The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention is expected on Friday to formally present a revised five-year strategic financing framework at a high-level convening in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, building directly on the organisation's announcement this week that it had achieved 95% budget utilisation and secured $463 million in grants during the previous fiscal cycle.
Senior officials, including Africa CDC Director-General Dr. Jean Kaseya, are set to outline benchmarks for reducing the continent's reliance on external donors by increasing domestic government health contributions from African Union member states. The framework is designed to institutionalise the funding gains made in 2025 and create resilient financing channels that persist independent of geopolitical aid fluctuations.
The announcement comes at a moment of heightened scrutiny over global health funding, with several major donor nations — including the United States — having scaled back multilateral health commitments. Africa CDC's leadership has repeatedly stressed that the organisation must accelerate its path toward financial self-sufficiency, a message that gained fresh urgency following cuts to USAID-linked programmes earlier this year.
The new plan is expected to include tiered contribution targets for member states based on GDP, a continental health emergency reserve fund, and expanded public-private partnership mechanisms targeting pharmaceutical manufacturing and disease surveillance infrastructure. South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya are anticipated to be among the first signatories to pilot financing commitments under the framework.
Health policy analysts tracking the organisation say the timing is deliberate — presenting a credible financial track record alongside a forward-looking roadmap is intended to attract sovereign bond investors and development finance institutions, including the African Development Bank, which has signalled interest in co-financing pandemic preparedness infrastructure across sub-Saharan Africa.