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East African Community (EAC)

EU trade relations with the East African Community. Facts, figures and latest developments.

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African, Caribbean, Pacific (ACP)East African Community (EAC)
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Economic PartnershipsNegotiations and agreementsTrade policy

The East African Community (Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda) finalised negotiations for an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the EU on 16 October 2014.

The European Commission submitted a proposal for conclusion, signature and provisional application of the full EPA with the East African Community (EAC) to the Council in February 2016.

Kenya and Rwanda signed the EPA in September 2016, and Kenya ratified it. However, the EPA could not be applied as it required signature and ratification by all the EAC countries.

Upon the request of Kenya and based on the EAC Summit decision of February 2021 to move forward under 'variable geometry', the EU and Kenya engaged on 17 February 2022 to advance on the bilateral implementation of the EU-EAC EPA, with the addition of trade and sustainable development provisions.

The EU and Kenya announced on 19 June 2023 the political conclusion of their negotiations for an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). The agreement aims to implement the provisions of the EAC EPA, and it will be open for other EAC countries to join in the future.

South Sudan became the sixth member of the EAC in September 2016.

Trade picture

  • Exports to the EU from the East African Community are mainly coffee, cut flowers, tea, tobacco, fish and vegetables.
  • Imports from the EU into the region are dominated by machinery and mechanical appliances, equipment and parts, vehicles and pharmaceutical products.

The EU and the East African Community

Burundi, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda are on the UN’s list of Least Developed Countries (LDCs), while Kenya is a non-LDC.

The countries in the East African Community are members of the WTO with the exception of South Sudan.

The EU-EAC EPA covers trade in goods and development cooperation. It also contains a chapter on fisheries, mainly to reinforce cooperation on the sustainable use of resources. The agreement provides for further negotiations on services and trade-related rules in the future.

The deal is in line with the EAC Common External Tariff. It bans unjustified or discriminatory restrictions on imports and exports. This helps the EAC's efforts to get rid of non-tariff barriers in intra-EAC trade.

Factsheet on the Interim Economic Partnership Agreement between the EU and the East African Community

Trading with the East African Community

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