Against a backdrop of shifting global geopolitics and strained international supply chains, the 24th COMESA Heads of State Summit, scheduled for 7-9 October in Nairobi, is being positioned as a critical juncture for redefining Africa’s economic future.
Under the theme “Leveraging Digitalization to Deepen Value Chains for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth,” the gathering is set to pivot the region’s focus inward, championing intra-African commerce as a bulwark against external volatility.
The summit will see Kenya assume the bloc’s chairmanship, with authorities signaling a determined push to reorient the region’s trade strategy. The urgency of this shift is underscored by recent data. While intra-COMESA trade has grown at an impressive average of 7 percent annually since the establishment of its Free Trade Area, it starts from a low base. In 2023, a mere 9.4 percent of the bloc’s exports remained within COMESA, highlighting a vast untapped potential for internal market growth.
Kenya’s Cabinet Secretary for Trade, Lee Kinyanjui, emphasized the imperative for concrete action. “With external trade regimes under strain, we must lean more on regional mechanisms and technology to bridge our markets,” Kinyanjui stated ahead of the summit. “This Summit provides us the space to scale up digital trade tools—electronic certificates of origin, interoperable payments, smart border systems—that can turn fragmented value chains into seamless routes of commerce.”
Delegates are expected to move beyond rhetoric and adopt a suite of practical reforms. The agenda includes establishing a firm timetable for deploying electronic Certificates of Origin, creating frameworks for interoperable digital payments, and committing to smart border procedures designed to both facilitate trade and curb corruption.
For host nation Kenya, the event aligns with its broader Vision 2030 goals, aiming to boost industrialization, value addition, and job creation through enhanced regional competitiveness. The Nairobi summit, therefore, represents more than a symbolic meeting; it is a potential launchpad for a new, self-reliant African trade trajectory.

