Ressources
Agenda 2063 is Africa’s development blueprint to achieve inclusive and sustainable socio-economic development over a 50-year period.
L'UA offre des opportunités passionnantes pour s'impliquer dans la définition des politiques continentales et la mise en œuvre des programmes de développement qui ont un impact sur la vie des citoyens africains partout dans le monde. Pour en savoir plus, consultez les liens à droite.
Promouvoir la croissance et le développement économique de l'Afrique en se faisant le champion de l'inclusion des citoyens et du renforcement de la coopération et de l'intégration des États africains.
L'Agenda 2063 est le plan directeur et le plan directeur pour faire de l'Afrique la locomotive mondiale de l'avenir. C'est le cadre stratégique pour la réalisation de l'objectif de développement inclusif et durable de l'Afrique et une manifestation concrète de la volonté panafricaine d'unité, d'autodétermination, de liberté, de progrès et de prospérité collective poursuivie par le panafricanisme et la Renaissance africaine.
S.E. le Président William Samoei Ruto (PhD), Président de la République du Kenya et Champion de l'Union africaine pour la réforme institutionnelle. S.E. Ruto a été nommé lors de la 37ème Conférence des chefs d'État et de gouvernement en février 2024 pour promouvoir le processus de réforme institutionnelle de l'UA, succédant à S.E. Paul Kagame, Président de la République du Rwanda, qui a dirigé la mise en œuvre du processus de réforme depuis 2016.
L'UA offre des opportunités passionnantes pour s'impliquer dans la définition des politiques continentales et la mise en œuvre des programmes de développement qui ont un impact sur la vie des citoyens africains partout dans le monde. Pour en savoir plus, consultez les liens à droite.
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 25 January 2018: The African Union will, during the Assembly of the AU Heads of State and Government, launch the Africa Agriculture Transformation Scorecard (AATS) and present the Inaugural Biennial Report on the Implementation of the June 2014 Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth and Transformation for Shared prosperity and improved Livelihoods.
The AATS, the first of its kind in Africa, captures the continent’s agricultural progress based on a pan-African data collection exercise led by the African Union Commission’s Department of Rural Economy and Agriculture (DREA), NEPAD Agency, Regional Economic Communities in collaboration with partners, which has gathered data on up to 43 indicators.
The AATS tracks progress in commitments made by AU Heads of State and Government through the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) and the Malabo Declaration to increase prosperity and improved livelihoods for transforming agriculture.
The AATS captures 23 performance categories and 43 indicators for each of the 55 AU Member States. The indicators chosen to track the performance categories were defined on the basis of the strategic objectives derived from the Malabo Declaration.
In the Malabo Declaration, AU Member States committed to report on a biennial basis, the progress in achieving the 7 commitments of the Declaration with the first report to be presented at the 30th AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government. Preceding this, the “Inaugural Biennial Report on the Implementation of the June 2014 Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth and Transformation for Shared prosperity and improved Livelihoods,” was endorsed by Ministers of Agriculture during the 2nd Specialized Technical Committee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Water and Environment that was held in October 2017, in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia).
“No other agriculture evaluation tool in Africa’s history has ever brought together the AU, all the continent’s regional trade organisations, the private sector, the international development community and all African governments to build Africa’s agriculture and agribusiness markets,” said DREA’s Director Dr. Godfrey Bahiigwa. “The aim is that the AATS will encourage performance across AU Member States, and also provide a tool that can be used by every actor engaged in agriculture, across governments, the private sector, and non-state actors.”
In 2017, the AUC conducted and facilitated 6 training sessions respectively in West (in French and English), East, Central, Southern and North Africa regions, with 156 national experts trained including CAADP Focal Persons, Monitoring and Evaluation Specialists and Statisticians from Ministries of Agriculture and other line ministries.
Almost all AU Member States participated in the training and familiarized themselves with the Malabo Declaration, targets and indicators, and the biennial review reporting format, which has further embedded the culture of mutual accountability in Africa.
The work that has gone into delivering Africa’s most comprehensive agricultural data set has been enormous, but with this new tool set, the AUC has delivered on the Heads of State’s mandate to create tools which, when implemented, will take Africa’s economic growth to a next level.
In addition, five top performing countries in the implementation of the Malabo Declaration commitments will be awarded at the Summit.
The 30th AU Heads of State and Government Summit is scheduled to take place from 28-29 January 2018 under the theme, “Winning the Fight against Corruption: A Sustainable Path to Africa’s Transformation.”
For more information, please contact:
Ms. Carol Jilombo
CAADP Communications
Jilomboc@africa-union.org
Agenda 2063 is Africa’s development blueprint to achieve inclusive and sustainable socio-economic development over a 50-year period.
AUSSOM Ministerial Meeting report