Why Kenya wants embassies turned into trade engines

Business
By James Wanzala | Feb 14, 2026

Prime Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs, Musalia Mudavadi, addressed the media on 19 March 2025. [Jenipher Wachie, Standard]

The platforms aim to close AfCFTA’s execution gap by converting trade promises into financed deals.

New digital infrastructure will also connect exporters, financiers, and diplomatic missions to boost cross-border transactions.

Kenya has unveiled two digital trade platforms aimed at transforming African embassies into active commercial hubs.

The move is emerging as a shift from policy talk to deal-making under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

The platforms, BiasharaLink and Deal House, were launched at a high-level reception in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on the sidelines of the 39th African Union Summit.

The event brought together senior government officials, ambassadors, representatives of the African Union(AU), multilateral development institutions, and private sector leaders.

The initiative is designed to accelerate the implementation of the AfCFTA by closing what leaders termed as "Africa’s trade execution gap”, viewed as a persistent disconnect between trade agreements and actual cross-border transactions.

The platforms seek to digitise and coordinate trade opportunities generated through Africa’s more than 1,000 diplomatic missions.

Speaking during the launch, Prime Cabinet Secretary and Foreign Affairs CS Musalia Mudavadi said the move marks a new era in economic diplomacy.

“BiasharaLink and Deal House represent a new model of economic diplomacy; one that is results-oriented. It provides a common platform for capturing and organising opportunities. It connects opportunity to execution. Together, the platforms turn diplomacy into delivery,” Mudavadi said.

Equity Group CEO James Mwangi framed the launch as a structural turning point for Africa’s trade architecture.

“Africa does not suffer from a lack of opportunity. We suffer from a lack of structured execution. When we institutionalise execution, growth becomes predictable,” said Mwangi.

He noted that while trade agreements have laid the groundwork for integration, the real test lies in converting commitments into financed, bankable transactions.

“A trade agreement is a promise. A financed transaction is in progress. Our role is to bridge that gap,” he said.

Mwangi described the partnership between government and private sector as the building of a “trade superhighway,” anchored on digital infrastructure that connects producers, buyers, logistics providers, and financiers in one seamless system.

“Digital infrastructure is the new trade corridor. It is finance in one seamless flow. Integration becomes real the moment a product crosses a border, a payment is settled, and value is created on both sides,” he said.

He emphasised that Africa’s small and medium-sized enterprises are not short on competitiveness, but on access.

“Africa’s SMEs are competitive. What they require is structured access to markets and finance. When you solve that, you unlock scale,” Mwangi said.

He added that trade must shift from informal networks to institutional systems.

“Trade must move from informal relationships to formal systems. Systems create transparency. Transparency creates confidence. Confidence attracts capital,” he said.

Mwangi cautioned that AfCFTA should not be viewed as a single milestone but as a sustained process.

“AfCFTA is not an event. It is an execution journey. And execution requires platforms, partnerships, and patient capital. Diplomacy must now deliver measurable economic outcomes. It must originate deals, structure transactions, and close opportunities,” he said.

Under the new framework, BiasharaLink will function as a digital registry where diplomatic missions, exporters, and investors formally capture and track trade and investment opportunities aligned with AfCFTA priorities.

Deal House will serve as the execution layer, validating opportunities, matching credible counterparties, linking transactions to financing, and pushing them toward contract closure.

Felix Chege, founder and CEO of Real Sources Africa, said the idea was born out of a stark reality.

“We realised that our embassies collect 3,500 trade enquiries a month, but the closure rate of deals was less than one per cent. Our main goal is to build the infrastructure and ecosystems that can drive trade, investment, and financing to move this continent forward,” Chege said.

AfCFTA Secretary-General Wamkele Mene said the initiative comes at a time when global supply chains are increasingly fragmented.

“As the world is moving ever closer to supply chain disruptions and increased industrial protectionism, our continent is moving in the opposite direction. We have no alternative but to succeed; we have to build a very strong domestic market,” Mene said.

Mathias Kamp, Regional Director at Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, said five years after its launch, AfCFTA’s promise remains largely untapped.

“The AfCFTA needs to move to the next level. Five years on, the potential remains untapped. I’m convinced that what we are launching today will be a significant step forward in unlocking trade,” Kamp said.

The launch highlights Nairobi’s intent to anchor its foreign policy on commercially measurable outcomes, aligning with Kenya’s leadership role in AfCFTA implementation under the President.

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