Accra APD reframes hydrogen, gas markets—opportunity for Air Products & Chemicals
- AfCFTA dialogues boost demand for cross‑border industrial gas projects that companies like Air Products & Chemicals can serve.
- Rising hydrogen and industrial‑gas demand targets Air Products & Chemicals’ core markets: manufacturing, mining and chemicals.
- SME scaling increases need for oxygen, nitrogen, argon and hydrogen, expanding markets Air Products & Chemicals can supply.
Accra conference reframes market for industrial energy suppliers
AfCFTA-driven dialogues at the Africa Prosperity Dialogues (APD) in Accra are sharpening a market case for cross‑border industrial energy and gas projects that firms such as Air Products & Chemicals can serve. More than 7,000 delegates from 104 countries convene at the Accra International Conference Centre to press for a borderless Africa under the theme “Empowering SMEs, Women, and Youth in Africa’s Single Market,” and discussions repeatedly return to infrastructure, financing and regulatory alignment that underpin large-scale industrial supply chains.
Hydrogen and industrial gases emerge as strategic enablers
Pan‑African momentum around the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is creating demand signals for energy carriers, industrial gases and associated logistics that support manufacturing, mining and chemicals sectors — core markets for Air Products & Chemicals. Delegates outline priorities such as cross‑border value chains, digital trade platforms and access to capital, which together reduce project risk and lower barriers to deploying electrolyser capacity, industrial gas plants and cryogenic shipping routes that the company supplies. Policy sessions and trade dialogues stress the need for harmonised standards and predictable tariffs, elements that industry executives identify as prerequisites for capital‑intensive hydrogen and gas infrastructure.
Industry players are also watching SME and women‑led growth as a source of aggregate demand. Scaling small and medium enterprises across borders requires reliable oxygen, nitrogen, argon and hydrogen supplies for food processing, pharmaceuticals and light manufacturing, making regional gas networks more attractive to investors. Conversations at APD emphasize blended finance, public‑private partnerships and technical assistance to build local capacity, all of which can accelerate uptake of industrial gas services and green hydrogen projects in multiple African markets.
Consultancy engagement bridges policy and private sector
Representing TheAfricanDream Consultancy, Managing Editor Abeeb Lekan Sodiq uses the APD platform to connect private‑sector actors with policymakers, meeting high‑level figures including Ghanaian Ambassador Amma Twum‑Amoah. These engagements aim to translate conference recommendations into concrete partnership opportunities and policy reforms that reduce entry costs for international suppliers of industrial gases and clean energy.
Policy recommendations focus on practical enablers
Across panels, delegates push for measures to catalyse investment, boost export capacity, improve access to capital and digital infrastructure, and advance reforms supporting women‑led and youth entrepreneurship — all targeted outcomes that could broaden the market for industrial gas and hydrogen suppliers as Africa deepens economic integration under AfCFTA.
