The Afri-Caribbean Investment Summit 2026, scheduled for March in Abuja, aims to unlock a combined $40 trillion market spanning Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas, building on landmark deals from its inaugural 2025 edition including a $40 million deep-water port agreement.
The Afri-Caribbean Investment Summit 2026 is scheduled for March 23-28 in Abuja, Nigeria, organised by Aquarian Consult Limited. The summit targets a combined market valued at $40 trillion across Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas. Two new specialised events will run alongside the main investment programme: the Afri-Caribbean Agriculture and Food Security Summit on March 23-24 and the Afri-Caribbean Health Summit on March 26, with the core Investment Summit running March 25-28.
The event will feature structured Business-to-Business and Business-to-Government matchmaking sessions, an Investor Deal Room managed by investment promotion agencies, and sector-specific engagements covering agriculture, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, renewable energy, tourism, digital technology, and the creative economy. Over 2,000 participants are expected, including current and former heads of government, sovereign wealth funds, multilateral institutions, and private sector leaders.
The inaugural 2025 summit achieved several firsts, including the establishment of the first direct flight from Africa to Saint Kitts and Nevis and a $40 million deep-water port agreement.
The combined market value across Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas that ACIS 2026 aims to unlock through trade and investment partnerships
Africa-Caribbean trade currently represents less than one percent of total trade between the regions, indicating significant untapped potential for growth
Over 2,000 participants expected to attend ACIS 2026, including current and former heads of government, sovereign wealth funds, multilateral institutions, and private sector leaders
A major infrastructure deal secured at the inaugural 2025 ACIS summit, demonstrating concrete investment outcomes from the platform
The inaugural direct flight from Africa to Saint Kitts and Nevis, established as a result of the 2025 ACIS summit, carried 120 business mission participants
ACIS 2026 runs from March 23-28, 2026, with specialized agriculture and health summits running March 23-24 and March 26 respectively, alongside the main investment summit March 25-28
Africa-Caribbean trade currently represents less than 1% of total trade between regions, indicating a massive untapped opportunity that ACIS 2026 aims to address through structured B2B and B2G matchmaking sessions
The 2025 inaugural summit produced tangible outcomes including the first-ever direct Africa-Caribbean flight and a $40 million deep-water port agreement, establishing ACIS as a platform delivering 'actionable finance' rather than just diplomatic engagement
The 2026 summit expands scope with specialized agriculture and health summits alongside the main investment program, reflecting focus on food security and healthcare innovation as key growth sectors for Africa-Caribbean cooperation
With 2,000+ expected participants including heads of government and sovereign wealth funds, ACIS 2026 positions itself as a premier marketplace connecting African and Caribbean businesses with global capital and investment networks
For the Caribbean, ACIS 2026 represents a potential paradigm shift in how the region sources investment and builds trade partnerships. With Africa-Caribbean trade sitting below one per cent, even modest growth could yield significant economic benefits for small island developing states.
The focus on reducing Caribbean import dependence through agricultural partnerships and healthcare infrastructure investment addresses two of the region's most persistent vulnerabilities. The structured B2B and B2G matchmaking sessions and Investor Deal Room signal a move beyond rhetoric toward actionable deals.
"Trade between Africa and the Caribbean currently represents less than one per cent of total trade between the regions, despite a combined market valued at $40 trillion across Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas."
— Aquarian Consult Ltd briefing, Abuja
ACIS as a strategic catalyst for South-South cooperation: Organisers position ACIS as a platform to fundamentally reshape Africa-Caribbean economic relations. They point to the inaugural summit's tangible outcomes — including the first direct Africa-to-Caribbean flight and a $40 million port deal — as proof of concept for scaling South-South investment.
Caribbean as a gateway to broader American markets: The summit framework positions the Caribbean not merely as a destination but as a strategic corridor to Central and South American markets. This reframes Caribbean economies as bridges within a $40 trillion trading bloc, potentially elevating their geopolitical and economic significance.
LAC-Africa cooperation as part of a wider South-South agenda: A broader LAC conference panel on CELAC-Africa partnerships highlights how South-South cooperation is moving from aspiration to a results-oriented agenda, with the African diaspora in the Caribbean region serving as a bridge for exchange, innovation, and bi-regional leadership.
"By focusing on agriculture and healthcare, we aim to strengthen regional cooperation, enhance food security, open new export markets for African producers, and support policy frameworks that reduce import dependence in the Caribbean."
— Serumun Ubwa, Chief of Staff, Aquarian Consult Ltd, via ACIS 2026 Set to Open $40trn Africa-Caribbean Investment Market
Less than one per cent. That is the current trade share between Africa and the Caribbean — two regions bound by history, culture, and diaspora, yet economically estranged. Against a $40 trillion combined market spanning Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas, that figure is not just underwhelming; it is indefensible.
ACIS 2025 proved sceptics wrong with a direct flight to Saint Kitts and Nevis and a $40 million port deal. The 2026 edition's focus on agriculture, food security, and healthcare targets the Caribbean's deepest vulnerabilities — import dependence and fragile health systems. That is strategic, not symbolic.
But Caribbean delegations must arrive in Abuja in March with bankable proposals, not just handshakes. The region has seen too many summits produce MOUs that gather dust. If ACIS delivers on its matchmaking promise and deal-room ambitions, it could reshape how small island states build economic resilience beyond traditional Western corridors.
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