Wednesday, April 22, 2026
28 C
Lagos

‘African Firms Should Tap into $24Trillion Blue Economy’

Africa Blue Economy Forum (ABEF) comes to Tunis, Tunisia on June 25-26, 2019 with confirmed speakers include Government ministers and officials from Gabon, Ghana, Morocco, Somaliland, Tunisia and Seychelles; Aims to raise awareness of the economic, social and environmental benefits of the Blue Economy.
African businesses are being challenged to wake up to the economic, social and environmental power of the Blue Economy. Momentum is gathering for companies based in Africa’s coastal nations to fully recognise and understand the benefits of backing a Blue Economy, which covers a wide range of productive sectors that are crucial for the continent’s sustainable development, including fisheries, aquaculture, transport, energy, trade and tourism as well as extractive industries.
Research indicates that the Blue Economy has the potential to be a major source of wealth and prosperity for the continent and help advance the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the UN Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development.
Businesses interested in learning how they can be part of the rising tide involved in the Blue Economy are invited to attend the second Africa Blue Economy Forum (ABEF), which is being held in Tunisia on 25-26 June.
This year’s ABEF2019 builds on the inaugural event in London last year which explored what the Blue Economy was. This year’s forum aims to take it a stage further and explore how business and government can implement actions that will proactively boost the economic, social and environmental welfare of the continent.
The importance of a cohesive strategy that will protect and utilise Africa’s coastal waters cannot be overstated:

  • 70 per cent of Africa’s nations are coastal
  • 90 per cent of the continent’s imports and exports are done via sea transportation
  • Africa’s maritime industry is estimated to be worth US$1 trillion per year
  • The asset value of ocean economy eco-systems is valued at US$24 trillion
  • Plastic pollution costs $13 billion per year due to damage caused to marine ecosystems

ABEF2019 will deliver a strong focus on business and government collaboration, highlight investment opportunities and reveal environmental and social impact. Discussions will explore the opportunities and innovations in emerging and frontier sectors of the blue economy and how they can help accelerate Africa’s transformation, create jobs, sustain livelihoods and communities and offer low cost but impactful climate change measures.
Government ministers and officials from Gabon, Ghana, Morocco, Somaliland, Tunisia and Seychelles already confirmed speakers whilst more official delegations from other African countries are also expected to be present.

They will be joined on the platform by business leaders, international investors, ocean innovators and environmental organisations from across the globe, who will share the importance of the Blue Economy in advancing Africa’s development agenda.
Leila Ben Hassen, organiser and founder of ABEF2019, said: “There needs to be more awareness of the Blue Economy and a realisation of how important it is to the future of Africa. Governments are beginning to understand this and beginning to implement policies but it still needs the private sector to grasp this and to look at how they can work in partnership with governments and other organisations to make this succeed. Collaboration is necessary to make this work and deliver huge benefits for the continent enabling it meet the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. ABEF2019 will begin to lay the foundations for this collaboration process.” 

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

QEDNG Summit 2026 Set for August 11 in Lagos

The QEDNG Creative Powerhouse Summit will hold its second edition on...

NLNG MD, Adeleye Falade, Commends Rivers Police, Seeks Stronger Security Collaboration

Adeleye Falade, MD, NLNG, (centre); Olakunle Osobu, Deputy MD...

Renaissance MD, Tony Attah, Predicts Merger of Operators at Nigerian Content Lecture

The Managing Director of Renaissance Africa Energy Company Limited,...

NCDMB, Seplat Firm Up Plans for Take-off of Centre of Excellence at DELSU

 Key Management staff of the Nigerian Content Development and...

FG Denies Allegation of Hidden Spending, Diversion of Federation Revenue

The attention of the Federal Ministry of Finance has...

Topics

Allianz Ranked World’s ‘Best Insurance Brand’ as Value Climbs to $15bn

Allianz continues to be the world’s most valuable insurance...

‘Cost of Finance Too Expensive in Africa’

“I would say the biggest challenge companies face is the cost of finance. Funds are very expensive in Africa,” says Jonty Levin, a Partner at financial advisory and structuring specialist, Alkebulan. There are two main reasons why the cost of finance generally remains high across the continent, according to Levin. One is the perceived risk associated with investing in African companies, and another is the shallow financial markets, where limited supply is rationed through higher costs.

NCC Declares Sept 14 as Final Deadline for NIN-SIM Linkage Compliance

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is pleased to announce...

P+Measurement, Media Monitoring Agency Celebrates 6th Anniversary

P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria's foremost Independent Public Relations...

elev8 Joins AWS Program to Develop, Transform Cloud Tech Sector in Africa

elev8 education, a leading global digital skilling and transformative...

Densiva.ng: Open for Business, Investment in Digital Ecosystem

Densiva.ng, a frontline online marketplace where buyers and sellers...

Nigeria Seeking $11bn World Bank Loan

Nigeria is holding talks with the World Bank to...

Nigeria Drops to 99 in 2017 Global Entrepreneurship Index

Tunisia, Botswana and South Africa are the three African...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img