The corporate boardrooms and hospitality enclaves of Accra are preparing for a major influx of European gourmet capital as the Spanish gastronomic and trade exhibition, Taste Spain Accra, officially locks in its return for Thursday, June 18, 2026.
This eighth edition represents a significant milestone in West African commercial diplomacy, serving as an exclusive business-to-business gateway that links Ghanaian food and wine professionals directly with top-tier Spanish exporters and regional distributors.
Organized under the institutional leadership of the Economic and Commercial Office of the Embassy of Spain in Accra, and bolstered by the structural support of ICEX Spain Trade and Investment – the Spanish Institute for Foreign Trade – the exhibition marks a strategic push to transform temporary market interest into long-term sovereign trade infrastructure.
“Spain is currently ranked as the third largest exporter of wine to Ghana, and we hope to improve on this with this year’s event expanding to include a wider selection of Spanish beverages, including sparkling wines, juices, and food products”
Yann Emonet Ripoll, Head of the Economic and Commercial Office of Spain in Accra
Emphasizing the strategic focus of the 2026 campaign, he explained that the upcoming trade summit arrives during a period of remarkable realignment within Ghana’s hospitality and retail sectors, where shifting consumer preferences and an expanding middle class are driving unprecedented demand for premium international agri-food products.
The return of this flagship trade platform is backed by robust macroeconomic data that underscores a highly balanced, mutually profitable commercial relationship between Accra and Madrid. Unlike traditional asymmetric trade flows between European economies and West African markets, Ghana and Spain maintain a strikingly stable trade balance.

Total Ghanaian exports entering the Spanish market have surged past the €273 million mark, while Spanish exports into the Ghanaian economy have reached €267 million. This represents a substantial 26 percent escalation in Spanish export values compared to the 2024 fiscal performance, driven in large part by Ghana’s stabilizing domestic economic environment.
Within this broader trade matrix, the performance of the agri-food sector has emerged as the primary growth engine for Spanish commercial interests in the region. In 2024, Spanish agricultural and beverage exports to Ghana stood at a modest €23.5 million.
However, data compiled ahead of the 2026 summit reveals that these numbers skyrocketed by more than 50 percent, reaching a historic high of €50.2 million in 2025.
This exceptional surge means that agri-food products now account for nearly 20 percent of the total monetary volume that Spain exports to Ghana, cementing its status as one of the most lucrative and highly sought-after product portfolios among local corporate importers.
Portfolio Diversification
According to organizers, the core of the 2026 exhibition centers on a deliberate diversification of the Spanish product offering, as Spain’s commercial presence within Ghana’s food and beverage landscape has been heavily dominated by its globally recognized wine industry.
While Spain currently commands the position of the third-largest sovereign exporter of wine to the Ghanaian market, trade planners recognize that long-term volume growth requires a broader portfolio that matches the evolving needs of West Africa’s premium food service channels.

Consequently, the upcoming June exhibition is expanding its focus beyond traditional still wines to showcase a curated selection of sparkling wines, high-end fruit juices, and premium packaged food products.
To achieve this, eight carefully vetted Spanish food and beverage corporations are traveling to Accra to display their premium catalogs and actively negotiate market-entry frameworks. These foreign exporters will be joined on the exhibition floor by three prominent Ghanaian distribution firms.
These local entities, which already manage established supply lines for Spanish brands within the domestic market, will showcase their current commercial offerings, proving that a viable, high-yield consumer base already exists across major urban centers like Accra and Kumasi.
The long-term viability of these commercial pipelines is heavily reinforced by the operational presence of ICEX Spain Trade and Investment, an institution that has actively spent more than a decade developing market insights and corporate matchmaking frameworks within the Ghanaian economy.
Providing localized market data, regulatory clearance guidance, and structured networking platforms, ICEX has consistently minimized the entry risks usually faced by European enterprises attempting to navigate West African logistics networks.
The upcoming event is meticulously engineered to maximize immediate business transactions rather than acting as a simple public relations display.
The exhibition layout focuses entirely on targeted corporate matching, featuring dedicated tasting rooms, technical seminars regarding product origins and geographic indicators, and private networking spaces where local procurement directors can negotiate pricing structures directly with Spanish manufacturing executives.

The Economic and Commercial Office of the Embassy of Spain intends to permanently position Taste Spain Accra as the definitive regional gateway for European food and beverage integration.
For Ghanaian hospitality professionals, retail barons, and distribution networks, the June 18 trade summit offers a direct path to secure high-margin supply chains capable of elevating local consumer standards while reinforcing a balanced, multi-million euro bilateral trade alliance.
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