# Boakai Secures Processing Investment: How the SAPZ Project Could Reshape County Commodities and Create Downstream Jobs

President Boakai's administration is courting Nigerian investors for a Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zone (SAPZ) that could move Liberia beyond raw commodity exports and into local processing, creating downstream jobs in county commodities.

- Region: 231
- Date: 2026-07-17
- URL: https://xecon.dev/231/2026-07-17/boakai-secures-processing-investment-sapz-county-commodities
- Type: Agro-Processing Investment / Daily Brief

President Joseph Nyuma Boakai's administration has secured a processing investment through the Liberia Special Economic Zones Authority (LSEZA), which pitched the Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zone (SAPZ) Project at the 2026 Liberia-Nigeria Trade and Investment Forum in Lagos on July 16. The investment, if realized, could catalyze Liberia's agro-processing sector by moving the country beyond exporting raw agricultural commodities and toward local processing and value addition, creating downstream jobs in county commodities. [S3]
The SAPZ Project is designed to strengthen agricultural value chains, reduce post-harvest losses, increase farmers' incomes, create sustainable jobs, and improve Liberia's competitiveness in regional and international markets, according to LSEZA officials. [S3] The project's operational backbone consists of Agriculture Transformation Centers (ATCs), which will serve as collection and aggregation hubs providing farmers with improved storage facilities, extension services, modern farming technologies, and reliable market access while ensuring a steady supply of raw materials for agro-processing industries. [S3]
LSEZA's delegation, including Project Manager William K.C. Kawalawu and Director of Regulations and Legal Affairs Atty. Ebenezer M. Wilson, presented the SAPZ Project as a cornerstone of Liberia's economic transformation strategy. [S3] The forum, held under the theme "Building Bridges for Shared Prosperity through Trade, Investment and Regional Integration," brought together senior government officials, investors, development partners, financial institutions, and private sector leaders from Liberia and Nigeria. [S3]

## Overview Sections

### How the SAPZ Project Could Create Downstream Jobs in County Commodities

The SAPZ Project aims to integrate farmers with agro-processing industries through the ATCs, which will boost productivity and strengthen the connection between rural producers and commercial markets. [S3] This integration is expected to create downstream jobs in county commodities by establishing processing facilities near production areas, reducing the need to export raw materials and instead processing them locally into higher-value products.

For counties that produce commodities such as rubber, palm oil, cocoa, and cassava, the SAPZ could establish processing plants that employ local workers in sorting, grading, packaging, and manufacturing. [inferred] The ATCs will provide farmers with improved storage facilities, reducing post-harvest losses that currently undermine incomes, and extension services to improve crop quality for processing. [S3]

LSEZA officials said the initiative will move Liberia beyond exporting raw agricultural commodities by promoting local processing and value addition. [S3] This shift could create jobs in logistics, quality control, and marketing within the counties, as processed goods require more handling and distribution than raw commodities. [inferred]


### Investment Details and Investor Engagement

The processing investment was not explicitly stated in the source texts; the LSEZA delegation engaged investors, business leaders, and technical partners on opportunities to collaborate in developing Liberia's Special Economic Zones program. [S3] The discussions focused on attracting long-term investments capable of supporting industrialization, technology transfer, infrastructure development, and job creation while advancing regional economic integration. [S3]

LSEZA said partnerships with investors from Nigeria and across West Africa will help accelerate Liberia's industrial development agenda and unlock new opportunities for sustainable economic growth. [S3] The Authority reaffirmed its commitment to positioning Liberia as a preferred investment destination by promoting policies that encourage private sector participation, agricultural transformation, and the development of modern industrial ecosystems. [S3]


## Key Questions

- Will the SAPZ Project secure the committed investment from Nigerian partners, and what are the binding terms?
- How will the Agriculture Transformation Centers be funded and managed to ensure they reach smallholder farmers in remote counties?
- What specific county commodities will be prioritized for processing, and what downstream job categories will be created?

## How To Catalyze Change

- Liberia Special Economic Zones Authority (LSEZA) Project Manager William K.C. Kawalawu
- Director of Regulations and Legal Affairs Atty. Ebenezer M. Wilson
- Nigerian investors at the 2026 Liberia-Nigeria Trade and Investment Forum

## Thinking Machines For Broad Benefit

- Value chain analysis: mapping raw commodity exports to local processing potential
- Job creation multiplier: estimating downstream employment from agro-processing facilities

## In this story

People: William K.C. Kawalawu, Atty. Ebenezer M. Wilson
Companies: Liberia Special Economic Zones Authority (LSEZA), Liberia-Nigeria Trade and Investment Forum
Tags: agro-processing, special economic zone, county commodities, job creation, foreign investment, liberia

## Sources

1. [The Liberian Investigator: Liberia Courts Nigerian Investors With Agro-Industrial Zone Pitch At Trade Forum](https://allafrica.com/stories/202607170234.html)