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Prof. Alex Dodoo (2nd from right), President of African Organisation for Standardisation, interacting with Dr Hermogène Nsengimana, Secretary-General of ARSO
Prof. Alex Dodoo (2nd from right), President of African Organisation for Standardisation, interacting with Dr Hermogène Nsengimana, Secretary-General of ARSO

Let’s promote standards to industrialise Africa - Prof. Dodoo

The President of the African Organisation for Standardisation (ARSO), Professor Alex Dodoo, has called on ARSO member countries to seize the opportunities embedded in the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to industrialise the continent and position it as a global manufacturing hub.

With current economic uncertainties across the globe, he said, the world needed Africa because of its abundant natural resources, which must be processed into value-added products in accordance with accepted standards.

That, he said, would help rake in the needed revenue to support the continent’s development. “Africa’s time has arrived, and it is apt that the African Renaissance in trade and industrialisation is being rekindled in Addis Ababa with standardisation as the key tool for industrial transformation and accelerated trade”.

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Prof. Dodoo, who is also the Director General of the Ghana Standards Authority, made the call yesterday at the 67th ARSO Council Meetings in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia where a high powered assembly of leaders of the continent's standards community have gathered.

The meeting, which opened on November 27, is expected to officially close on December 2, this year. It is the first meeting chaired by Prof. Dodoo since he was officially sworn into office as ARSO President in June this year at the ARSO General Assembly in Cameroon.

Trade enabler

Prof. Dodoo cautioned the member countries of ARSO not to use standards as a punitive tool against industry but rather as an enabler that drove trade and ensured sustainability.

Standards, he explained, were critical tools for trade and Africa should use standards to unite Africa and not to restrict trade across the continent.

“As I have said repeatedly, once tariff barriers are removed between countries, non-tariff barriers become prominent and we at ARSO must work with our governments to eliminate these non-tariff barriers because standards should not be stumbling blocks for intra-Africa trade.

“Remember, where there are no standards, there is no trade. Where there is no trade there is no economy. And where there is no economy there are NO jobs,” he said. Going forward, Prof. Dodoo outlined some key milestones that must be achieved to ensure the quick realisation of the continent's industrial development. “Africa must and will industrialise, starting now,” he said.

He said Africa’s industrialisation would be sustainable because Africa can learn from other geographies what worked and what did not work.“Africa’s industrialisation and rapid growth will be inclusive since it is our females, our mothers and sisters and daughters who will lead this industrialisation and since no one will be left behind because in Africa, the concept of the family is each for all and all for God and Allah, so together, we shall industrialise,” he said. He added that “We will pay attention to females, the youth, the vulnerable and to marginalised groups”.

We will listen to them and work with them to drive industrialisation across Africa. Already, most SMEs in Africa are female-led and they are transforming our economies. All we need to do is to support their scale-up and expansion across the continent”.

Roadmap

To position the continent’s trading community on the path of rapid growth, Prof. Dodoo said there was a need to put in place some measures and score some significant policy goals. Among other things, he said there was a need for a harmonised regulatory framework and adoption of African Standards to address TBTs in Africa for increased Intra-African Trade and capacity-building and standardisation education, support to SMEs, standardisation experts, consumers and the youth.

He said it was also important to facilitate partnerships and collaborative efforts with the Africa Union, AfCFTA Secretariat, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), Afreximbank, AfDB, private sectors, donors and facilitate the formulation of the African Union Regulatory Directives, Summit decisions and legislations that promote Quality Infrastructure and Common Regulatory Framework.

Prof. Dodoo said it was also critical to ensure the promotion of Mutual Recognition Arrangements, which currently have been initiated by ARSO and being championed by Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa and Zimbabwe, while also focusing on universal membership of ARSO by all African countries.


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