The African Union (AU) has opened applications for the 2026 Food and Energy Sovereignty Challenge, a continent-wide innovation initiative designed to support African startups, SMEs, and deeptech companies developing solutions for food and energy security.
The challenge seeks to identify and scale African-built technologies capable of strengthening the continent’s industrial capacity, climate resilience, and long-term economic independence.
According to the AU, the programme aims to mobilise a new generation of “Sovereignty Builders” capable of transforming proven innovations into large-scale continental solutions.
AU Targets Food and Energy Sovereignty Through Innovation
The African Union Food and Energy Sovereignty Challenge focuses on two major tracks designed to address some of Africa’s most pressing development challenges.
Track A: Innovation for Food Sovereignty
This category targets solutions that improve agricultural productivity, food systems, supply chains, climate-smart farming, and sustainable food security across Africa.
The AU is seeking innovations capable of strengthening local food production while reducing dependence on external systems and imports.
Track B: Innovation for Energy Sovereignty
The energy track focuses on technologies that improve access to reliable, sustainable, and locally driven energy systems.
Solutions may include renewable energy technologies, energy storage systems, grid innovations, clean cooking solutions, or industrial energy infrastructure designed for African markets.
Eligibility Requirements for the AU Sovereignty Challenge
Applications are open to citizens of African Union member states leading legally registered organisations.
To qualify, applicants must meet the following conditions:
- The company must be at least 51% owned by African citizens, including diaspora Africans
- The business must be legally registered
- The innovation must have a Technology Readiness Level (TRL) of 6 or higher
- The solution must align strictly with either food sovereignty or energy sovereignty
The AU stated that the challenge targets businesses with proven prototypes or market-ready technologies capable of scaling across the continent.
Benefits for Selected African Innovators
Selected participants will gain access to several growth and market expansion opportunities designed to help scale their solutions into continental ventures.
Industrial and Market Expansion Support
The programme will provide support for industrial scalability, helping innovators increase production capacity and expand into larger African markets.
Participants will also receive institutional support aimed at facilitating public procurement opportunities across national and regional markets.
Investor and Government Access
The AU challenge includes strategic networking opportunities with venture capital firms, institutional investors, and high-level government stakeholders.
Selected innovators may also participate in official African Union trade, innovation, and business missions across international markets.
Continental Visibility
Successful applicants will be featured in the “Africa Food & Energy Sovereignty Catalog 2026,” providing additional visibility for their innovations and businesses.
Submission Requirements for Applicants
Applicants must submit a structured application that includes:
- A 300-word problem statement
- A 500-word innovation and implementation summary
- A 500-word impact and outcomes report
- A pitch deck in PDF format
- A three-minute video demonstration or external link
- Legal registration and intellectual property documentation
The AU noted that all submissions must comply with the specified file size and format requirements.
Application Deadline
The deadline for the African Union Food and Energy Sovereignty Challenge 2026 is May 25, 2026, by 23:00 EAT (GMT+3).
Applicants with inquiries can contact:
FoodEnergySovereignty@AfricanUnion.org
Interested innovators can also visit the official African Union webpage for additional details and application guidelines.

