Africa Awaits Its Moment as ICCA Prepares to Unveil 2025 Rankings at IMEX Frankfurt

When the global meetings industry converges on Frankfurt in May, attention will once again turn to the data that shapes destination strategies worldwide. At a press conference during IMEX Frankfurt, the International Congress and Convention Association (ICCA) will present its much-anticipated 2025 Country and City Rankings Report, alongside new technology solutions designed to redefine how destinations bid for and win international association meetings.The International Congress and Convention Association (ICCA) is a global community and knowledge hub for the international association and governmental meetings industry. ICCA represents the world’s top destinations and most experienced suppliers, specialised in handling, transporting, and accommodating international meetings and events.

For Africa, the unveiling is more than a calendar highlight. It is a moment of reflection, expectation, and quiet ambition.

The context is clear. According to the 2024 ICCA rankings, Africa accounted for just under 400 international association meetings, roughly 3% of the global total. Europe continued to dominate by volume, followed by Asia-Pacific and North America. Yet the African story in 2024 was never purely about numbers. It was about trajectory. Countries such as South Africa, Morocco, Rwanda, Kenya and Egypt consolidated their positions as continental leaders, while cities like Cape Town, Kigali, Marrakech and Nairobi demonstrated that Africa can host meetings that are not only competitive, but strategically relevant.

The 2024 data also reinforced a defining African characteristic – purpose-driven meetings. A high proportion of events hosted on the continent were linked to healthcare, education, energy, agriculture and development policy. In contrast to mature markets where scale and rotation often drive decisions, Africa’s meetings ecosystem remains closely aligned with national and regional priorities. This alignment, increasingly, is what global associations are seeking.

As ICCA prepares to release the 2025 rankings, expectations for Africa are cautiously optimistic. Few expect a dramatic leap in overall market share. Structural realities – air connectivity, funding constraints and uneven infrastructure – remain. However, there is growing confidence that Africa will show incremental but meaningful gains, particularly in city performance and sector-specific meetings.

One factor shaping those expectations is ICCA’s expanding intelligence capability. At the Frankfurt press conference, the association will unveil upgrades to its Business Intelligence Tool and introduce tailored technology solutions aimed at improving bid success and uncovering new association opportunities. For African destinations, often operating with lean teams and limited resources, access to sharper data could prove transformational.

Even more significant is the launch of ICCA’s inaugural GlobeWatch: Global Government Meetings Intelligence Report. Mapping more than 2,300 government meetings across 124 countries, the report shines a light on a segment where Africa has long been active but undercounted. Government-led and intergovernmental meetings are central to Africa’s convening power, and their formal recognition within ICCA’s analytics ecosystem could reshape how the continent’s influence is perceived.

ICCA leadership has been clear about the direction of travel. President Marta Gomes and CEO Senthil Gopinath have consistently framed data not as a scoreboard, but as a strategic tool for growth. That philosophy resonates strongly in Africa, where meetings are increasingly viewed as catalysts for trade, policy alignment and skills transfer.

Dr. Senthil Gopinath, CEO ICCA

As Frankfurt beckons, Africa’s place in the 2025 ICCA rankings will likely reflect steady progress rather than headline-grabbing shifts. Yet beneath the numbers, the signals are unmistakable. Africa is organising with greater intent, bidding with sharper focus, and positioning itself not just as a host region, but as a platform for the world’s most consequential conversations.

In the long arc of the global meetings industry, Africa’s story is still being written. IMEX Frankfurt may not deliver a dramatic chapter, but it will almost certainly confirm that the continent is moving in the right direction – deliberately, strategically, and with growing confidence.

Founded in 1963, ICCA specialises in the international association meetings sector, offering unparalleled data, education, and communication channels, as well as business development and networking opportunities. The organisation consists of more than 1,100 members in almost 100 countries worldwide.

Today, ICCA is one of the most prominent organisations in, and advocates forthe world of international meetings. The ICCA Association Community offers associations across the world education, connections, tools, and resources to help them organise more effective and successful meetings.

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