World

12 February 2026

Emanuele Rossi

The second Italy–Africa Summit in Addis Ababa marks a political and financial stocktaking phase for the Mattei Plan within the broader EU–African Union dialogue. Giorgia Meloni’s participation in the AU Assembly reinforces Italy’s ambition to position itself as a strategic bridge between Europe and Africa.

The second Italy–Africa Summitscheduled for tomorrow, Friday, 13 February, in Addis Ababa, represents a significant political milestone for Italy’s strategy on the continent. For the first time, the meeting is being held in Africa and in conjunction with the African Union Summit, on the eve of the 39th Assembly of the Heads of State and Government of the AU. This is not merely a logistical choice: it carries a political message.

From Rome. According to Italian sources, the decision — strongly supported by Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni — to hold the summit in the Ethiopian capital, which hosts the African Union headquarters, aims to consolidate Rome’s ambition to act as a privileged bridge between Europe and Africa, moving beyond approaches perceived as paternalistic and promoting a model of “equal-to-equal” cooperation.

From launch to political stocktaking. The summit marks an assessment of the Mattei Plan, two years after its formal launch. The objective, Italian sources explain, is to review the results achieved so far, gather feedback from African partners and jointly identify operational priorities and working methods for the next phases, reaffirming the Mattei Plan’s nature as an open and evolving platform.

Financial architecture as a key pillar. One of the elements most emphasised by Italian sources concerns the construction of a dedicated financial architecture, as already noted by Daniele Fattibene (IAI) in our sister website Formiche.

The Africa framework. The summit fits within the broader framework of Africa–Europe dialogue and confirms Italy’s commitment to building concrete, results-oriented partnerships with African partners, based on shared interests, shared responsibility and full alignment with the priorities expressed by African nations and the African Union’s Agenda 2063, in synergy with European and multilateral initiatives.

Multilateral dimension and political signal. Participants at the summit will include:

PM Meloni at the AU Assembly: the symbolic step. The day after the summit, also in Addis Ababa, the Prime Minister will participate as a guest of honour in the opening plenary session of the 39th African Union Assembly. According to Italian sources, the invitation represents a signal of trust and recognition of the cooperation that has been consolidated in recent years.

The operational dimension: from energy corridors to AI

The real test. Beyond its symbolic dimension, the Addis summit represents a political stress test. After the launch and structuring phase, the Mattei Plan now enters a stage in which measurable results, financial sustainability and coherence with African priorities will be decisive.