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Partners across regions globally
This section highights collaborations and policy developments in R&I involving partner institutions across regions of the Global South.
FARA: Unlocking Africa’s Agri-Food System Through Evidence-Based Policy Decisions
The Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme (CAADP) continues to drive Africa’s ambition for agricultural growth and food security through evidence-based policymaking. The Strengthening Evidence-Based Policy Practice for Sustainable Food Systems (StEPPFoS) project, funded by the European Union and coordinated by FARA, plays a vital role in this mission.
In partnership with the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre, WUR, Hohenheim, Agrinatura, ECDPM, and ACU, StEPPFoS builds the capacities of African researchers to link data with decisions. It strengthens the Pan-African Network for Economic Analysis of Policies (PANAP), a key platform supporting informed agricultural and food system reforms.
By aligning efforts within the Food and Nutrition Security and Sustainable Agriculture (FNSSA) framework, StEPPFoS is bridging the gap between policy and practice to foster sustainable, evidence-driven growth across Africa.
RUFORUM: African Universities urged to reinvent themselves to stay relevant to the economy
This article published by RUFORUM on 23rd October 2025 highlights how Artificial Intelligence (AI) is now embedded in daily life and transforming education worldwide. For Africa, AI presents an opportunity to leapfrog longstanding barriers despite limited resources. Experts emphasize that universities must align graduates’ skills with the demands of a digital, AI-driven economy. Governments in Kenya, Rwanda, and South Africa are already advancing national AI strategies to harness this potential.
Key priorities include revising curricula, building faculty capacity, ensuring ethical AI use, and strengthening industry partnerships.
AI can drive innovation in climate-smart agriculture, health, and governance.
Regional collaboration through the AfCFTA can further enhance research, knowledge exchange, and mobility. With global AI adoption accelerating, inaction could widen the digital divide.
Africa’s universities must lead this transformation — or risk being left behind.
Stronger research and innovation cooperation between Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean
Representatives from the European Union and the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) adopted a Ministerial Declaration and a New Agenda for Cooperation in Research and Innovation. The agreements set out shared priorities, concrete actions, and governance to guide bi-regional cooperation in the years ahead. Work will start immediately with the launch of dedicated Working Groups on health, climate change, environmental sustainability and energy transition, and artificial intelligence in science. These groups, open to voluntary participation from EU and CELAC countries, will prepare 18-month action plans to put these commitments into practice.
Their coordination will be supported by a permanent mechanism linking the European Commission and the CELAC Pro Tempore Presidency. Ministers will reconvene every two years to review progress, agree on new priorities and provide strategic steer of the bi-regional cooperation.
In 2023, during the EU–CELAC Summit, ministers adopted a joint Declaration and endorsed the New EU–LAC Agenda, giving fresh political momentum to cooperation between the two regions. The agenda called for a dedicated Ministerial meeting on research and innovation to turn that momentum into concrete actions.
Egypt becomes second African country to join Horizon Europe
At the EU–Egypt Summit held in Brussels on 21 October 2025, Egypt has officially joined Horizon Europe, becoming the second African country associated to the EU’s multibillion-euro research and innovation (R&I) programme. This grants Egyptian researchers, universities, innovators and entities access to all parts of the programme on similar terms to those of EU Member States. It enables them to lead projects, contribute to cutting-edge research, and support national research reforms and institutional capacity-building.
This milestone builds on the long-standing EU-Egypt cooperative relationship, providing a platform for strengthened partnership in tackling global challenges, from digital transformation to climate action. It also strengthens regional research and innovation collaboration. The agreement extends Egypt’s participation in the Partnership for Research and Innovation in the Mediterranean Area (PRIMA) to enhance water management, farming systems and food value chains.
In April 2025, the EU and Egypt successfully concluded negotiations on Egypt’s association to Horizon Europe, reinforcing Egypt’s research and innovation capacities and strengthening its role in regional and international scientific collaboration.
Partnership for Research and Innovation in the Mediterranean Area (PRIMA)
PRIMA is a public-public institutionalized Article 185 European Partnership between the European Union and Participating States. The aim of PRIMA is to build research and innovation capacities and develop knowledge and common innovative solutions in the Mediterranean area in the following thematic areas: water management, farming systems and food value chain.
Since 2019, PRIMA has been integrating into its calls the Water–Energy–Food–Ecosystems (WEFE) Nexus approach to address water, energy, food, and ecosystems as interdependent components of a unified system. The PRIMA programme implementation follows a long-term Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA), which provides the vision and strategic direction for the partnership’s actions. PRIMA is a very successful instrument of international cooperation for research and innovation and a good example of science diplomacy in the Mediterranean, a region of geopolitical important for the Union, based on mutual benefit, equal footing, co-ownership, co-decision, and co-financing.
PRIMA is a ten-year initiative (2018-2028), partly funded by EU’s research and innovation programme Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe. More HERE
EU Pact for the Mediterranean: One Sea, One Pact, One Future
On 16th October 2025, the European Commission and the High Representative set out a new ambitious strategy to strengthen EU relations with its Southern Mediterranean partners.
- People as drivers of innovation and connection, featuring initiatives in higher education, research, youth mobility, and skills development. A Mediterranean University will serve as a flagship project fostering academic and scientific collaboration across the region.
- Stronger, sustainable and integrated economies, promoting research-driven growth in clean technologies, the blue economy, agriculture, digitalisation, and connectivity.
- Security, preparedness and migration management to strengthen regional stability.
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