BAMAKO, Mali – October 7, 2025: The Alliance of Sahel States (AES) has taken a decisive step toward economic sovereignty through a groundbreaking customs partnership with Togo, as Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso finalized modernization agreements on October 3 that directly challenge decades of French-influenced regional integration frameworks.
The high-level Bamako meeting between Malian Prime Minister Abdoulaye Maïga and Togolese Revenue Commissioner General Philippe Chodi represents more than technical customs harmonization—it signals the emergence of an alternative economic bloc that threatens to reshape West African trade dynamics.
Breaking Traditional Trade Dependencies
The customs accord establishes a preliminary AES Customs Code and develops a common external tariff system that directly challenges ECOWAS’s Western-aligned trade framework. This development builds upon the AES countries’ March 28, 2025 implementation of a 0.5 percent “Confederal Levy” on goods from ECOWAS nations—a strategic tariff that generated significant concern among coastal West African economies.
Prime Minister Maïga’s warning during the October 3 meeting was unmistakable: “On the road to our sovereignty there are many traps and obstacles… We must anticipate this by strengthening our cooperation and efforts”. This language reflects a confederation that views economic independence as essential to their political sovereignty.
The timing is particularly significant. Niger’s parliamentary delegation’s arrival in Bamako on October 5 to participate in Mali’s National Transitional Council demonstrates the AES is rapidly institutionalizing political coordination alongside economic integration. This dual-track approach—combining legislative harmony with customs union—creates a formidable challenge to ECOWAS’s established authority.
The March 2025 tariff implementation by AES countries was explicitly designed to generate revenue for alliance operations while asserting economic independence from ECOWAS trade liberalization schemes. Revenue collected through national customs authorities is deposited into special AES accounts, subject to annual audits and financial reports.
Togo’s Strategic Maritime Positioning
Togo’s deepening partnership with AES represents perhaps the most consequential geopolitical realignment in West Africa in recent years. Foreign Minister Robert Dussey’s March declaration that “Togo is considering joining the AES” has materialized into concrete economic cooperation that fundamentally alters regional power dynamics.
The strategic implications are profound. Togo’s Port of Lomé has already become a primary maritime gateway for AES countries, handling 30.64 million tonnes of cargo in 2024, with approximately 70 percent of container traffic consisting of transshipment operations. This development has come at the expense of Benin’s Cotonou port, which previously handled significant AES traffic before diplomatic tensions arose.
Polling data confirms popular support for this realignment. According to a November 2024 Afrobarometer survey of 1,200 Togolese citizens, 54 percent support leaving ECOWAS to join the AES. Support is higher among men (57 percent) than women (50 percent), and stronger in urban areas (59 percent) compared to rural regions (49 percent).
Port of Lomé statistics demonstrate the concrete impact of this shift. The facility has maintained its position among the top 100 container ports globally for four consecutive years, ranking 93rd in 2024. Container handling reached 2 million TEUs in 2024, representing a 5.19 percent increase from the previous year.
The economic significance extends beyond tonnage figures. Maritime activities contribute approximately 70 percent of Togo’s economic activity and generate over 75 percent of national tax revenues. This economic foundation provides Togo substantial leverage in regional diplomatic negotiations.
Economic Warfare Through Trade Policy
The AES customs partnership with Togo effectively creates a parallel trade system that bypasses ECOWAS entirely. Nigeria’s trade data illustrates the potential impact—the country exported ₦812 billion to Togo in the second quarter of 2025, six times the ₦134.8 billion recorded in the first quarter, making Togo Nigeria’s largest African trade partner.
These trade shifts reflect logistical advantages rather than purely political motivations. Moving a 40-foot container through Nigeria’s Apapa port costs approximately $4,800, while Lomé Container Terminal charges $1,050 for the same service. Even accounting for additional trucking costs to reach Nigerian markets, shippers save $1,500-1,700 per container—nearly 20 percent of standard cargo costs.
ECOWAS leaders have responded with concern to these developments. The organization scheduled an extraordinary meeting for April 22, 2025, specifically to address the AES import levy, though no retaliatory measures were announced. ECOWAS continues to treat AES countries under the Trade Liberalisation Scheme despite their official departure from the bloc.
The customs partnership threatens to accelerate what analysts describe as ECOWAS’s institutional crisis. Nigeria, which exported goods worth $10.43 million to Mali in 2024, faces direct economic consequences from trade barriers imposed by AES countries. The broader pattern suggests systematic decoupling from French-designed economic frameworks.
French influence in West Africa has been systematically challenged by AES countries, which expelled French military forces, reduced French language prominence, and aligned with alternative partners including Russia and China. The customs union with Togo represents the economic dimension of this sovereignty assertion, creating viable alternatives to France-controlled financial and trade systems.
The broader implications extend beyond West Africa. This customs partnership demonstrates how African nations can construct alternative integration frameworks that prioritize continental interests over external dependencies. As regional analysts note, the AES model offers a sovereignty-centered approach that may inspire similar movements across the continent.
The AES-Togo customs partnership signals a fundamental shift in African economic independence, challenging decades of French monetary and trade control while establishing alternative institutional frameworks. As these nations continue building parallel systems, they pose fundamental questions about whether Western-designed integration truly serves African interests—or primarily facilitates external extraction and control.