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    Home » Africa positions regeneration at the heart of the global blue economy agenda

    Africa positions regeneration at the heart of the global blue economy agenda

    March 9, 2026
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    *Aerial view of Durban’s Nelson Mandela Cruise Terminal

    Durban, South Africa — Ocean Innovation Africa (OIA), in partnership with eThekwini Municipality as host city, will hold its 2026 summit in Durban, from 23 to 25 March at the International Convention Centre.

    The Summit is aimed at positioning Africa at the forefront of the global shift from a sustainable to a regenerative blue economy, and brings together policymakers, investors, scientists, entrepreneurs, development finance institutions and community leaders to accelerate implementation, unlock capital and investment, and coordinate tangible action across the continent’s ocean economy.

    As host city and main partner, the eThekwini Municipality demonstrates its active leadership in advancing the blue economy by looking towards how to strengthen coastal management, support maritime and port-linked innovation, and align local development strategies with climate resilience and ocean sustainability objectives. By hosting OIA 2026, eThekwini reinforces Durban’s position as an important continental hub for ocean innovation, investment, and policy leadership.

    “As climate pressures intensify and ocean degradation accelerates globally, our continent stands at a defining moment,” says Alexis Grosskopf Founder of OceanHub Africa and spokesperson for Ocean Innovation Africa .“With more than 38 coastal and island states and a rapidly expanding ocean economy, Africa has a unique opportunity to lead a regenerative model, one that restores ecosystems, strengthens long-term stability and drives equitable economic growth.”

    Unlike traditional conferences, Ocean Innovation Africa operates as an ongoing action platform.

    “We’ve structured the Summit to move past conversation and into real, coordinated action with the right people and organisations,” explains Grosskopf.

    The 2026 Summit, will focus on regenerative blue business models and nature-positive growth; blue finance pathways, from aid to local and blended capital, marine protection, economic expansion and community stability, pan-African innovation ecosystems and solution-oriented workshops and curated Business-to-Business matchmaking and investor meetings and dialogues.

    Following the public summit, a smaller, invitation-only Ocean Impact Retreat (25–27 March) will convene select stakeholders to deepen alignment across finance, policy, science, innovation and delivery infrastructure. While not open to the broader public, this working session is designed to ensure that momentum generated at the summit translates into practical next steps.

    The global ocean economy is valued in the trillions of dollars annually, yet overfishing, habitat loss, pollution and climate change are undermining both ecological stability and economic security. Incremental sustainability is no longer sufficient.

    “Africa is setting a new global benchmark for the ocean space and OIA 2026 is designed to coordinate such action – we bring finance, policy, science and entrepreneurs in the same room to ensure that commitments move into implementation. Africa has the opportunity to build a regenerative blue economy from the outset – one that restores ecosystems, strengthens communities and delivers economic growth within planetary boundaries.”, says Grosskopf.

    By convening African and international stakeholders under a regenerative framework, OIA aims to move beyond commitments towards coordinated implementation and measurable outcomes.

    “We expect that investors, policy-makers, and innovators will join forces and co-ordinate strategies to tackle priority bottlenecks, drive practical collaborations, scale solutions, and reinforce Africa-led regenerative framing within global ocean dialogues.”

    With increasing global attention on ocean-climate solutions and post-2030 development pathways, OIA 2026 positions Africa as both contributor and leader in shaping the future of the blue economy.

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