Liberia Deepens EU Partnership to Drive Agricultural Industrialization
[February 26, 2027 – Brussels] The Government of Liberia, in partnership with the European Union, successfully convened the Liberia–EU Business Forum 2026 in Brussels on 24–25 February 2026, reaffirming Liberia’s commitment to investment-led growth and strategic international partnerships.
Held under the theme “The ARTS in the ARREST – Invest in Liberia 2026”, the Forum highlighted priority investment opportunities under Liberia’s ARREST Agenda for Inclusive Development (AAID), the Government’s five-year national strategy aimed at driving inclusive economic growth and positioning Liberia on a pathway toward middle-income status.
The ARREST Agenda focuses on Agriculture, Roads, Rule of Law, Education, Sanitation, Trade, and Tourism—opening diverse avenues for foreign direct investment and structured public–private partnerships. Agriculture was a cornerstone of the strategy, reflecting its central role in job creation, food security, rural transformation, and export growth.
The Forum was convened under the patronage of the Directorate-General for International Partnerships (DG INTPA) with support from the Embassy of Liberia to the Kingdom of Belgium. Over two days, the program featured high-level plenary sessions, targeted investment showcases, technical roundtables, and structured networking engagements. It brought together Liberian and EU policymakers, development finance institutions, private investors, business leaders, and members of the Liberian diaspora, creating a dynamic platform for strategic dialogue and concrete deal-making opportunities.
In his keynote address, Agriculture Minister Dr. J. Alexander Nuetah emphasized that Liberia is moving beyond traditional primary commodity exports and is prioritizing agro-industrial development, value addition, mechanization, and inclusive out-grower integration.
“Our vision is clear,” Minister Nuetah stated. “Liberia is not simply open for investment; Liberia is ready for agro-industrial transformation that creates jobs, strengthens food security, and builds resilient rural economies.”
The Government presented bankable opportunities across five priority agricultural value chains: rice, cassava, maize, coffee, and oil palm. These sectors are being developed through integrated production systems that combine commercial farming with structured smallholder participation, ensuring inclusive growth, sustainability, and compliance with international standards, including EU traceability and ESG requirements.
Discussions during the Forum focused on climate-smart agriculture, blended finance mechanisms, sustainable supply chains, and long-term investment partnerships to reduce risk while ensuring mutual value creation.
The EU-funded Food Systems Governance Technical Assistance Project, managed by AESA, supported the Ministry’s participation and facilitated strategic bilateral engagements between Liberia’s delegation and potential investors and financial institutions. This collaboration reinforces Liberia’s commitment to governance reform, policy alignment, and investment readiness.
The Liberia–EU Business Forum 2026 was more than an investment event; it served as a gateway to building sustainable partnerships that foster growth, innovation, and resilience. It signals Liberia’s transition from aid-based cooperation to structured, investment-driven engagement and underscores the Government’s determination to modernize agriculture as a key driver of economic transformation.
As implementation of the ARREST Agenda advances, the Ministry of Agriculture remains committed to translating strategic dialogue into tangible investments that strengthen rural livelihoods, expand agro-processing capacity, and accelerate national development.
