Agenda 2063 is a set of initiatives proposed and currently under implementation by the African Union. It was adopted on 31 January 2015 at the 24th Ordinary Assembly of the Heads of State and Governments of the African Union in Addis Abeba. The call for such an agenda was first made by the 21st Ordinary Assembly on 26 May 2013, 50 years after the foundation of the Organisation of African Unity, as a plan for the next 50 years. The stated goals of the Agenda are economic development, political integration, improvements in democracy and justice, establishment of security and peace on the entire African continent, strengthening of cultural identity through an "African renaissance" and pan-African ideals, gender equality, and political independence from foreign powers. The First Continental Report on the Implementation of Agenda 2063 was presented by PresidentAlassane Ouattara of Côte d’Ivoire on 10 February 2020, marking the beginning of a biennial reporting cycle. It measures progress against a set of goals defined for the first Ten-Year Implementation Plan and was launched together with an interactive online dashboard showing progress in individual areas of the Agenda as well as geographical regions.
Flagship projects
The Agenda includes 15 so-called flagship projects, which have been identified as being key to enabling and accelerating progress in all areas of development. These are:
A high-speed train network connecting all African capitals and commercial centres
The formulation of a strategy for transforming the African economy from a supplier of raw materials to one that actively uses its own resources
The foundation of a Great African Museum, preserving African cultural heritage and promoting pan-Africanism
The compilation of an Encyclopaedia Africana as an authoritative resource on the authentic history of Africa and African life
Implementation
The African Continental Free Trade Area was established by an agreement adopted in March 2018 and will be operational from 1 July 2020. The African Investment Bank and African Monetary Fund are nominally established, with headquarters to be built in Tripoli, Libya and Yaoundé, Cameroon, respectively. Egypt is set to host the African Space Agency. The Pan African Virtual and E-University has been created as the digital arm of the Pan-African University and is offering an initial set of three courses. Many of the projects are held back by lack of funding, such as the high-speed train network, the space agency, and the Inga Dam.