(Togo First) - The United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) will support Togo through a new Country Partnership Program (CPP) for 2026 to 2030. A framework agreement was signed by the two sides on the sidelines of UNIDO’s 21st General Conference, held from Nov. 23 to 27, 2025, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Togo’s Minister of Economy and Strategic Foresight, Badanam Patoki, and Minister Delegate for Investment Promotion, Arthur Lilas Trimua, attended the signing ceremony.
The program aims to help Togo implement its industrial development priorities in line with the Sustainable Development Goals, particularly Goal 9 on industry, innovation and infrastructure. It will focus on improving industrial governance, building technical skills, and rolling out sustainable energy and environmental initiatives.
The CPP also targets the expansion of agro-industrial value chains, a key sector for increasing local processing of agricultural outputs, and prioritizes the development of the Agbélouvé industrial park.
“The CPP offers tailored support based on Togo’s priorities. It forms part of the country’s broader structural transformation efforts,” said Tidiane Boyé, UNIDO’s regional representative for Côte d’Ivoire, Benin, Niger and Togo, speaking recently in Lomé.
The Togolese government sees the partnership as a tool to accelerate the country’s industrial transformation. Officials expect it to stimulate investment, modernize production systems and strengthen the competitiveness of the manufacturing sector.
Under the new framework, Lomé aims to boost its appeal to investors, fast-track major industrial projects and position Togo as a regional hub for production and exports.
Esaïe Edoh