Keypoints:
- ECOWAS and AfDB induct corridor authority board
- Highway aims to link five West African economies
- Financing mobilisation and staffing plans underway
THE Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the African Development Bank (AfDB) have advanced implementation of the Abidjan–Lagos Corridor Highway following a two-day orientation session for the Board of Directors of the Abidjan–Lagos Corridor Management Authority (ALCoMA).
The induction programme, held in Abidjan on February 19–20, 2026, represents a key operational milestone after the Authority’s governing board was officially sworn in during the 22nd Ministerial Steering Committee meeting of the corridor project in December 2025.
Organisers said the exercise signals a shift from institutional formation toward execution for one of West Africa’s most ambitious regional infrastructure projects.
A strategic corridor linking five economies
Stretching approximately 1,028 kilometres, the Abidjan–Lagos Corridor Highway is designed to connect Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo, Benin and Nigeria along a densely populated coastal route that accounts for a large share of West Africa’s trade and economic activity.
During the orientation, board members were briefed on the Corridor Treaty, which establishes the project’s supranational governance structure and outlines strategic objectives endorsed by the participating heads of state.
Presentations also examined technical studies underpinning the highway’s development, including transport and trade facilitation systems, logistics integration, spatial planning initiatives and value-chain opportunities expected to emerge along the corridor.
Officials emphasised that the project is conceived as an economic development platform rather than a standalone road, combining infrastructure investment with industrial growth and regional market integration.
Building governance frameworks for implementation
A significant portion of the session focused on strengthening the institutional and legal foundations needed to manage a multinational infrastructure authority.
Board members reviewed intergovernmental agreements and draft international instruments establishing both the highway and its management framework. Discussions also covered internal governance procedures, including the Authority’s charter, operational rules and recruitment plans for senior leadership positions.
The selection process for a Director General, administrative officers and technical staff was introduced as a priority step toward making the Authority fully operational.
Stakeholders noted that coordinated governance will be essential to ensuring smooth cross-border operations once construction begins.
ECOWAS calls for accelerated delivery
Chris Appiah, ECOWAS Director of Transport, led the regional bloc’s delegation and highlighted the importance of adopting an integrated economic corridor approach.
He said the initiative combines transport infrastructure with trade facilitation measures aimed at unlocking socio-economic opportunities across the sub-region.
Appiah urged participating countries and partners to intensify collaboration to deliver tangible progress, stressing that improved connectivity could significantly enhance regional competitiveness and reduce logistical bottlenecks.
According to ECOWAS officials, seamless cross-border mobility remains central to achieving deeper economic integration across West Africa.
AfDB reaffirms financing leadership
Mike Salawou, Director for Infrastructure and Urban Development at the African Development Bank, commended ECOWAS and member states for operationalising the corridor authority and reaffirmed the Bank’s role as mandated lead arranger.
He said the AfDB would work alongside the ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development (EBID) and other partners to mobilise financing required for the project’s construction phase.
‘Our fellow citizens are waiting for us to move along this corridor, to carry out their socioeconomic activities and facilitate trade in our sub-region,’ Salawou said.
The Bank has already provided technical assistance and about $25 million in early-stage support as feasibility assessments and project structuring near completion.
Infrastructure lessons from Abidjan project visit
As part of the orientation programme, delegates visited one of Abidjan’s major bridge developments, described as the city’s fourth-largest bridge project. The infrastructure has significantly reduced congestion, particularly in Yopougon, the country’s most populous municipality with an estimated population of two million residents.
The African Development Bank mobilised approximately €600 million for the bridge, alongside €103 million from the Japan International Cooperation Agency and €6.4 million from the Global Environment Facility.
Officials presented the project as a practical example of how coordinated financing and planning can deliver large-scale transport solutions with measurable economic and social benefits.
A 2030 vision for regional integration
The Abidjan–Lagos Corridor Highway is widely viewed as a flagship initiative supporting ECOWAS regional integration ambitions and Africa’s broader continental trade goals under the African Continental Free Trade Area.
By linking ports, industrial zones and commercial centres across five countries, the highway is expected to lower transport costs, strengthen supply chains and stimulate cross-border investment by the end of the decade.
According to information released by ECOWAS and the African Development Bank Group, the establishment of ALCoMA marks a decisive step toward implementation as the project moves closer to financing closure and construction.
The corridor is ultimately envisioned as a transformative economic artery capable of reshaping trade flows and supporting millions of daily economic activities across West Africa by 2030.


























