How Benin is on the road to reshaping its cotton industry, with China’s help
Benin, Africa's largest cotton producer, is improving its cotton industry infrastructure with international assistance. For decades, transporting cotton from the north to southern ports and processing plants was hindered by poor road conditions.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedBenin, Africa's largest cotton producer, is improving its cotton industry infrastructure with international assistance. For decades, transporting cotton from the north to southern ports and processing plants was hindered by poor road conditions. A new 184km road connecting Djougou to Banikoara, a major cotton-producing region, is nearing completion to address this bottleneck. This project, co-financed by the European Union and the Africa Growing Together Fund (funded by China and administered by the African Development Bank Group), aims to facilitate the movement of cotton to the Glo-Djigbé Industrial Zone (GDIZ). The GDIZ is part of Benin's strategy to stop raw cotton exports and currently processes a fifth of the national harvest into finished clothing for global brands.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedBenin is Africa’s largest cotton producer.
The Africa Growing Together Fund is a US$2 million facility funded by the People’s Bank of China.
The road project has been co-financed by the European Union and the Africa Growing Together Fund.
A 184km road project from Djougou to Banikoara is nearing completion to ease transport bottlenecks.
The Glo-Djigbé Industrial Zone (GDIZ) now processes a fifth of the national cotton harvest into finished clothing.