade sectors. On his part, Amb Mfumukeko said the EAC and Germany have enjoyed a long standing partnership for the last 20 years, with commitments from the German Government amounting over Euros 470 million. He also requested Germany, through Mr. Nooke, to consider more support in Agriculture, Industrial development especially Agro-processing, and ICT sectors as part of institutional transformation in addition to the areas that the Federal Republic is currently supporting. Amb Mfumukeko reiterated that the EAC was deeply interested in penetrating the German and European market in general, which he described as being large and vibrant, adding that the region also hopes to benefit from technology transfer from Europe’s largest economy. Germany has long supported the EAC, and for the last 20 years spent about US$508 million to the region. The joint cooperation focuses on the areas of economic and social integration as well a health. Some of the Germany supported projects in the EAC include EAC Immunization Programme, EAC Regional Network of Public Health Reference Laboratories for Communicable Diseases Project, EAC Scholarship Programme; the Lake Victoria Basin...