The Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness and Industry (MoTAI) has finalized strategic arrangements with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission to host the upcoming Fifth Meeting of ECOWAS Ministers of Trade and Industry (ECOMOTI-5) in Accra.
Scheduled to take place from June 11 to 12, 2026, this high-level ministerial summit serves as a vital platform for West African nations to harmonize their commercial and industrial policies.
The announcement was made public during a comprehensive joint press briefing addressed by leading regional technocrats, including the ECOWAS Director of Trade, Mr. Kolawole A. Sofola, the Executive Director, Dr. Simeon K. Koffi, the ECOWAS Director of Industry, Mr. Kofi Addo, and Ghana’s Director of Trade Development at MoTAI, Mr. Ebo Quayson.
“The meeting comes at a crucial time as the global trade and investment landscape continues to evolve due to changes in multilateral trade governance, continental integration efforts, bilateral trade agreements, and growing competition for foreign direct investment.
“They stressed the need for coordinated regional responses to safeguard the economic interests of ECOWAS Member States”
Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness and Industry
The upcoming ministerial convergence arrives at a period when sub-regional trade governance is currently navigating complex pressures stemming from shifting multilateral rules, expanding bilateral agreements, and intensifying competition for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).

According to the briefing officials, West African nations must pivot away from isolated economic policies and instead forge a unified front to insulate their domestic markets from external volatility.
The two-day Ministerial sessions will evaluate detailed reports and recommendations compiled by regional experts in trade, investment, industry, and competition regulation, with the primary focus being the analysis of the policy outcomes and regulatory rollouts from the 14th World Trade Organization Ministerial Conference (MC14).
MoTAI noted that ECOWAS aims to shield local production capacities while maintaining global market accessibility by aligning regional frameworks with modern WTO standards. A critical pillar of the ECOMOTI-5 agenda centers on accelerating the practical implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
While the continental free trade framework offers unprecedented market access, its success across West Africa remains heavily dependent on the elimination of persistent non-tariff barriers (NTBs) that slow down cross-border trade.
Ministers will deliberate on robust trade facilitation measures designed to streamline customs operations, reduce administrative delays at border posts, and formalize trade corridors. Central to these discussions is the review of the ECOWAS Common Market Roadmap, a strategic framework designed to fast-track regional integration.
The elimination of non-tariff barriers remains a top priority for trade planners, as these hidden bureaucratic and logistical hurdles often pose greater challenges to regional commerce than standard import tariffs.
Through the standardization of customs documentation and the harmonization of cross-border transport regulations, the summit aims to significantly lower the cost of doing business within the sub-region.

Customs Union and External Relations
As individual member states come under increasing pressure to sign independent bilateral trade deals, the ECOWAS Commission is emphasizing the absolute necessity of maintaining a unified front.
The Ministers will conduct an extensive review of the region’s evolving trade relations with dominant international economic powers and trading hubs, specifically the European Union, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, the United States, and China.
To counter the argument of policy experts that fragmented external agreements pose a structural risk to the stability of the local economy, ECOMOTI-5 will also emphasize the preservation of the ECOWAS Customs Union and the strict enforcement of the Common External Tariff (CET).
Officials noted that maintaining a standardized tariff structure for third-party imports ensures that external goods cannot exploit loose regulations in one member state to flood the wider regional market, thereby protecting indigenous manufacturing setups.
Beyond trade facilitation, the Accra ministerial meeting will prioritize industrial upgrading and regional value-chain development. Delegates are expected to evaluate strategies aimed at accelerating industrialization, improving manufacturing self-sufficiency, and expanding industrial value addition across key sectors such as “agribusiness, textiles, and light manufacturing.”
A major highlight of this segment will be the formal operationalization of the ECOWAS Common Investment Market (ECIM). MoTAI explained that the ECIM framework is designed to harmonize investment codes, eliminate double taxation, and create a predictable, unified regulatory environment for international investors.
To balance rapid industrial expansion with market equity, the summit will review existing competition regulations and consumer protection frameworks, establishing independent, robust competition watchdogs across the region to prevent monopolistic practices, protect small and medium enterprises (SMEs), and ensure that West African consumers benefit directly from increased market integration.

The ECOMOTI-5 summit will bring together trade and industry ministers from all member states, high-level officials from the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), and representatives from leading international development organizations.
The two-day forum will conclude with the formal adoption of critical policy decisions and actionable recommendations structured to advance regional economic integration, expand internal trade volumes, and secure sustainable macroeconomic growth across the West African sub-region.
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