Changeflow GovPing Trade & Sanctions WTO STDF Project Boosts ePing Use in Africa
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WTO STDF Project Boosts ePing Use in Africa

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Summary

The WTO, funded by the Standards and Trade Development Facility (STDF), is implementing a three-year project to strengthen use of the ePing SPS & TBT Platform in five African countries: Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda. The initiative aims to help governments, exporters and other stakeholders track and engage with evolving product requirements affecting international trade. A national workshop is scheduled in Arusha, Tanzania from 28 to 30 April 2026 to launch the in-country implementation phase. In 2025, more than 7,000 SPS and TBT notifications were issued globally, the highest number on record.

“"Timely access to regulatory information is essential for trade," said Deputy Director-General Jean-Marie Paugam.”

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The World Trade Organization publishes dispute settlement filings, agreement notifications, safeguard investigation announcements, trade policy review results, and the committee meeting outputs that shape the multilateral trading system. Around 40 news items a month. Coverage includes new WTO dispute cases, safeguard investigations by individual members (most frequently Madagascar, India, and South Africa in recent filings), Technology Transfer Workshops for Least Developed Countries, and Trade Policy Review meeting outcomes. Watch this if you advise on international trade disputes, represent a country in WTO proceedings, track safeguard measures that affect your imports, or follow the evolution of the Appellate Body impasse.

What changed

The WTO, in partnership with the STDF, has begun implementation of a capacity-building project to expand use of the ePing SPS & TBT Platform across five African countries. The platform, developed jointly by the WTO, ITC, and UNDESA, enables users to follow notified draft SPS and TBT measures in real time, receive tailored email alerts, and engage with regulators before new requirements take effect. The project will conduct national and regional workshops combining hands-on training, peer exchange, and needs-assessment sessions. Feedback from users will inform technological and functional enhancements to make the platform more intuitive and user-friendly.

Governments, exporters, trade associations, and regulatory bodies in the five participating countries should be aware that workshops will be held to strengthen practical use of the platform. As regulatory notification volumes continue to rise globally, effective use of ePing can help traders — particularly small and medium-sized enterprises — avoid compliance costs and rejected exports at the border by improving transparency and enabling early dialogue with trading partners.

Scheduled event

Date
2026-04-28
Location
Arusha, Tanzania

Archived snapshot

Apr 27, 2026

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WTO project aims to step up ePing use to increase transparency and market access in Africa

Implementation of a WTO initiative to strengthen use of the ePing SPS & TBT Platform is now under way, helping governments, exporters and other stakeholders better track and engage in evolving product requirements affecting international trade. Funded by the Standards and Trade Development Facility (STDF), the three year project focuses on five African countries and aims to enhance transparency, predictability and market access.

WTO project aims to step up ePing use to increase transparency and market access in Africa

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- Technical assistance

#STDF

#WTOsps

#WTOTBT

The project is being implemented by the WTO in Kenya, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda. It brings together governments, the private sector and international partners to improve how regulatory information is shared, accessed and used in sectors affected by sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures and technical barriers to trade (TBT).

At its core, the initiative seeks to improve the use of the ePing SPS & TBT Platform to enhance transparency for market access, with a strong focus on raising awareness of the platform, especially in the five African countries where national workshops will take place. These in-country workshops are designed to strengthen practical use of ePing among regulators, enquiry points, exporters, trade associations and other stakeholders who rely on timely regulatory information to access markets.

"Timely access to regulatory information is essential for trade," said Deputy Director-General Jean-Marie Paugam. "As project implementation gets under way, improving how ePing is used on the ground and upgrading the platform based on user feedback will help traders - particularly small and medium-sized enterprises - avoid costly surprises at the border and make better use of market access opportunities."

Governments worldwide continue to introduce and revise regulations related to food safety, animal and plant health, product quality and technical standards. Keeping track of these changes can be challenging, especially for exporters operating in multiple markets. ePing, a tool developed by the WTO, the International Trade Centre (ITC) and the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA), helps address this challenge. ePing is a free, global platform that allows users to follow notified draft SPS and TBT measures in real time, receive tailored email alerts, and engage with regulators before new requirements enter into force.

The urgency of strengthening ePing use is underscored by growing volumes of regulatory activity. In 2025, more than 7,000 SPS and TBT notifications were issued globally, the highest number on record, with African members accounting for an increasing share. As notifications continue to rise, missing or late information can result in rejected exports, compliance costs and lost market opportunities. Effective use of ePing can help mitigate these risks by improving transparency and facilitating early dialogue domestically and with trading partners.

National and regional workshops form a central pillar of project implementation. These workshops will combine hands-on training, peer exchange and needs-assessment sessions to better understand how different users interact with ePing. The workshops will also build on synergies with other projects and tools from international partners, such as ITC's global trade helpdesk.

The workshops will gather structured feedback from users on challenges they face in navigating large volumes of notifications and identifying information that matters most to them. This feedback, to be complemented by a survey among all WTO members, will feed directly into technological and functional enhancements of the ePing platform, aimed at making it more intuitive, responsive and user-friendly.

Project implementation builds on momentum generated at a regional launch event in Nairobi in December 2025, which highlighted the role of digital tools in supporting regulatory transparency. Activities are now moving into a national phase, starting with a workshop in Arusha, Tanzania, from 28 to 30 April 2026, to be followed by similar events across the other participating countries.

By strengthening capacity, raising awareness and incorporating user-driven improvements, the WTO aims to ensure that ePing delivers even greater value - not only in the five participating African countries, but also for WTO members as a whole, contributing to safer, more predictable and more inclusive trade.

More information on ePing is available here.? Information on the STDF project for improving the use of ePing SPS&TBT Platform to enhance transparency for market access is available here.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
WTO
Published
April 27th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Importers and exporters Retailers
Industry sector
4231 Wholesale Trade
Activity scope
Trade facilitation Regulatory transparency SPS/TBT monitoring
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
International Trade
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Trade Facilitation Agricultural Policy Consumer Protection

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