Agroecological products—such as organic honey, herbs, horticultural produce, traditional grains, and other sustainably farmed commodities—form a growing segment of Africa’s intra-regional trade. However, because they are agricultural and often perishable, they are subject to stringent customs, sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS), and technical barriers to trade (TBT) procedures. These requirements aim to ensure consumer safety, maintain fair trade, prevent pest and disease spread, and uphold environmental and sustainability standards.
The East African Community (EAC) and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) both emphasise trade facilitation through harmonised border management, mutual recognition of standards, and digitalisation of customs processes, while ensuring inclusivity for women and youth traders under the AfCFTA Protocol on Women and Youth in Trade.
Before goods reach the border, traders or clearing agents must ensure that all required documents are in place and submitted electronically. These include:
|
Required Document |
Purpose |
Issuing Authority / System |
|
Commercial Invoice & Packing List |
Indicates product description, quantity, and value for customs valuation. |
Exporter |
|
Certificate of Origin (CoO) |
Confirms origin under EAC or AfCFTA for preferential treatment. |
Issued by national customs or chambers of commerce. |
|
Phytosanitary / Veterinary Certificate |
Confirms the product meets SPS requirements. |
Issued by competent authorities (e.g., KEPHIS, TPHPA, UNBS, RBS, ZABS). |
|
Organic / Agroecological Certification |
Verifies that products are produced according to agroecological or organic standards. |
Certified bodies (e.g., Participatory Guarantee Systems, Kilimo Hai). |
|
Import / Export Permit |
Required for regulated goods such as seeds, honey, or animal products. |
National ministries of agriculture/trade. |
Traders with a history of compliance (e.g., cooperatives, exporters certified as Authorised Economic Operators – AEOs) may use green lanes, benefiting from:
Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) controls are central to maintaining the integrity of agroecological products and protecting human, animal, and plant life. These measures ensure that traded goods are safe for consumption, pest- and disease-free, and produced in accordance with ecological and sustainability standards.
For agroecological products, SPS verification is not only about biosecurity; it also reinforces the credibility of organic and ecological claims, ensuring that products meet the expectations of consumers and buyers across regional and international markets.
SPS inspections are conducted at multiple stages — from production and export certification to cross-border checks at One-Stop Border Posts (OSBPs) and entry ports. The institutional ecosystem includes plant health authorities, veterinary services, port health units, and standards agencies working collaboratively under Coordinated Border Management (CBM).
Each EAC Partner State has designated agencies responsible for SPS enforcement and certification.
| Country | Plant Health | Animal Health | Food Safety / Port Health |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kenya | KEPHIS | Directorate of Veterinary Services | Ministry of Health – Port Health Dept. |
| Tanzania | TPHPA | Ministry of Livestock & Fisheries | TBS / Port Health |
| Uganda | Department of Crop Inspection (MAAIF) | NADDEC | Ministry of Health – Port Health |
| Rwanda | RICA | RARDA | Rwanda FDA |
| Burundi | Direction de la Protection des Végétaux | Département de la Santé Animale | Ministry of Health |
| South Sudan | Ministry of Agriculture & Food Security | Ministry of Animal Resources | Ministry of Health |
Digitisation improves efficiency, traceability, and real-time validation in SPS certification.
Reform Measures:
| Stage | Responsible Authority / Actor | Main Activities | Tools & Systems Used | Output Document | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Farm-level Pre-Certification | Farmers, Cooperatives, Certification Bodies | Field audit, compliance check | PGS tools, checklists | Audit report, organic certificate | 3–5 days |
| 2. SPS Inspection Application | Exporter / Trader → National SPS Authority | Online submission | ePhyto, e-Cert portal | Application receipt | Same day |
| 3. Inspection & Sampling | SPS Inspectors | Verification, sample collection | Mobile SPS apps, GPS tagging | Inspection report | 1–2 days |
| 4. Laboratory Testing | Accredited Labs | Residue/pest analysis | LIMS | Test results | 1–3 days |
| 5. Certificate Issuance | Competent Authority | Review & issue SPS certificate | ePhyto / e-Cert / IPPC Hub | Phytosanitary / Vet / Health Certificate | Same day |
| 6. Border Clearance | Customs, Port Health, SPS Officers | Joint verification | ASYCUDA / TANCIS / iCMS | Release form | 2–6 hours |
| 7. Post-Border Monitoring | SPS Authorities / Committees | Traceability audit | SPS compliance database | Audit report | Periodic |
TBT measures ensure that products meet technical regulations, standards, and conformity assessment requirements for safety, quality, and environmental integrity.
For agroecological products—such as organic honey, herbs, grains, and horticultural produce—TBT compliance reinforces market credibility and guarantees that the product meets
the expectations of consumers, buyers, and import authorities. Unlike SPS measures, which safeguard biological safety, TBT controls focus on product characteristics, labelling, packaging,
and quality assurance systems.
The Act enables Partner States to jointly develop East African Standards (EAS) that reflect sustainable and eco-friendly trade practices.
See: Catalogue of East African Standards 2023
| Institution | Role in TBT Compliance |
|---|---|
| EAC Secretariat (Standards & Quality Unit) | Coordinates regional standards harmonisation and SQMT implementation. |
| National Standards Bodies (KEBS, TBS, UNBS, etc.) | Develop and enforce standards, testing, and certification. |
| EAC Technical Committee on TBT | Facilitates dialogue and resolves inter-State technical disputes. |
| National TBT Enquiry Points | Provide information and respond to queries from traders and Partner States. |
| Private Sector Associations (EABC, Chambers of Commerce) | Represent trader interests and promote voluntary standards adoption. |
Disputes (e.g., rejection of certified goods) are addressed through TBT Enquiry Points, SQMT Committees, and AfCFTA Dispute Settlement Mechanisms.
Strategic Responses:
The Simplified Trade Regime (STR) is a flagship trade facilitation mechanism under the EAC Customs Union Protocol designed to assist small-scale cross-border traders—particularly women, youth, and informal traders—who dominate the agroecological and agricultural produce markets.
Agroecological products such as organic maize, honey, vegetables, beans, bananas, and herbs constitute a significant share of informal and small-scale trade flows within the region.
The STR enables such traders to legally access regional markets, benefit from duty-free preferences, and avoid harassment and delays at border posts.
Lists are periodically reviewed by bilateral committees involving Customs, Trade, and Agriculture authorities.
| Form | Name / Purpose | Issued By |
|---|---|---|
| Form 1 – Simplified Customs Declaration Form | Serves as both import/export declaration; captures trader details, product description, value, and origin. | Border Customs Officer |
| Form 2 – Simplified Certificate of Origin (SCO) | Confirms that goods originate within the EAC and qualify for duty-free entry. | Customs / Revenue Authority of exporting country |
Supporting documents such as invoices, receipts, or ID may be requested for verification.
| Area | Benefits |
|---|---|
| Financial | Duty-free entry, reduced compliance costs, no agent fees. |
| Procedural | Simplified documentation, same-day clearance, single inspection. |
| Inclusivity | Empowers women, youth, and cooperatives in agroecological trade. |
| Transparency | Formalises informal traders, enhances trade data collection. |
| Trade Facilitation | Integrates with OSBP operations, reduces congestion and delays. |
Reform Priorities:
| Institution / Stakeholder | Role in STR Implementation |
|---|---|
| EAC Secretariat – Trade Directorate | Policy coordination, regional monitoring, and product list review. |
| National Revenue Authorities (KRA, TRA, URA, RRA, etc.) | Customs administration and issuance of Simplified Certificates of Origin. |
| Ministries of Trade / Industry | Policy support, training, and awareness creation. |
| Border Management Committees (BMCs) | Coordinate border agencies and address bottlenecks. |
| Cross-Border Trade Associations & Cooperatives | Trader sensitisation, peer education, and advocacy. |
| Development Partners (TMEA, UNCTAD, AfDB, ACBF) | Provide technical and financial support for infrastructure and digitalisation. |
Transit procedures are critical for ensuring the smooth, secure, and efficient movement of agroecological products that must pass through one or more countries en route to their final destination. Because many EAC Partner States are land-linked (e.g., Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan), goods in transit must comply with regional customs, SPS, and TBT protocols to maintain safety, quality, and traceability across borders.
Policy Responses:
Rules of Origin (RoO) determine the economic nationality of a product, identifying whether it qualifies for preferential tariff treatment under regional trade agreements such as the EAC Customs Union and the AfCFTA.
For agroecological goods, RoO are especially important because they:
A product qualifies for preferential treatment if it meets one of the following criteria:
Proof of origin is demonstrated through:
A women’s cooperative in Rwanda producing organic banana flour sources bananas from Uganda and packaging from Kenya:
These developments will strengthen Africa’s position in eco-friendly intra-African trade and promote inclusive growth through agroecological value chains.
Efficient customs clearance is essential for facilitating agroecological trade while maintaining compliance with fiscal, safety, and environmental regulations. Customs authorities across the EAC and AfCFTA apply internationally recognised procedures under the WTO Customs Valuation Agreement (CVA) and EAC Customs Management Act (EACCMA) to ensure fair, transparent, and predictable trade processes.
For agroecological products—such as organic honey, coffee, grains, fruits, and herbal products—customs valuation and clearance are tailored to promote trade facilitation, preferential treatment, and integrity verification of eco-certified goods.
The clearance process is primarily digital across EAC Partner States through systems such as ASYCUDA World, TANCIS, iCMS, and EAC e-Single Window.
Every declaration undergoes risk assessment based on trader history, product type, and compliance profile. Clearance channels include:
Customs valuation determines the dutiable value of imports in line with WTO rules.
| Method | Description | Applicability |
|---|---|---|
| Transaction Value | Actual price paid or payable for goods. | Most common for agroecological goods with invoices and proof of origin. |
| Identical Goods | Uses customs values of identical imports. | For standard items like organic honey or dried herbs. |
| Similar Goods | Based on similar goods of same origin and characteristics. | Useful where specific data is missing. |
| Deductive Value | Based on resale price minus costs. | Rare for perishables but used where resale data exists. |
| Computed Value | Cost of production + profit margin. | For processed agroecological products. |
| Fall-back Method | Applied when other methods fail. | For informal or mixed consignments. |
| System / Tool | Function |
|---|---|
| ASYCUDA World / TANCIS / iCMS | Core customs declaration and valuation systems |
| National Single Windows | Integrate customs, SPS, and TBT data for unified clearance |
| e-Payment Systems | Enable digital payment of duties and fees |
| e-Manifest & e-Tracking | Monitor shipments electronically |
| Risk Management Modules | Automate profiling and channel assignment |
| AfCFTA e-Tariff & NTB Portals | Provide tariff schedules and NTB resolution mechanisms |
Joint inspections reduce duplication and improve transparency, especially for perishables.
| Area | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Speed | Pre-arrival processing & risk-based release reduce delays |
| Cost Savings | Preferential tariffs & simplified digital clearance |
| Transparency | Real-time valuation & data sharing minimise discretion |
| Sustainability | Green Channel rewards eco-compliant trade |
| Trust & Predictability | Post-clearance audits uphold integrity |
| Challenge | Response |
|---|---|
| Inconsistent valuation across borders | Harmonised EAC–AfCFTA reference databases |
| Limited trader knowledge | Capacity-building for MSMEs and cooperatives |
| Under-invoicing in informal trade | Digital record linkage between customs & tax authorities |
| Delayed audits | Automated PCA management tools and feedback |
These innovations strengthen Africa’s shift toward inclusive, efficient, and environmentally responsible trade facilitation.

