Sierra Leone readies to become big food exporter. But is it possible?

Sierra Leone is taking on chunks of investment in a bid to position itself as a key player in the global food export market.

Positioned near the key cocoa-producing countries of Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana, and with a similar climate, the country has the potential to be a key exporter of commodities such as, alongside cocoa, cashew, rice and cassava.

However, the it does face significant challenges. According to the World Food Programme​, 82.3% of its population are food insecure, and because of a lack of key processing infrastructure it must import large amounts rice to meet demand.

The country has received $100m from the African Development Bank, building on the existing $480m of funding from OPEC and the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA).

This funding is only part of the country’s broader plan to transform its food system. It hopes to build critical infrastructure to, first, mitigate food insecurity and meet the demand of its own people and, in the long run, step up exports.

How will the funding reduce be used?

The recent African Development Bank funding will be allocated as part of a larger plan, Sierra Leone’s ‘Feed Salone’ initiative, which includes money from the government, NGOs, and the private sector. It aims to transform Sierra Leone’s food system, both combating food insecurity and expanding exports.

According to Dr. Henry Musa Kpaka, Sierra Leone’s Minister for Agriculture and Food Security, the project is ‘conservatively’ costed at $1.8bn.

How will the funding reduce food insecurity?

Sierra Leone’s rice consumption per capita is one of the highest in the world, roughly 131kg per person a year. The country is currently between 65-70% rice self-sufficient, according to Dr. Kpaka, yet due to poor processing infrastructure it must heavily import rice to meet demand and close the gap. This is not inconsequential, and around a third its food import bill is spent on rice.