Geography of the African Union


The African Union covers almost the entirety of continental Africa and several off-shore islands. Consequently, it is wildly diverse, including the world's largest hot desert, huge jungles and savannas, and the world's longest river.

Overview

The AU presently has an area of 29,922,059 km², with 24,165 km² of coastline. The vast majority of this area is on continental Africa, while the only significant territory off the mainland is the island of Madagascar, accounting for slightly less than 2% of the total.

Extreme points

Countries bordering the African Union

The AU has two land borders: Morocco borders the Spanish semi-enclaves of Ceuta, Melilla, and Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula borders the Gaza Strip for 11 km and Israel for 400 km on its western frontier. Since it is Asian, the Sinai is the only territorial region of the AU on another geopolitical continent.

Previous borders

The AU is the successor to the Organisation of African Unity, an international organization that gradually included sovereign African states as the continent was decolonized. The membership of the African Union, and consequently its borders, have not changed since its founding.

Founding of the OAU: May 25 – December 13, 1963

, Comoros, Mozambique, and São Tomé and Príncipe join the OAU.

February 27 – June 29, 1976

joins the OAU.

February 22, 1982 – November 12, 1984