Jump to navigation

Long-awaited new trade treaty lacks substance for Africa

Mandarins in Brussels call it a turning point but the deal makes few commitments on trade terms, climate and migration cash

The European Union and African, Caribbean and Pacific Community on Thursday (15 April) signed off on the successor to the Cotonou agreement, ending two-and-a-half years of negotiations (AC Vol 61 No 25, Old treaty rolls over).

The EU's chief negotiator, Jutta Urpilainen, says the post-Cotonou treaty, which must be ratified before the end of November, marks a 'turning point'.

Critics say the deal has lots of bones but precious little meat. In exchange for new promises on return and re-admission of migrants from African countries, with the prospect of sanctions for non-compliance, the EU has promised to offer more generous terms on 'circular migration' and 'legal pathways' (AC Vol 60 No 10, EU-ACP ties in question).

The other significant new addition is the inclusion of the UN-agreed Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris climate change agreement in the text. The EU wants to export its green diplomacy, primarily by imposing a carbon levy on imports, to encourage other countries to make their own transitions to renewable energy.

That is likely to hit African states, which are among the lowest contributors to global carbon emissions but are struggling to finance the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy at home.

African states are expected to request more EU funding and investment for their own energy transitions; a High-Level Forum between EU and African officials on 23 April may offer some pointers.

For now, the lofty promises of cash and political cooperation exist only on paper. The new agreement will not change trading arrangements between the EU and ACP or include a funding line from the EU budget, as the Cotonou agreement had.



Related Articles

Old treaty rolls over

After two years of negotiations the white smoke of a successor to the Cotonou Agreement – which governs trade and political relations between the European Union and the...


EU-ACP ties in question

A joint ministerial council on 23-24 May had been earmarked as the moment for formally concluding the successor to the Cotonou Agreement, governing the next 20 years of...


More summits, more funds

The South Korean government is making more commitments to back its economic expansion in Africa and to promote industrialisation and trade

The third Korea-Africa Economic Cooperation Forum took place in Seoul from 15-18 October, marking a stronger engagement from the South Korean government. Foreign Minister Kim Sung-hwan announced to...


Leading lights

Construction companies, traders, clerics and teachers are part of Turkey’s new wave of engagement in Africa

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government is ratcheting up its African diplomatic offensive, touting the ‘moderate Islamism’ of the ruling Adalet ve Kalkinma Partisi (Justice and Development Party,...


The East needs oil

Higher oil prices are helping Africa's producers and punishing its consumers

With its eyes fixed on Iraq, the United States has done little to diversify its sources of crude oil, despite some proposals that were bandied around a couple...