Guinea Digitizes Public Procurement with Launch of TELEMO Platform

Guinea has taken a major step toward modernizing its public sector operations with the launch of TELEMO, a national digital procurement platform aimed at transforming ......

Guinea Digitizes Public Procurement with Launch of TELEMO Platform

Guinea has taken a major step toward modernizing its public sector operations with the launch of TELEMO, a national digital procurement platform aimed at transforming how government contracts are managed and awarded.

Introduced in Conakry on May 22, the platform marks a shift away from paper-based procurement systems toward a fully digital framework designed to improve efficiency, transparency, and oversight across public contracting processes. The initiative was developed in collaboration with Rwanda, a country widely recognized for its advances in digital governance and public service digitization.

TELEMO centralizes the full procurement cycle within a single online platform, allowing institutions to handle procurement planning, tender announcements, bid submissions, evaluations, contract awards, and document archiving electronically. Authorities expect the system to significantly reduce administrative delays while improving accountability in public spending.

The rollout forms part of Guinea’s broader efforts to modernize public financial management and accelerate the digital transformation of government services. Public procurement plays a crucial role in the national economy, representing between 11% and 15% of Guinea’s GDP, making the sector a strategic area for reform.

The government also sees the platform as a way to improve access to public contracts for small and medium-sized enterprises by simplifying participation and increasing visibility into procurement opportunities. Both local and international companies will be able to access procurement processes through the online system.

Across West Africa, public procurement remains one of the region’s largest economic sectors. According to estimates from the World Bank, procurement spending accounts for roughly 11.5% of GDP across the sub-region, totaling nearly $80 billion annually in public spending on goods, infrastructure, and services.

Beyond digitizing procedures, Guinea aims to use TELEMO to strengthen governance standards, improve the business environment, and align its procurement practices with the performance and transparency standards increasingly adopted by leading African economies.

Officials believe the initiative could help position Guinea as a more competitive and investment-friendly economy while supporting broader goals around economic inclusion, digital governance, and public sector efficiency.