• Home
  • Business
  • Ghana: 14 African commodity exchanges unite under AFCFTA
Image

Ghana: 14 African commodity exchanges unite under AFCFTA

A sum of 14 commodity exchanges across the continent have united to leverage their combined potential within the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), marking a significant agreement.

The AfCFTA Association of Commodities Exchanges (ACX) places a strong emphasis on its agenda, which includes collaborative efforts to ensure food security and improve market efficiency by sharing knowledge and best practices. ACX aims to promote modern trading practices, such as electronic trading platforms and standardized contracts, while also enhancing market information availability throughout the continent. These measures will lead to improved market efficiency, reduced transaction costs, and increased participation from both domestic and international traders.

This is especially important since the formalized commodity trading sector in most AfCFTA markets is in its early stages, except for South Africa.

The ACX initiative is spearheaded by the Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX), and will most importantly facilitate cross-border trade. Under this, ACX hopes to work closely with AfCFTA on harmonizing trade regulations, simplifying Customs procedures and expediting cross-border transactions.

Chief Executive Officer of GCX Tucci Ivowi, emphasized that there is no more opportune moment for African commodity exchanges to play a role in making a unified African market a reality than the present.

“Different African countries have established commodity exchanges and we are at different stages; there are common challenges across the board, but we also see common opportunities. So, we gathered together all the commodity exchanges in Africa to really sit down and have a dialogue about how we can work together on areas such as promoting food security, collaborating for inter-regional trade and also to ensure market efficiency across the continent” he added.

Altogether, 14 active commodity exchanges are coming together, a move that is widely seen by the participating countries as fitting, considering the common trading framework set by AfCFTA.

Related Posts

Afreximbank, Heirs Energies seal $750m financing deal

The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and Heirs Energies Limited have sealed a landmark US$ 750 million financing partnership…

WIOCC secures $65m sustainability-linked financing to boost Africa’s digital infrastructure

WIOCC Group, Africa’s foremost open-access digital infrastructure provider, has successfully raised an additional $65 million in sustainability-linked debt…

PZ Cussons abandons Africa sell-off, bets big on Nigeria and continent’s growth

PZ Cussons Plc has dramatically reversed course, scrapping plans to divest its African subsidiaries and instead unveiling an…

Kenya overtakes Nigeria as Africa’s fastest-growing private-sector economy

Kenya has seized the crown as Africa’s fastest-expanding private-sector economy, ending Nigeria’s long dominance, according to the latest…

Greenwich Holdings appoints Samson Ariyibi as Group MD

Greenwich Holdings Limited (GHL) has appointed Mr. Samson Oyewale Ariyibi as its first Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer,…

George Elombi takes Afreximbank helm, vows to transform African trade

In a historic moment for African economic sovereignty, Dr. George Elombi was officially invested as President and Chairman…

AfDB inks $73.31m loan to boost Kenya’s Science, Technology Education

The African Development Fund (ADF), part of the African Development Bank Group (AfDB), has approved a $73.31 million…

Sahara Group expands talent pipeline with Graduate Business Analyst Program

Sahara Group has introduced the Sahara Graduate Business Analyst (GBA) Program to equip emerging talent with analytical, data-driven,…

Equity Group launches 2024 Sustainability Report on Africa’s transformation

Equity Group Holdings Plc marked a significant milestone with the launch of its fourth annual Sustainability Report for…