Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – October 10, 2025: Ethiopia’s formal entry into African Continental Free Trade Area operations this week marks more than a symbolic milestone in continental integration—it reveals complex questions about Africa’s economic sovereignty as the continent navigates competing external influences and internal challenges.
On October 9, Ethiopia dispatched its first AfCFTA-compliant shipments to Kenya, Somalia, and South Africa, carrying agricultural products including meat, coffee, fruits, vegetables, beans, edible oil, and select manufactured products such as textiles. The ceremony, presided over by Trade and Regional Integration Minister Kassahun Goffe and Deputy Prime Minister Adem Farah, marked the end of a seven-year preparatory period since Ethiopia signed the agreement in Kigali in 2018.
Ethiopia’s Strategic Entry Amid Continental Shifts
The timing of Ethiopia’s AfCFTA implementation occurs as France completes its military withdrawal from West Africa, with six former colonies—Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Senegal, and Ivory Coast—requesting or demanding the departure of French troops since 2020. This continental shift toward rejecting external military presence provides context for understanding Deputy Prime Minister Adem Farah’s declaration that “Africa’s destiny must be determined through the cooperation of Africans”.
Ethiopia’s entry comes as the African Continental Free Trade Area faces significant implementation challenges. The agreement, signed by 54 of 55 African Union member states and ratified by 47 countries as of 2024, aims to create a single continental market of 1.4 billion people with a combined GDP of $3.4 trillion.
However, progress remains limited. While the AfCFTA officially began trading operations on January 1, 2021, only a small number of countries have achieved Ethiopia’s level of practical implementation. The Guided Trade Initiative, launched in October 2022 with eight pilot countries—Cameroon, Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Mauritius, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Tunisia—has demonstrated modest success, but broader continental trade under AfCFTA protocols remains constrained.
Implementation Challenges Reveal Structural Constraints
Ethiopia’s bilateral trade arrangements with Kenya illustrate both opportunities and limitations in continental integration. In April 2025, the two countries signed a memorandum of understanding establishing a simplified trade regime at the Moyale border, allowing transactions up to $1,000 per trader with a maximum of four trips monthly. Ethiopia’s designated border trade zone extends 50 kilometers from Moyale, while Kenya’s covers 100 kilometers.
Despite these arrangements, practical challenges persist. Border communities at Moyale report that the One Stop Border Post has become “an impediment to trade,” preventing access to Ethiopian fuel and cement that could benefit Kenyan communities. These localized difficulties reflect broader infrastructure and procedural barriers that limit the AfCFTA’s effectiveness.
Rules of Origin negotiations, crucial for determining which products qualify for preferential treatment, remain incomplete despite years of discussions. Current completion rates vary by source, with estimates ranging from 88.3 percent to 92 percent of tariff lines agreed upon. Outstanding issues primarily concern textiles, automotive products, and scattered sectors that have proven difficult to resolve.
The AfCFTA’s projected benefits—lifting 30 million people from extreme poverty and raising intra-African trade to 36 percent of total continental trade—remain largely theoretical without addressing fundamental infrastructure deficits. The African Development Bank estimates that logistics costs can increase traded goods’ prices by up to 75 percent, making African products uncompetitive even within the continent.
Ethiopia’s AfCFTA launch demonstrates both the potential and limitations of continental integration efforts. Trade Minister Kassahun Goffe’s characterization of the agreement as “more than a trade agreement” and “a cornerstone of Africa’s Agenda 2063” reflects aspirations for economic sovereignty. However, achieving these goals requires addressing not only tariff barriers but also the deeper structural constraints and external dependencies that continue to shape Africa’s development trajectory.
AfCFTA Secretary-General Wamkele Mene’s observation that Ethiopia’s entry represents “not only a national milestone but a testament to Africa’s determination to turn AfCFTA from a vision to reality” acknowledges both progress and ongoing challenges. Whether this determination translates into meaningful economic transformation depends on the continent’s ability to address infrastructure deficits, complete technical negotiations, and navigate competing external influences while maintaining focus on African-led development priorities.