Mostafa Terrab has been the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Moroccan state-owned phosphate-mining company OCP since 2006. Since 2019 Terrab has also been President of the International Fertilizer Organisation. He was an adviser to the late His Majesty King Hassan II and member of the G-14 think-tank, which counted figures such as Taieb Fassi-Fihri and Driss Jettou.
Returning to Morocco in 1992, Terrab was appointed Chargé de Mission to the Royal Cabinet of the late His Majesty King Hassan II before joining in 1995, as Secretary General, the Executive Secretariat of the Economic Summit for the Middle East and North Africa. From 1998, he led the National Agency for Telecommunications Regulation, before joining The World Bank as Lead Regulatory Specialist, where he directed the “Information for Development” program for the support of entrepreneurs with strong growth in emerging economies. Terrab was appointed Chief Executive Officer of OCP in 2006, and then Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the OCP Group when it became a Public Limited Company in June 2008. He is also Chairman of the Mohammed VI Polytechnic University. In June 2019, Terrab became President of the IFA, a global organization bringing together 480 members of the fertilizer industry in 68 countries. He is the first African executive to chair this Association, and is also a member of the Executive Board. In late 2019, Terrab was appointed to a 35-member committee for Moroccan Development, made up of a diverse cross-section of the most respected people in Morocco. The committee will deliver a report to His Majesty King Mohammed VI on the impacts of the reform programs initiated in the Kingdom, across education, society, environment, infrastructure and the economy. The report will also deliver recommendations on best practice and future initiatives.
Personal life
Mostafa Terrab is married and the father of three children.
Awards and honours
In 1998, he received the Frederick C. Hennie III prize for his contribution to the MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science teaching programme. In 2012, Morocco World News named him Person of the Year for his contributions to the "most vital" sector of the Moroccan economy. He was named one of the 100 most influential Africans by New African Magazine in 2013 and one of the 50 most influential Africans worldwide by Jeune Afrique Magazine in 2014.