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AfCFTA: what the African Continental Free Trade Area means for agri-food exporters

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is not a single compliance deadline the way EUDR or Indonesia's halal rule are, it is a multi-year build-out of preferential trade across the continent, and it is already live for the agri-food categories many African exporters handle. If you export fisheries, livestock, fruit, vegetables, spices, or processed food within Africa, here is what it actually offers and what proving eligibility requires.

What AfCFTA is, and who it covers

AfCFTA is a 54-country trade agreement creating a single continental market. The Guided Trade Initiative (GTI) is its live pilot phase, roughly 39 countries participating so far, with Kenya a founding pilot country since 2022 and its own national implementation strategy running 2022 to 2027.

What it means in practice: preferential tariffs, if you can prove origin

Goods that meet AfCFTA's rules-of-origin criteria, broadly, that they were substantially produced or transformed within Africa, qualify for reduced or zero tariffs when traded between participating African countries. The proof is an AfCFTA Certificate of Origin, now issued by more than 40 countries, without which your shipment is treated as ordinary, non-preferential trade at standard duty rates.

Which agri-food categories, and the pace of rollout

Kenya's AfCFTA rollout names fisheries, livestock, fruits, vegetables, spices, and processed foods as targeted export categories. Manufacturing and agri-food processing are projected to make up roughly half of intra-African trade flows in 2026. This is a structural, multi-year shift rather than a single hard date, so the opportunity compounds the earlier your export documentation is AfCFTA-ready, not the closer you get to a deadline.

The friction points

Trade bodies covering the rollout report real friction: inconsistent standards enforcement and border delays across participating countries, alongside regulatory shifts that create uncertainty for traders and processors. Rules-of-origin determination is also product- and value-content-specific, a generic checklist cannot tell you whether your specific product qualifies. Check your product's actual rule against the AfCFTA Rules of Origin Manual or with a customs broker before relying on preferential treatment.

Getting ready

A Certificate of Origin application draws on the same record a commercial invoice or export cost sheet already needs: what the product is, where it originated, and how it was produced or transformed. Fernable already generates proforma invoices, export cost sheets, and consignment paperwork straight from lot data, so the origin record behind an AfCFTA CoO application is a by-product of documents you are already producing, not a separate filing exercise.

This guide summarises the agreement for orientation and is not a rules-of-origin determination. Confirm your product's specific origin rule and your national trade ministry's current Certificate of Origin process before relying on preferential treatment.

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AfCFTA: what the African Continental Free Trade Area means for agri-food exporters | Fernable