Overview

Ghana’s strength in multilateral institutions and its leadership among the global south makes it a highly valuable partner for the European Union. While Nigeria tends to receive more attention than other countries in the region because of its size and economy, Ghana often punches above its weight in multilateral forums such as the United Nations – notably, Ghana’s Kofi Annan served as the first and so far only UN secretary-general from sub-Saharan Africa. Historically, the country has also been a leader in decolonisation, spearheading the non-aligned movement and advancing pan-African cooperation and integration, especially in west Africa under the Economic Community of West African States.

Ghana is also one of the freest, best-governed, and least fragile countries on the continent – scoring better than Nigeria and Kenya, the other two “untapped” sub-Saharan African partners. But, despite the adoption of an economic partnership agreement with the EU in 2016 and generally positive relations with the bloc and its member states, interlocutors described other players as more present in and important to Ghana: primarily the United States and China, but increasingly also Turkey and the United Arab Emirates. To keep this strategic partner, Europeans should embrace deeper cooperation, particularly on development and security governance.

In doing so, Europeans should look to build on existing EU development programmes which aim to boost Ghana’s inclusive growth, green transition, and agribusiness. In principle, these align well with President Nana Akufo-Addo’s “Ghana Beyond Aid” agenda. The Bank of Ghana is also among the few African financial institutions to have joined the World Bank’s Sustainable Banking and Finance Network, which advances sustainable development finance, financial market deepening, and stability. Ghana could thus be a valuable partner for the EU in greening international financial institutions, development cooperation, and debt relief.

Global Gateway serves as an organising framework for the EU’s engagement with Ghana. However, from our interlocutors’ perspectives, this has underdelivered. The 2022 EU-AU Summit raised expectations for a sea change in Europeans’ engagement with Ghana and other African partners, only for promised funds to be redirected to Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion. Similarly, the EU long discouraged African partners from investing in fossil-fuel infrastructure, only to reverse its position when Europeans scrambled to diversify their energy imports away from Russia. The dent these caused in the EU’s credibility is yet to be repaired.

To work on its credibility issues, the EU should pursue deeper and more committed cooperation with Ghana. A good place to start is security cooperation, where Ghana is a particularly relevant partner for Europe. While the country has largely been spared the violent extremism engulfing other west African countries, concerns about regional instability and forced displacement led Ghana, along with Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, and Togo to create the Accra Initiative. Headquartered in Ghana’s capital since 2017, the initiative aims to prevent the spillover of violent extremism from the Sahel. These threats also extend to the maritime domain. Instability and diminishing economic opportunities have caused a rise in piracy and narcotics trafficking in the Gulf of Guinea. Illegal fishing by Chinese trawlers operating off the coast of west Africa and rumours about a future Chinese naval presence in Equatorial Guinea have also resulted in Ghana bringing maritime security up its list of priorities and looking for new partners. EU countries have provided some financial support to regional maritime security initiatives and occasionally deployed military vessels to the region. But going forward, a more robust presence would be welcomed by Ghana and other countries along the Gulf of Guinea, particularly given that continued Houthi attacks on ships in the Red Sea are pushing companies to opt for the longer route around the southern tip of Africa and along west African shores.

Ghana is keen to deepen cooperation with the EU and European states in order to advance development and maritime security governance. In turn, Europeans should look to Accra – for its stake in these issues and longstanding leadership in regional and global governance – to find a multilateral ally with regional sway. But the EU must stop flip-flopping and repackaging funds under grandiose-sounding names if it wants to gain credibility as a serious partner for Ghana.