Kigali will host the 26th East African Community Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Trade Fair from 30 October to 8 November 2026. The event signals a sharper policy focus on regional value chains and import substitution in leather and horticulture. For investors, the fair flags a coordinated push to localise production, deepen standards, and crowd in capital across East Africa’s manufacturing and agribusiness sectors.
The decision to award hosting rights to Kigali was taken at the 48th Meeting of the EAC Sectoral Council on Trade, Industry, Finance and Investment, held in Arusha, Tanzania. The choice of Rwanda aligns with the bloc’s broader agenda to strengthen cross-border value chains and support MSMEs as anchors of industrialisation.
This year’s fair will prioritise the leather sector, where the growth story is clear and the supply gap is stark. A mid-term review of the EAC Leather Strategy (2020–2030) shows regional footwear demand rose from about 130 million pairs in 2017 to nearly 290 million pairs in 2024. Local production stands at only around 17 million pairs. Imports dominate a market projected to reach roughly 385 million pairs by 2030.
For manufacturers, this gap represents a sizeable opportunity in basic footwear, higher-value fashion products, and intermediate leather goods. The fair is designed to connect tannery operators, footwear producers, designers, logistics providers, and retailers. It will also draw in investors interested in new plants, technology upgrades, and brand development.
The EAC will also use the platform to promote regional brands under its Buy Made in East Africa initiative. That campaign aims to shift consumer demand towards locally produced goods and build scale for regional champions. This is an important signal for private equity and strategic investors seeking demand visibility.
Horticulture will form the second pillar of the 2026 edition. It reflects the sector’s role in food security, rural incomes, and export earnings. Agriculture accounts for more than 25% of the region’s GDP, and horticulture is central to both domestic markets and high-value export chains.
The fair will concentrate on technology adoption, quality-standards compliance, and stronger value-chain linkages. The aim is to boost competitiveness and access to regional and global markets. This creates a ready pipeline for providers of cold-chain logistics, seed and input companies, irrigation and greenhouse technology, packaging, and certification and testing services.
According to EAC Deputy Secretary General for Customs, Trade and Monetary Affairs, Annette Ssemuwemba, the event will convene MSMEs, investors, policymakers, researchers, and development partners. It will serve as a platform for trade, knowledge exchange, innovation, and partnerships. She also links the fair to a broader effort to promote consumption of locally produced goods and to enhance regional competitiveness.
Alongside the EAC MSME trade fair, Kigali will host the EAC Quality Awards 2026. These awards recognise enterprises that excel in quality management, standards compliance, innovation, and continuous improvement. The awards aim to entrench a stronger quality culture, improve the competitiveness of local goods and services, and support deeper regional integration.
For investors, the combination of a sector-focused MSME fair and quality awards points to a maturing policy environment. Standards, branding, and value-addition now matter as much as volumes. As preparations advance, capital allocators will watch how EAC governments translate this agenda into concrete incentives, cross-border regulatory alignment, and project pipelines in leather, horticulture, and related services.
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