Transnet Rail Infrastructure invites bids for sidings lease RFPs

Source: Government of South Africa

Transnet Rail Infrastructure invites bids for sidings lease RFPs

Transnet Rail Infrastructure Manager (TRIM) has issued Sidings Lease Requests for Proposals (RFPs) covering nine rail siding facilities located across the Eastern and Central Regions. 

Successful bidders will be awarded leases for a minimum period of 10 years, with clear performance and investment commitments tied to the lease term.

Proposals are expected to include comprehensive infrastructure upgrades to enhance operational efficiency and enable seamless road-to-rail integration. 

These may include rail line refurbishment; loading and handling facilities; drainage systems; lighting and security enhancements, fencing and access roads.

“This batch underscores TRIM’s ongoing commitment to transparent, market-based access to critical rail assets. By enabling private sector participation in siding operations, we are advancing a more efficient, competitive, and integrated freight logistics system for South Africa,” TRIM Chief Executive Moshe Motlohi said on Thursday.

Operators will be required to demonstrate measurable improvements in turnaround times and overall logistics efficiency. 

The commercial framework is based on market-related rental structures, designed to ensure fair value while preserving the long-term sustainability of the assets.

This RFP marks another milestone in its open market programme aimed at unlocking value from South Africa’s rail infrastructure and expanding access to strategic siding facilities.

It follows the issuance of the previous batch of siding lease RFPs, which included three siding facilities in the Eastern and Central Regions. 

“It aligns with the National Rail Policy (2022) and the Freight Logistics Roadmap (2023), reinforcing TRIM’s mandate to commercialise rail assets in a responsible, transparent, and sustainable manner, while upholding the highest standards of safety, compliance, and network integrity.

“Bidders will engage through a transparent, market-based process to access TRIM’s rail sidings under a regulated framework.”

This multi-stage process includes prequalification, functional evaluation, and final price/preference assessment. 

Safety, health, and regulatory compliance are non-negotiable requirements.

A non-compulsory Virtual Tender Briefing will be held on 17 April 2026 at 10;00 (via Microsoft Teams), and the bid submission deadline is 28 May 2026. 

The virtual briefing session will provide prospective bidders with detailed insights into the batch 4 facilities and the evaluation framework.

Interested parties can access the full RFP documents and submission details via the official Transnet procurement platforms, including the National Treasury e-Tender portal: https://www.etenders.gov.za/. – SAnews.gov.za

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Have your say on draft procurement regulations

Source: Government of South Africa

Have your say on draft procurement regulations

National Treasury has published the draft General Public Procurement Regulations, 2026 and draft Public Procurement Tribunal Regulations, 2026, for public comment in the Government Gazette.

The draft regulations and the notices can be accessed on the National Treasury website https://www.treasury.gov.za/legislation/regulations/default.aspx.

They were published in terms of section 63(1) of the Public Procurement Act, 2024 (Act No. 28 of 2024), as communicated through notices in Government Gazette Numbers 54528 and 54527, respectively. 

“These regulations are necessary to bring into effect the Public Procurement Act, 2024, which was assented to by the President on 18 July 2024 and published in the Government Gazette on 23 July 2024. 

“The published notices explain the need for, the intended operation of the regulations, and the expected impact of these regulations,” National Treasury said.

The due date for submitting comments on the draft Public Procurement Tribunal Regulations, 2026, is 15 May 2026. 

Due to the length and complexity of the draft General Public Procurement Regulations, 2026, a longer consultation period has been determined by the Minister of Finance, and the due date for submitting comments thereon is 15 June 2026.

Written comments on the draft General Public Procurement Regulations, 2026, may be submitted to DraftGeneralProcurementRegulations@treasury.gov.za, and written comments on draft Public Procurement Tribunal Regulations, 2026 must be submitted to DraftTribunalRegulations@treasury.gov.za. – SAnews.gov.za

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Small Enterprise Development and Finance Agency (SEDFA) backs Africa’s next generation of digital businesses at Converge Africa 2026

Source: APO

MSMEs are the backbone of South Africa’s economy, contributing over 60% of employment and a significant share of GDP, yet many still face barriers to market access, funding, and digital integration.

As Africa’s digital economy continues its rapid expansion, the next phase of growth will be driven not only by large enterprises, but by the scale, resilience, and innovation of Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).

Recognising this, the Small Enterprise Development and Finance Agency (SEDFA) has partnered with Converge Africa 2026 as the official sponsor of the MSME Pavilion, reinforcing its commitment to enabling sustainable business growth and inclusive economic development across the continent.

Taking place from 4–6 May 2026 at the Cape Town International Convention Centre, Converge Africa brings together leaders across e-commerce, fintech, payments, logistics, digital marketing, and cybersecurity to shape the future of digital commerce in Africa.

At its core, the event is driven by a unifying imperative: “Frictionless digital commerce. Transacting seamlessly, without borders.”

Empowering the businesses that drive economic growth

SEDFA’s sponsorship of the MSME Pavilion reflects a strategic focus on supporting emerging businesses as critical drivers of economic participation, job creation, and innovation.

Through its holistic approach, SEDFA provides financial assistance, business mentoring, and technical training, while also supporting formalisation, market access, and targeted development programmes such as Empretec, Manufacturing Supplier Programmes, and township and rural enterprise initiatives.

“Facilitating sustainable international market access is a core pillar of SEDFA’s business development mandate. Enabling meaningful market linkages for small enterprises is critical to boosting exports and, in turn, driving inclusive economic growth. The Converge Africa Conference 2026 presents a powerful platform to unlock both local and global opportunities positioning our enterprises to compete effectively and sustainably in an increasingly digital economy.” Group Executive Business Development Support, Mr Sipho Ngcai

A platform for visibility, access and growth

As part of its sponsorship, SEDFA will enable 10 high-potential SMEs to exhibit within the MSME Pavilion at Converge Africa, providing them with:

  • Dedicated exhibition space to showcase products and services
  • Access to over 1,400 attendees from 700+ organisations
  • Opportunities to engage directly with corporate buyers, partners, and investors
  • Participation in conference sessions and workshops through sponsored delegate access

This initiative creates a direct bridge between emerging businesses and the broader digital commerce ecosystem, enabling practical opportunities for growth, collaboration, and scale.

Connecting SMEs to the digital economy ecosystem

Converge Africa is designed as a fully integrated ecosystem spanning five core pillars: Payments & Fintech; eCommerce; Digital Marketing; Fulfilment & Logistics; and Digital Security. 

For SMEs, access to this ecosystem is critical.

The ability to integrate payments, optimise digital marketing, navigate logistics, and build trusted customer experiences determines whether businesses can compete and grow in today’s environment.

SEDFA’s presence within this ecosystem positions it as a key enabler, ensuring that smaller businesses are not excluded from the opportunities created by digital transformation.

Driving meaningful PR impact and industry recognition

Beyond the direct support of SMEs, SEDFA’s sponsorship delivers significant strategic visibility.

Through integrated event branding, digital promotion, and on-site presence, SEDFA will be recognised as a champion of entrepreneurship and innovation within Africa’s digital economy.

The stories of the participating SMEs, their journeys, and their engagement with industry leaders will generate powerful narratives that reinforce SEDFA’s role as a catalyst for inclusive growth.

This aligns with a broader industry shift: economic development is no longer only about access to funding, but about enabling ecosystems where businesses can connect, learn, and scale.

A shared ambition for inclusive digital growth

As Africa’s commerce landscape evolves, the importance of inclusive participation becomes increasingly clear.

SEDFA’s partnership with Converge Africa reflects a shared ambition:

To ensure that the growth of digital commerce is not limited to established players, but extended to the next generation of businesses that will shape the continent’s future.

“As a provider of integrated business development and financial solutions for small enterprises and cooperatives, SEDFA is positioning itself as a central role-player within the enterprise development ecosystem. Recognising the digital economy as a critical enabler and driver of growth, platforms such as the Converge Africa Conference 2026 present a strategic opportunity for SEDFA to engage directly with global leaders in e-commerce, technology, and fintech unlocking long-term, sustainable benefits for small enterprises.” Group Executive Ecosystem and Stakeholder Management, Ms Nthabeleng Mokitimi-Dlamini

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of VUKA Group.

About Converge Africa:
Converge Africa is a leading digital commerce event bringing together Africa’s e-commerce, fintech, payments, logistics, and digital marketing ecosystems.

Taking place at the CTICC in Cape Town from 4 – 6 May 2026, the event is designed to enable collaboration, knowledge exchange, and business growth across the continent.

For more information, visit: (https://apo-opa.co/48UGzBU)

View the event programme (https://apo-opa.co/4dNKwvD)

Ticket Options (https://apo-opa.co/4tKyc3O)

Register online to attend and be part of Africa’s fastest-growing digital commerce ecosystem.

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Enlit Africa 2026: The business of power and the value of compounding impact

Source: APO


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Enlit Africa’s 2026 programme convenes decision-makers from utilities, private sector, government, industry and finance to tackle the business of delivering power across the continent – at a moment when system constraints, reform and investment urgency are converging. In South Africa, transmission constraints are limiting new connections and generation evacuation, municipal distribution and tariff reform is reshaping incentives and financial sustainability and the need for digitalisation is accelerating, raising both opportunity and operational risk. Across Africa, these same pressures show up in different forms: grid expansion and interconnection readiness, utility performance and collections, bankable project pipelines, procurement design, and the operational capability to deliver reliability at scale.

Anchored by Enlit Africa’s year-round platform, the 2026 programme is shaped around the event theme: Compounding impact: small changes, outsized outcomes. The programme is designed to move beyond diagnosis and focus on practical levers that shift outcomes: what unlocks grid capacity, improves distribution performance and tariff credibility and turns data into operational capability at scale.

Pan-African participation: where Africa’s power business connects

Enlit Africa, part of VUKA Group, is designed as a working platform for the continent’s power ecosystem – utilities, regulators, municipalities, developers, financiers and technology providers – to align around delivery: projects that reach financial close, grid access that becomes real connections and operational improvements that translate into performance. With participation expected from 30+ African countries and international stakeholders Africa, Enlit Africa’s role as a continental convening point rather than a single-country conversation is reinforced once again. 

Level 2: the executive deal layer (limited access)

A defining feature of Enlit Africa is the Level 2 experience: a curated, executive environment designed to move beyond “conference attendance” into decision-grade engagement and deal flow. Level 2 brings together utility leadership, project owners, financiers and delivery partners in formats built for outcomes, not commentary.

Key elements include the Utility CEO Forum (closed-door) and the Projects & Investment Network (P&IN), alongside structured meeting zones and focused discussions where attendees can stress-test assumptions, clarify bankability requirements and move opportunities forward with the right stakeholders in the room. For delegates attending with investment, partnership, procurement or project-development intent, Level 2 is where the show is designed to convert insight into next steps.

“Delivery improves when finance, regulation and operations are aligned to the same outcomes. Enlit Africa creates the platform for that alignment to move from theory to execution.” – Marcel du Toit, Event Director, Enlit Africa

Transmission constraints: unlocking grid access and delivery

Across the programme, Enlit Africa 2026 addresses the constraint that increasingly defines feasibility across many markets: grid access. Sessions focus on the bottlenecks blocking evacuation and expansion, the delivery models and coordination required to scale build-out and the investment conditions that determine whether projects move from pipeline to operation – including practical discussions on infrastructure delivery, regional integration and the conditions that make projects bankable.

“Across Africa, the constraints are compounding: grid access, distribution performance, revenue certainty and the rapid shift to digital operations. Enlit Africa is where the business of power is discussed properly: what gets financed, what gets delivered and what keeps systems performing. The 2026 theme, ‘Compounding impact’, reflects our focus on the small, targeted changes that unlock outsized outcomes.” – Claire Volkwyn, Head of Content, Enlit Africa

Municipal distribution and tariffs: making reform workable

As market evolution and procurement models change, municipalities and distribution utilities face a dual challenge: maintaining system performance while keeping tariffs credible, affordable and financially sustainable. Enlit Africa 2026 brings practitioners into the same room to unpack what distribution readiness looks like in practice, how tariff structures respond to new market signals and what technical and governance interventions help restore service reliability and revenue performance.

Digitalisation: from pilot projects to critical infrastructure

Utilities and large users are moving from digital ambition to operational dependency: smart metering, improved visibility and data-driven forecasting are becoming core to performance. The programme explores deployment realities, data governance and security and the operational capabilities required to turn digitisation into measurable outcomes rather than added complexity.

Water Security Africa: a dedicated focus

Alongside Enlit Africa, Water Security Africa runs as a co-located event. Water is a continuity risk for cities and industry and requires its own commercial and delivery logic. The Water Security Africa programme convenes stakeholders around water resilience, utility performance, reuse and recovery, regulatory enabling conditions and investment-ready delivery models.

Enlit Africa 2026 will take place on 19–21 May 2026 at the CTICC in Cape Town, South Africa. The full programme and registration information are available at: www.Enlit-Africa.com

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of VUKA Group.

Contact:
Marcel du Toit, Event Director
marcel.dutoit@wearevuka.com

About Enlit Africa:
Enlit Africa convenes stakeholders across the power sector value chain to address the commercial and operational realities of delivery. The programme brings together leaders across finance, utilities, government, industry and technology to accelerate bankable investment, system readiness and measurable outcomes.

Enlit Africa is supported by leading industry sponsors already confirmed for 2026 including ACTOM, Conlog, Eskom Rotek and Standard Bank (platinum sponsors), Siemens (gold sponsor) and G3-Alliance (silver sponsor) alongside additional confirmed sponsors including Grundfos, Hengtong, Holley Technology, Lesedi, Nuriflex, Steinmuller Africa, Triveni Turbine, Aberdare Cables, Allbro Industries, Hexing Electrical, Landis+Gyr and Megger. www.Enlit-Africa.com

About Water Security Africa: 
Water Security Africa is a dedicated programme focus running alongside Enlit Africa, convening stakeholders around water resilience, utility performance, reuse and recovery and bankable delivery models that strengthen continuity of supply and long-term system sustainability. www.WaterSecurity-Africa.com

About VUKA Group: 
VUKA Group connects people and organisations across Africa’s energy, mining, mobility, green economy, and retail sectors through events, content, and strategic networking. Venture partners to The Global Trust Project and leaders of NPO Go Green Africa.  www.WeAreVUKA.com

Government calls on private sector to partner in enhancing conservation

Source: Government of South Africa

Government calls on private sector to partner in enhancing conservation

Deputy Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, Narend Singh, has called on the private sector to partner with government to slow biodiversity loss, restore critical habitats, and secure the ecological infrastructure that supports the economy.

This as the National Biodiversity Assessment (NBA) paints a concerning picture of the state of the country’s biodiversity, showing that nearly one-third of terrestrial ecosystems are classified as threatened.

“Pressures on biodiversity are intensifying habitat loss from agriculture, settlements, mining and infrastructure development, invasive alien species, pollution, overexploitation, and climate change continue to drive ecosystem degradation and species decline. 

“Freshwater systems — rivers, wetlands and estuaries — are among the most threatened,” Singh said on Thursday at the Walter Sisulu National Botanical Garden in Johannesburg.

According to the Deputy Minister, through concerted, collaborative efforts, South Africa can slow biodiversity loss, restore critical habitats, and secure the ecological infrastructure that supports the economy and environmental well-being. 

“Our Water Source Areas — mountain catchments, wetlands and rivers — cover only 10% of our land, yet supply more than 50% of the country’s water. 

“These areas face severe pressure from pollution, invasive species and altered flows. While some progress has been made, far more urgent action is required to protect this vital ecological infrastructure for water security. 

“Healthy freshwater flows to estuaries and oceans are equally important for marine fisheries and coastal resilience. Our terrestrial and marine ecosystems are vast, but pressures are concentrated in specific landscapes,” he said.

This demands smart spatial prioritisation — ensuring every rand invested in restoration delivers maximum impact, especially in degraded wetlands, estuaries, and coastal zones.

“Encouragingly, some species have shown improved protection status through our protected areas and stewardship programmes. These successes prove what is possible when conservation efforts are sustained and well-supported.

“Ultimately, our success will be measured by strengthened livelihoods, restored ecosystems, and robust environmental governance built on trust. This is where the private sector plays a vital role,” the Deputy Minister said.

He emphasised that meaningful progress depends on policy reform, targeted finance, and strong partnerships. 

“Public–private partnerships (PPPs) have proven powerful, enabling the private sector to drive investment, create jobs, and advance shared goals through corporate social responsibility and innovation.

“Sound environmental governance requires modernising our regulatory frameworks to make them more transparent, efficient, and aligned with the objectives of people, planet and prosperity. Strong institutions — both public and private — are essential for building peaceful, just, and inclusive societies,” the Deputy Minister said.

He pointed out that by forging innovative partnerships across government, business and civil society, South Africa can overcome barriers such as data gaps and regulatory challenges and fully unlock the potential of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) frameworks and sustainable investment.

An ESG framework is a structured set of guidelines, metrics and standards used by companies to measure, manage, and report their Environmental, Social, and Governance performance. 

The frameworks facilitate transparent disclosure of sustainability data to stakeholders, covering areas like carbon emissions, labour practices and board diversity, allowing for consistent evaluation of risks and opportunities

“A collaborative, whole-of-society approach to conserving our natural assets will be central to achieving our social and economic development goals. It requires coordinated action, secure livelihoods, and a nation united in purpose.

“I therefore call on the business community to partner with us in the conservation and infrastructure enhancement of South Africa’s national botanical and zoological gardens. Your support can expand these spaces, improve visitor experiences, advance research and education, and contribute directly to national biodiversity targets,” he said. – SAnews.gov.za

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Cold weather to dominate SA

Source: Government of South Africa

Cold weather to dominate SA

The South African Weather Service (SAWS) says a period of cold, wet and windy weather conditions is expected to affect large parts of the country from Friday through to Monday, 20 April.

“This change in weather is associated with the passage of two consecutive cold fronts making landfall over the western parts of South Africa. Initially, these systems are expected to impact the Western Cape and Northern Cape before spreading eastwards across the central and eastern interior over the weekend,” the weather service said.

Daytime maximum temperatures are expected to drop significantly, with some high-lying areas in the western interior and adjacent regions possibly experiencing daytime temperatures between 10°C and 12°C. 

These conditions, combined with strong winds, will result in a pronounced wind chill effect. By contrast, the northern extremities of the country are expected to remain relatively warm during this period.

Moreover, marine conditions are expected to deteriorate, with wave heights along the coastline forecast to reach between 4.0 and 5.0 metres from Sunday into Monday, potentially impacting coastal and beach activities. 

From Friday, 17 April, cold, wet and windy conditions will dominate the western interior, including parts of the Western Cape and Northern Cape. 

By Saturday, 18 April, the cold airmass will penetrate further into the central interior, while the cold front progresses further east of the country. 

“Widespread cool to cold conditions are expected across much of South Africa. Isolated to scattered showers and thundershowers are forecast over the central and eastern provinces, including the Free State, North West, Gauteng, Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal.

“By Sunday, 19 April, cold, wet and windy conditions will have spread to the eastern and southern parts of the country, including the southern and eastern coastline of South Africa,” SAWS said.

The impact of these weather conditions are as follows:

  • Cold, wet and windy conditions may result in a significant wind chill factor, making temperatures feel colder than measured.
  • Localised flooding of low-lying areas and poor drainage systems may occur in regions experiencing persistent rainfall.
  • Disruptions to outdoor and beachfront activities are possible due to strong winds and rough seas.
  • Reduced visibility and slippery roads may impact travel conditions.

The public is advised to take the following precautionary measures:

  • Dress warmly and ensure adequate heating in homes. 
  • Use heating devices safely to avoid fire hazards. 
  • Exercise caution when travelling on wet and slippery roads. 
  • Avoid unnecessary travel during periods of heavy rainfall. 
  • Secure loose outdoor objects that may be affected by strong winds. 
  • Stay away from the coastline during rough sea conditions. 
  • Continuously monitor official weather updates and warnings issued by SAWS.

SAnews.gov.za

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JSC disagrees with Tribunal finding in Judge Mbenenge matter

Source: Government of South Africa

JSC disagrees with Tribunal finding in Judge Mbenenge matter

 The Judicial Service Commission (JSC) has overturned the decision by the Judicial Conduct Tribunal into the complaint of Andiswa Mengo against Eastern Cape Judge President Selby Mbenenge.

This follows a meeting held last month whereby the JSC, excluding the members designated by the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces, held a meeting in terms of section 20(1) of the Judicial Service Commission Act 9 of 1994 (JSC Act), to consider the report of the Judicial Conduct Tribunal into Mengo’s complaint.

This as the Tribunal had earlier found Judge President Mbenenge not guilty of misconduct not amounting to gross misconduct and not guilty of gross misconduct, gross incompetence and/or gross incapacity under section 177 of the Constitution. 

Section 177 of the Constitution deals with the removal of a judge. 

“At the invitation of the Commission, the parties made written representations which the meeting considered together with the report of the Tribunal.

“After consideration of the report of the Tribunal and representations of the parties made in terms of section 20(2) of the JSC Act, the Commission did not accept the findings of the Tribunal that Judge President Mbenenge is guilty of misconduct not amounting to gross misconduct. The Commission found that on the common cause facts, the conduct of Judge President Mbenenge constitutes gross misconduct in terms of section 177(1)(a) of the Constitution,” said the Commission.

Section 177(a) of the Constitution states that a judge may be removed from office only if the Judicial Service Commission finds that the judge suffers from an incapacity, is grossly incompetent or is guilty of gross misconduct; and (b) the National Assembly calls for that judge to be removed by a resolution adopted with a supporting vote of at least two thirds of its members. 

In a statement on Thursday, the JSC said it will submit to the Speaker of the National Assembly its finding, together with reasons and a copy of the report in accordance with section 20(4) of the JSC Act. 

“The Commission has invited the parties to make written submissions whether, pending the process in terms of section 177(1) of the Constitution, the Commission should advise the President in terms of section 177(3) to suspend Judge President Mbenenge pending the process in section 177(1),” said the JSC.  
 

The report can be accessed here: JSC Report Mengo v Mbenenge JP matter – April 2026. – SAnews.gov.za

 

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Grupo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento e Mecanismo Europeu de Estabilidade assinam Memorando de Entendimento para melhorar cooperação

Source: Africa Press Organisation – Portuguese –

O Grupo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento (BAD) (www.AfDB.org) e o Mecanismo Europeu de Estabilidade (MEE) assinaram na quarta-feira, 15 de abril de 2026, um Memorando de Entendimento (MoU) para formalizar e reforçar a cooperação entre as duas instituições. A assinatura teve lugar à margem dos Encontros da Primavera de 2026 do Fundo Monetário Internacional e do Grupo Banco Mundial, em Washington DC. 

A cooperação ao abrigo do acordo centrar-se-á no reforço de capacidades, na partilha de conhecimentos e na investigação, bem como na cooperação através do diá. técnico, da troca de informações, de seminários conjuntos e de interações a nível do pessoal, sujeita às regras e procedimentos internos de ambas as instituições.

“Num mundo que se tornou mais propenso a choques frequentes, a preparação através da cooperação é essencial”, afirmou o Diretor-Geral do MEE, Pierre Gramegna. “Este MoU proporciona um quadro estruturado para aprofundar o nosso diá. com o BAD e partilhar experiências em áreas como o financiamento de mercado, a governação e a prevenção e gestão de crises”.

“Este acordo reflete o nosso compromisso com intercâmbios mutuamente benéficos”, afirmou o Presidente do BAD, Sidi Ould Tah. “Ao formalizar a nossa cooperação com o MEE, estamos a reforçar a nossa capacidade de recorrer às melhores práticas internacionais, nomeadamente no contexto dos esforços para estabelecer o Mecanismo Africano de Estabilidade Financeira, uma prioridade aprovada pelos Chefes de Estado e de Governo da União Africana. África continua a ser a única região sem um mecanismo regional dedicado à estabilidade financeira, e esta cooperação será fundamental para ajudar a salvaguardar a estabilidade financeira na região”.

Distribuído pelo Grupo APO para African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contacto para os media:
Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento

Amba, Mpoke-Bigg,
Departamento de Comunicação e Relações Externas, 
media@afdb.org

Mecanismo Europeu de Estabilidade
Anabela Reis, 
Departamento de Comunicação, 
A.Reis@esm.europa.eu

Sobre o Grupo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento:
O Grupo Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento é a principal instituição financeira de desenvolvimento em África. Inclui três entidades distintas: o Banco Africano de Desenvolvimento (AfDB), o Fundo Africano de Desenvolvimento (ADF) e o Fundo Fiduciário da Nigéria (NTF). Presente no terreno em 41 países africanos, com uma representação externa no Japão, o Banco contribui para o desenvolvimento económico e o progresso social dos seus 54 Estados-membros. Mais informações em www.AfDB.org/pt

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La Banque africaine de développement et le Mécanisme européen de stabilité signent un protocole d’accord pour renforcer leur coopération

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

Le Groupe de la Banque africaine de développement (www.AfDB.org) et le Mécanisme européen de stabilité (MES) ont signé, ce mercredi 15 avril à Washington, un protocole d’accord visant à formaliser et à renforcer la coopération entre les deux institutions. La signature a eu lieu en marge des réunions de printemps 2026 du Fonds monétaire international et du Groupe de la Banque mondiale.

Dans le cadre de cet accord, la coopération se concentrera sur le renforcement des capacités, le partage des connaissances et la recherche, ainsi que sur l’engagement à travers un dialogue technique, un échange d’informations, des séminaires conjoints et des interactions entre les personnels, dans le respect des règles et procédures internes des deux institutions.

« Dans un monde de plus en plus sujet à des chocs fréquents, la préparation par la coopération est essentielle, a déclaré Pierre Gramegna, directeur général du MES. Ce protocole d’accord fournit un cadre structuré pour approfondir notre dialogue avec la Banque africaine de développement et partager notre expérience dans des domaines tels que le financement de marché, la gouvernance, la prévention et la gestion des crises. »

« Cet accord reflète notre engagement en faveur d’échanges mutuellement bénéfiques, a souligné Dr Sidi Ould Tah, président du Groupe de la Banque africaine de développement. En formalisant notre coopération avec le MES, nous renforçons notre capacité à nous inspirer des meilleures pratiques internationales, notamment dans le cadre des efforts visant à mettre en place le Mécanisme africain de stabilité financière, une priorité approuvée par les chefs d’État et de gouvernement de l’Union africaine. L’Afrique est la seule région à ne pas disposer d’un mécanisme régional de stabilité financière, et cette coopération contribuera à préserver la stabilité financière dans la région. »

Distribué par APO Group pour African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contact médias :
Banque africaine de développement :

Amba Mpoke-Bigg 
Département de la communication et des relations extérieures
courriel : media@afdb.org

Mécanisme européen de stabilité :
Anabela Reis, directrice adjointe de la communication  
courriel : A.Reis@esm.europa.eu

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African Development Bank, The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) sign Memorandum of Understanding to enhance cooperation

Source: APO

The African Development Bank Group (www.AfDB.org) and The European Stability Mechanism (ESM) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to formalise and strengthen cooperation between the two institutions. The signing took place on Wednesday 15 April, on the margins of the 2026 Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group in Washington DC. 

Cooperation under the agreement will focus on capacity building, knowledge sharing and research, as well as cooperation through technical dialogue, information exchange, joint seminars, and staff‑level interactions, subject to the internal rules and procedures of both institutions.

“In a world that has become more prone to frequent shocks, preparedness through cooperation is essential,” said ESM Managing Director Pierre Gramegna. “This MoU provides a structured framework for deepening our dialogue with the AfDB and sharing experience in areas such as market funding, governance, and crisis prevention and management.”

“This agreement reflects our commitment to mutually beneficial exchanges,” African Development Bank Group President Sidi Ould Tah, said. “By formalising our cooperation with the ESM, we are strengthening our ability to draw on international best practices, including in the context of efforts to establish the African Financial Stability Mechanism, a priority endorsed by African Union Heads of State and Government. Africa remains the only region without a dedicated regional financial stability mechanism, and this cooperation will be instrumental in helping safeguard financial stability in the region.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Contact:
African Development Bank
:
Amba Mpoke-Bigg
Communication and External Relations Department,
email: media@afdb.org

European Stability Mechanism (ESM):
Anabela Reis
Deputy Head of Communications
email: A.Reis@esm.europa.eu

About the African Development Bank Group:
The African Development Bank Group is Africa’s premier development finance institution. It comprises three distinct entities: the African Development Bank (AfDB), the African Development Fund (ADF) and the Nigeria Trust Fund (NTF). On the ground in 41 African countries with an external office in Japan, the Bank contributes to the economic development and the social progress of its 54 regional member states. For more information: www.AfDB.org

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