The Minister for Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry, Hon. Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare, has executed a high-stakes diplomatic double-header to solidify Ghana’s trade sovereignty, coordinating with UK and Chinese envoys to anchor the nation’s industrial expansion in foreign direct investment.
The Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry (MoTAI) office in Accra became the focal point of a strategic trade blitz, as the Minister moved to synchronize Western investment confidence with Eastern trade concessions, focusing instead on the technical frameworks of upcoming summits and the immediate implementation of tariff-free trade protocols.
According to MoTAI, this dual engagement was in commitment to Ghana’s manufacturing-first foreign policy, where diplomatic ties are strictly measured by their ability to generate local jobs, reduce trade deficits, and establish Ghana as a continental industrial hub.
“The UK High Commissioner to Ghana, H.E. Christian Rogg, called on Minister Ofosu-Adjare ahead of the Ghana-UK Investment Summit, scheduled for June 1 – 2, 2026, in London. The summit, themed ‘The Reset Agenda: Restoring Investor Confidence to Unlock Opportunities and Shared Prosperity,’ will focus on trade, investment, infrastructure, and finance”
Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry
This high-level forum is an intervention aimed at repairing and revitalizing the capital flow between London and Accra. With His Excellency President John Dramani Mahama confirmed to attend, the summit represents the executive branch’s highest commitment to restoring international faith in the Ghanaian economy and securing long-term infrastructure and finance commitments.

“The UK High Commissioner to Ghana, H.E. Christian Rogg, emphasized the UK’s commitment to working closely with Ghanaian counterparts to ensure a successful summit that strengthens bilateral economic ties, focusing on trade, investment, infrastructure, and finance under the theme of The Reset Agenda”
Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry
Hon. Ofosu-Adjare’s stance during the meeting was one of firm industrial demand. While acknowledging the United Kingdom as one of Ghana’s largest and most consistent trading partners, she pivoted the conversation away from traditional commodity exchange toward localized production.
The Minister explicitly urged British firms to transition from exporters to manufacturers, utilizing Ghana’s favorable industrial climate to produce goods directly on-site for both the local and regional markets.
Central to this vision is the government’s 2026 roadmap for the garment industry, which includes the establishment of three major factories this year. The sector is viewed as a high-velocity engine for job and wealth creation, providing a scalable model for how foreign investment can be converted into local prosperity.
The June summit is expected to be the primary theater for these negotiations, featuring not only bilateral meetings but also intense private sector engagements on the sidelines. The anticipated signing of growth partnership agreements will serve as the technical anchor for these discussions, moving the relationship from one of aid and trade to one of deep industrial collaboration.

For Minister Ofosu-Adjare, the goal is to ensure that the UK’s commitment to Ghana results in the physical presence of factories on Ghanaian soil, specifically within the garment and agribusiness sectors, which are currently prioritized for rapid expansion.
Zero-Tariff Diplomacy
The afternoon session saw the Trade Minister welcome H.E. Ambassador Cong Song, the new Chinese envoy to Ghana, for a discussion centered on the mechanical implementation of the Chinese zero-tariff agreement.
MoTAI noted that this agreement is critical for Ghana’s trade balance; by removing tariff barriers, the state is attempting to flood the Chinese market with Ghanaian-made products and reduce the persistent trade deficit.
Ambassador Song’s introduction of himself as the new envoy was accompanied by a formal invitation for the Minister to lead a delegation to the Shanghai Import and Export Exhibition in November 2026. The exhibition was posited as a primary theater for Ghanaian exporters to gain a foothold in the world’s largest consumer market.
Hon. Ofosu-Adjare responded to the Chinese envoy, describing the Ministry as a “home” for the Chinese mission. She followed this with a demand for trade symmetry. She also confirmed that she will be traveling to China this Thursday with a target to attract no fewer than 20 major investors to Ghana.
The Trade Minister announced a clear objective: Chinese companies must move beyond selling to the Ghanaian market and start sourcing from it. This is a deliberate strategy to narrow the trade deficit and ensure that the zero-tariff agreement translates into tangible industrial growth rather than a one-way street for Chinese imports.

For MoTAI, the combined weight of these meetings underscores a Ministry that is operating at a high tempo, leveraging its diplomatic capital to secure industrial benchmarks. The UK summit in June and the Shanghai exhibition in November act as bookends for a year of aggressive trade diplomacy.
However, the success of 2026 will be defined by how many of these diplomatic handshakes are turned into factory floor groundbreakings.
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