Kenya signing an EU trade agreement strengthens Brussels’ relations to Africa.

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During a ceremony in Nairobi on Monday, Kenya and the European Union inked a trade agreement. This is the first significant agreement with an African nation since 2016 that Brussels has sought to strengthen economic connections with in order to compete with China’s demand.

As a victory for Brussels as it seeks closer economic links with Africa in the face of competition from China, Kenya and the European Union have inked a trade agreement.

On Monday, a ceremony in Nairobi marked the official end of talks for the EU-Kenya Economic Partnership Agreement under the leadership of Kenyan President William Ruto.

Kenya would get duty-free and quota-free access to the EU, its largest market and the destination of around one-fifth of all exports, if the agreement is confirmed and put into effect.

Imports from the EU to Kenya such as chemicals and machinery will receive progressive tariff reductions over a period of 25 years, but some sensitive products will be excluded.

“Today is a very proud moment for Kenya, and I believe a very proud moment for the European Union,” Kenyan Trade Minister Moses Kuria said after signing the accord with EU Trade Commissioner Valdis Dombrovskis.

Kenya’s main exports to the EU are agricultural products, including vegetables, fruits and the country’s famous tea and coffee.

More than 70 percent of Kenya’s cut flowers are destined for Europe.

Ruto, who said the EU was “the second most important development partner for Kenya after the World Bank” said the country’s farmers could be “assured of a predictable market” and the agreement provides new opportunities to boost this trade.

“It ensures a stable market for industrialists, for our farmers, and also industrialists in the European Union,” he said.

Dombrovskis said EU companies had invested 1 billion euros ($1.1bn) in Kenya in the past decade, but that there was “a strong appetite” to do more business.

“With this deal in place, we have the right platform to do so,” he said.

It is the first broad trade deal between the EU and an African nation since 2016 and follows a spending spree by China on lavish infrastructure projects across the continent.

The EU has taken steps to counter China’s Belt and Road program, announcing in February it would increase investments in Kenya by hundreds of millions of dollars through its own Global Gateway initiative.

It is part of a trend of African nations being wooed by Western partners in recent years as Russia and China increasingly gain a foothold in Africa.

Dombrovskis said the East African powerhouse was “a beacon of dynamism and opportunity”, echoing the international perception of Kenya’s relative stability in what remains a turbulent region.

In a briefing with reporters before Monday’s ceremony, Dombrovskis said Africa was a “priority region” for the EU, and he hoped the Kenya deal would “be a boost” to future trade links with Africa.

The Kenya deal is the culmination of trade talks between the EU and the East African Community (EAC) that started roughly a decade ago.

In 2014, the EU and the EAC, then Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, Burundi and Tanzania finalized negotiations for an economic partnership agreement, but only Nairobi ended up ratifying it.

Kenya went its own way, but Dombrovskis said the agreement remained open for other members of the EAC, which now includes the Democratic Republic of the Congo and South Sudan, to join.

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