By Michael Chomba (Nairobi), Joseph Murunga (Nairobi), Agnes Akello (Kampala), Theobald Rwamugira (Dar es Salaam)
Early this month (7th March 2026), EAC Heads of State concluded their 25th Ordinary Summit in Arusha, Tanzania under the theme "Deepening Integration for Improved Livelihoods of EAC Citizens," officially launching the Seventh EAC Development Strategy (2026/27–2030/31) and issuing a firm directive to eliminate all remaining non-tariff barriers by June 30, 2026. The Strategy is ambitious on paper: it prioritizes deepening trade integration, enhancing production and value addition in productive sectors, developing regional infrastructure, and accelerating the transition to green and digital economies, while aligning with EAC Vision 2050, the African Union's Agenda 2063 and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The critical question is not whether these objectives are the right ones — they are — but whether East Africa will treat green industrialization as the organising architecture that ties them together, rather than a footnote to conventional development thinking.
Europe's Green Deal (EGD) offers a compelling precedent: EU’s long-term growth strategy to make its economy climate neutral by 2050 while boosting competitiveness, protecting nature and ensuring a just transition. The Green Deal Industrial Plan, which is the operational engine of the EGD, is centered on four pillars: a simplified regulatory environment, enhanced financing, skills development, and open trade with resilient supply chains.