The Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) has finalized a coordinated, cross-agency economic mission to host the highly anticipated Invest Ghana Canada Business Forum & Exhibition – World Cup 2026 Edition.
Scheduled to open tomorrow, June 12, 2026, at the DoubleTree by Hilton in Montreal, Canada, this high-profile promotional campaign marks a sophisticated effort by the state to convert international sports entertainment visibility into tangible macroeconomic returns.
Operating under an extensive institutional alliance, the GIPC is executing this multi-sectoral showcase in close partnership with the Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness and Industry (MoTAI), the Ghana Export Promotion Authority (GEPA), the Ghana Free Zones Authority (GFZA), and the Ghana High Commission in Canada.
“The forum will bring together businesses, investors, and stakeholders to explore opportunities for trade, investment, and partnerships while showcasing Ghanaian products and enterprises across key sectors, including agribusiness, chocolate and cocoa products, shea and cosmetics, Afrocentric garments, processed foods, and handcrafted items”
Ghana Investment Promotion Centre
According to the GIPC, the strategic North American trade push, anchored in Quebec’s commercial heartland, positions local small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to pitch directly to Canadian private equity firms, agricultural brokers, and retail conglomerates seeking to diversify their global supply chains.
The deployment of the Invest Ghana Canada Forum represents a deliberate departure from fragmented investment promotions, signaling a unified, synchronized approach to timely economic diplomacy, combining the statutory mandates of investment attraction, trade policy, export readiness, and industrial manufacturing incentives to build an all-inclusive investment pitch.

This institutional alignment ensures that foreign buyers and venture capitalists attending the Montreal forum are presented with a complete commercial pipeline – extending from initial capital onboarding to zero-tariff free zone manufacturing and final export logistics.
According to preparatory briefings from the organizing committee, the forum will serve as a dynamic business-to-business matchmaking platform. It is engineered to connect domestic production entities directly with international buyers, North American distribution networks, and cross-border logistics partners.
The timing of the exhibition allows Ghana’s diplomatic apparatus to leverage established bilateral ties between Accra and Ottawa. Executing the premium trade exhibition against the vibrant backdrop of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in North America is expected to exploit heightened international media coverage and massive corporate congregation
The Ghana High Commission in Canada has engaged with the Montreal Board of Trade and Canadian business networks to secure the attendance of high-level supply chain executives, institutional investors, and retail procurement officers.
With global attention on the host nations, the GIPC and its partner agencies are utilizing the tournament’s economic momentum to project Ghana as the premier commercial hub in West Africa.
Trade experts note that during global sports events, standard corporate gatekeeping relaxes, providing an ideal window for high-impact nation-branding and economic networking.
The forum’s design directly capitalizes on this unique atmosphere, creating an exclusive environment where international delegates can explore lucrative commercial alignments away from the crowded tournament areas.

Strategic Export Focus
A defining characteristic of the Montreal exhibition is its focus on non-traditional, value-added Ghanaian exports, with participating state agencies expected to showcase processed, packaged, and branded finished goods that command premium prices in Western consumer markets.
The exhibition floor at the DoubleTree by Hilton will feature curated showcases across several highly competitive sectors, each selected for its high domestic employment generation potential and strong export growth metrics.
The focus on sustainable organic produce and processed raw materials in the agribusiness sector is to secure long-term bulk supply contracts with Canadian agro-processors. This approach is mirrored in the display of chocolate and cocoa products to shift the trade narrative away from raw bean exports toward high-margin retail products.
Similarly, the shea and cosmetics pavilion targets the booming North American clean beauty market by presenting premium raw shea butter alongside finished organic skincare lines. This value-addition strategy directly supports rural women’s cooperatives in Ghana, ensuring that the economic returns of the export trade reach the primary producers.
In the fashion and apparel sector, the exhibition introduces structured collections of Afrocentric garments, aiming to establish direct supply lines with major North American fashion retailers and boutique distributors interested in authentic textiles, contemporary design, and sustainable streetwear.
The processed foods sector addresses both the expanding African diaspora market and mainstream ethnic food aisles across Canada, presenting shelf-stable packaged foods, indigenous spices, and vacuum-sealed snacks that meet strict Canadian food inspection standards.
Finally, the presentation of handcrafted items will connect local artisan cooperatives with premium home decor retail chains, turning traditional craftsmanship into a reliable source of foreign exchange. The architectural core of the forum is expected to be its specialized deal-brokering sessions, facilitated to move discussions rapidly from casual networking to hard contractual commitments.

Representatives from the Ghana Free Zones Authority are prepared to pitch specific tax holidays, regulatory exemptions, and dedicated industrial land allocations to Canadian manufacturing firms willing to set up production bases within Ghana.
This setup allows foreign firms to manufacture goods locally, benefit from lower operational costs, and export duty-free to the rest of Africa under African Continental Free Trade Area protocols.
As final preparations wrap up at the DoubleTree by Hilton in Montreal, the cross-agency delegation remains focused on establishing long-term, resilient trade corridors by presenting a sophisticated, Ghanaian value-driven exhibition on the global stage.
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