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AGP Executive Report

Your go-to archive of top headlines, summarized for quick and easy reading.

Note: AI summary from news headlines; neutral sources weighted more to help reduce bias in the result. Feedback is welcome. Please let us know if you have any comments or suggestions about the AGP Executive Report.

Energy Skills & Regulation: LERC and the University of Liberia signed an MoU to build an energy auditing curriculum, aiming to grow local capacity for energy efficiency and better electricity-sector management. Power Expansion: Liberia switched on its first grid-connected utility-scale solar plant, the 20MW Mount Coffee Solar Park, with plans to expand capacity and add battery storage through World Bank-backed funding. Solar Project Milestone: EU-funded Greenville solar works hit a major milestone after installation of all 1,500 PV modules, moving the city closer to reliable clean power. Electrical Standards: LERC and IECD Liberia signed an MoU to strengthen licensing and certification for electrical professionals and contractors under the CLEPCR program. Local Electrification Logistics: New split electricity meters arrived in Buchanan as part of an EU-backed €42m push to expand distribution and customer connections. Agriculture & Coffee: LACRA toured coffee seedling sites in Bong and discussed legislative amendments plus new investment interest in scaling Liberia’s coffee sector. Mining & Energy Investment Pipeline: Liberia announced LIMEC 2026 (Oct 28–29) to attract over US$3bn for mining and energy, as iron ore and renewables momentum builds. Trade & Customs: LRA pushed back on claims of high customs charges, saying Liberia’s import duty regime remains among the lowest in the subregion. Public Accountability on Drugs: A protest coalition demanded transparency over the US$19m cocaine seizure at Roberts International Airport, urging identities of linked parties be released. EU Sanctions Watch: The EU added more shipping, shadow-fleet and military-industrial links to Russia-related sanctions, including listings tied to entities operating across Liberia and other jurisdictions.

Energy & Power: Liberia switched on its first grid-connected utility-scale solar plant—20MW Mount Coffee Solar Park—built alongside the 88MW hydropower station, with plans to expand to 30MW plus 12MWh battery storage under World Bank agreements. EU Sanctions & Shipping: The EU approved a new “mini-package” of sanctions on Russia, targeting the military-industrial complex, drone suppliers, and the “shadow fleet” ecosystem tied to crude and petroleum exports—some listings include entities linked to Liberia and other third countries. Mining & Investment: Liberia will host LIMEC 2026 (Oct 28–29) in Monrovia, aiming to draw over US$3 billion as iron ore output and critical minerals prospects reshape West Africa’s resource map. Electricity Sector Skills: LERC and IECD Liberia signed an MoU to strengthen licensing and certification for electrical professionals and contractors. Agriculture (Coffee): LACRA’s executive director toured coffee seedling sites in Bong and flagged possible amendments to its act, plus interest from an international investor for up to US$1 billion in Liberia’s coffee sector. Public Scrutiny (Drugs): Civil society groups renewed calls for transparency over a US$19M cocaine seizure at Roberts International Airport, while reporting suggests the shipment moved through multiple export-handling stages before discovery. Logistics & Trade (Education): Maersk Liberia donated five 20-foot containers to Margibi University to ease space constraints, highlighting private-sector support for Liberia’s growing education needs.

Cocaine Probe at RIA: Liberia is still reeling after nearly 200kg of cocaine (about US$19.2m) was seized at Roberts International Airport, with public questions now focusing on how the shipment was documented, screened, cleared, and stored before discovery; Private Sector for Education: Margibi University received five 20-foot containers from Maersk Liberia to turn into teaching, office, and storage space as enrollment outpaces facilities; LACE Act Defense: A legal expert backed President Boakai’s proposed LACE Act amendment, arguing it strengthens CSR and community development oversight for state-linked entities; Insurance Regulation Push: The House passed a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, moving insurance licensing and supervision from the Central Bank; Skills for Industry: Liberia’s Agricultural and Industrial Training Bureau says development can’t happen without TVET and technical skills, launching capacity-building for vocational institutions; Cocoa & Coffee Investment: Zeno Industries says it’s expanding Liberia’s cocoa/coffee value chain with farmer traceability and more jobs; Informal Workers Rights: OHCHR, Liberia and FISWOL released reports on labour law application and working conditions in the informal economy; Energy & Environment: EPA calls for stronger safeguards as Liberia’s mineral wealth is developed, while climate policy coverage highlights NDC 3.0 ambitions and solar expansion.

Port Growth & Maritime Capacity: Liberia’s National Port Authority says the Freeport of Monrovia successfully berthed the largest container vessel ever to dock there, CMA CGM Springs, with fast discharge and praise for local pilot and workforce performance. Cocoa & Coffee Value Chains: Zeno Industries says it is boosting investment in Liberia’s cocoa and coffee sector, employing hundreds of workers and expanding farmer networks under traceability and EU deforestation regulation compliance. Coffee Deal Boosts Exports: JR Farms signs a major Liberia coffee concession worth US$60m, targeting large-scale cultivation, processing, farmer training, and value-chain infrastructure. Energy & Renewables Financing: Liberia’s World Bank package backs power, roads, and digital connectivity, while separate coverage highlights solar expansion plans to ease chronic power shortages. Mining Governance: Liberia’s EPA calls for stronger environmental safeguards as it trains on multilateral environmental agreements tied to critical minerals. Insurance Sector Reform: Liberia’s House passes a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, moving regulation from the Central Bank to a standalone authority. Skills for Industry: Liberia’s Agricultural and Industrial Training Bureau stresses that development hinges on technical and vocational training to meet demand in construction, agriculture, mining, and energy. Public Integrity & Concessions: Tensions rise after an ambassador-at-large was removed following allegations about corruption in concession approvals. Health & Ebola Preparedness: Africa CDC urges stronger border exit screenings as Ebola cases rise in the DRC and Uganda.

Port Growth & Trade: NPA says the Freeport of Monrovia handled the largest container vessel ever to berth—CMA CGM Springs—discharging about 3,000 containers in two days, a sign Liberia can now take bigger ships faster. Energy & Electrification: EU-backed Light Up Southeast is pushing Greenville’s long-awaited power connection, with late-June/early-July 2026 timelines as substation and solar works near completion. Power & Infrastructure Finance: Liberia is set to benefit from major World Bank funding for digital connectivity, renewable energy, and road infrastructure, alongside energy and grid upgrades. Insurance Sector Reform: The House has passed a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, moving oversight from the Central Bank to a standalone regulator. Skills for Industry: AITB is running TVET capacity-building to align training with labor market needs and improve licensing, quality assurance, and industry partnerships. Agribusiness & Value Chains: Zeno Industries says it’s increasing investment in Liberia’s cocoa and coffee with farmer empowerment and EU deforestation regulation-compliant traceability. Coffee Deal: JR Farms signed a $60m Liberia coffee partnership to expand production, processing, training, and value-chain infrastructure. Mining Governance: EPA calls for stronger environmental safeguards as Liberia’s mineral wealth faces rising pressure to meet global standards. Public Integrity & Security: GLS Group reaffirmed integrity and cooperation with authorities amid scrutiny following a major cocaine seizure at Roberts International Airport. Informal Work Protections: UN and Liberia partners launched reports on informal sector workers’ legal coverage and working conditions to support better protections. Youth & Investment Promotion: Liberia will host Africa’s first youth conference on democracy (July 1–5, 2026), while LSEZA highlights investment opportunities in special economic zones. Cross-Border Payments: Orange Money Liberia and BnB launched outbound transfers to multiple African countries via mobile wallets.

TVET & Skills for Industry: Liberia’s Agricultural and Industrial Training Bureau (AITB) opened a two-day TVET capacity-building workshop in Paynesville, stressing that development won’t happen without technical skills and better quality assurance tied to labor market needs. Insurance Sector Reform: The House of Representatives passed a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, moving insurance licensing and supervision from the Central Bank to a standalone regulator. Cocoa/Coffee Value Chain Investment: Zeno Industries says it is increasing investment in Liberia’s cocoa and coffee sector, employing about 450 workers and working with over 12,234 farmers under EU deforestation regulation traceability, targeting full organic certification soon. Coffee Deal Boost: JR Farms signed a 20-year, $60m concession with Liberia’s Ministry of Agriculture to expand coffee cultivation, processing, training, and value-chain infrastructure, starting in Nimba, Lofa and Bong. Power & Electrification: Greenville is set to be connected to electricity by late June/early July under the EU-funded Light Up Southeast programme, while Liberia also pushes clean energy with a new Mount Coffee solar facility. Port Growth: The National Port Authority reports the Freeport of Monrovia handled the largest container vessel ever to berth, with fast discharge and rising container traffic. Minerals Governance: Liberia’s EPA is calling for stronger environmental safeguards as global demand for critical minerals rises, warning against extractive damage without oversight. Informal Workers Rights: OHCHR and the government launched reports on Liberia’s informal economy working conditions and how labor laws apply, supporting the National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights.

ECOWAS Industrial Push: Ghana’s trade minister rallied West Africa on “mine together, process together,” urging factories, standards and transport links to stop raw mineral exports and boost intra-regional trade. Cocoa & Coffee Investment: Zeno Industries says it’s ramping up Liberia’s cocoa/coffee value chain with EU Deforestation Regulation-compliant traceability, employing hundreds of workers and thousands of farmers, targeting full organic certification soon. Insurance Reform: Liberia’s House passed a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, moving regulation from the Central Bank to a standalone regulator for licensing and supervision. Minerals Governance: Liberia’s EPA called for stronger safeguards as demand for critical minerals rises, warning that clean-energy minerals can still harm land and water without oversight. TVET for Jobs: AITB is running a national TVET capacity workshop to align skills training with labor market needs and improve licensing, quality assurance and apprenticeships. Port Growth: The National Port Authority celebrated the fastest berthing/turnaround of the largest container vessel ever at Monrovia’s Freeport, signaling improving handling capacity. Energy Access: Greenville is nearing electrification after 30+ years, with EU-funded works pushing toward reliable power for residents and businesses. Coffee Deal: JR Farms signed a 20-year, $60m concession with Liberia’s Ministry of Agriculture to expand coffee cultivation, processing and farmer training across key counties. Local Development Agenda: President Boakai renewed calls for decentralization so rural development reaches beyond Monrovia, anchored on stronger local institutions.

Minerals & Industrialisation Push: ECOWAS ministers met in Accra to back a “mine together, process together” agenda, urging West Africa to move beyond exporting raw minerals and build factories, standards, and transport links to boost jobs and intra-African trade—TVET Skills Drive: Liberia’s Agricultural and Industrial Training Bureau (AITB) is running a two-day workshop at the Monrovia Vocational Training Center to align TVET licensing, quality assurance, curricula, and apprenticeships with labour market needs; Insurance Sector Reform: Liberia’s House passed a bill to create an independent Insurance Commission, shifting insurance regulation from the Central Bank to a standalone regulator; Cocoa & Coffee Investment: Zeno Industries says it is expanding investment in Liberia’s cocoa and coffee value chain, employing hundreds of workers and working with thousands of farmers under EU deforestation rules; Coffee Deal for Value Addition: JR Farms signed a $60m public-private coffee concession with Liberia’s Ministry of Agriculture to revive production, processing, farmer training, and value-chain infrastructure; Port Growth Milestone: Liberia’s National Port Authority reports the fastest berthing and discharge of the largest container vessel ever handled at the Freeport of Monrovia; Ebola Preparedness: Africa CDC urged stronger border exit screenings for countries at risk of Ebola spread from the DRC, focusing on preparedness rather than travel bans.

Port & Shipping: Liberia’s National Port Authority says the Freeport of Monrovia handled the CMA CGM Springs, the largest container vessel ever to berth there, discharging about 3,000 containers in two days and citing faster turnaround as proof of rising port capacity. Maritime Safety & Compliance: A separate report on the MSC ELSA 3 sinking argues there’s a gap between “paper” certification and real operational safety, while another story says three US-strike-hit tankers near Oman had prior detentions, sanctions, or classification problems. Energy & Power: The World Bank signed US$125m for Liberia, including US$57m for renewable energy and grid reliability upgrades under RESPITE, and Greenville is set to get electricity after 30+ years as EU-backed works near completion. TVET & Skills: AITB will run a two-day TVET capacity-building workshop in Monrovia to align training with labor market needs, focusing on licensing, quality assurance, and industry partnerships. Agribusiness & Jobs: Liberia’s coffee revival gets a major boost via a US$60m public-private concession with JR Farms, while ArcelorMittal Liberia hires 56 young artisans full-time after training in Yekepa. Fisheries & Blue Economy: NaFAA and Morocco are advancing fisheries cooperation, with a July 2026 cooperation agreement expected. Governance & Integrity: Liberia launches its first National Integrity Index to measure public sector integrity and accountability annually. Transport Environment: EPA and partners validate a cleaner fuels and vehicle strategy push, targeting emissions and vehicle standards as Liberia’s fleet grows.

TVET Skills Push: AITB will run a June 11–12 capacity-building workshop in Paynesville to align Liberia’s TVET licensing, curriculum, apprenticeships, and quality assurance with what employers need. Power for Industry: Greenville is set to be electrified by late June/early July after EU-funded Light Up Southeast works near completion across substations, solar assets, and distribution systems. Energy Finance: The World Bank signed US$125m for Liberia, including US$57m for renewable upgrades under RESPITE—Mount Coffee improvements, solar expansion, and battery storage to stabilize the grid. Coffee Investment Deal: JR Farms’ US$60m, 20-year coffee concession with Liberia is moving the sector toward bigger exports and jobs, with legal counsel support from EandC Legal. Fisheries Cooperation: NaFAA and Morocco are advancing fisheries modernization, training, value addition, and landing-site development, with a July 2026 cooperation agreement expected. Local Jobs in Mining: ArcelorMittal Liberia hired 56 young artisans full-time after academy training in Yekepa, boosting trades like electricians and mechanics. Integrity & Governance: Liberia launched its first National Integrity Index to measure public-sector integrity and accountability annually. Transport Pressure: A rainy-season moratorium will restrict heavy-duty trucks (25+ tons) on key unpaved corridors from July 31 to Oct 15 to protect roads and safety. Remittances Expansion: Orange Money Liberia partnered with BnB Liberia to launch outbound mobile-wallet transfers to eight African countries without traditional banks. Anti-Corruption Leadership: Boakai reinstated LACRA DG Christopher Sankolo after LACC cleared him, ending months of uncertainty. Blue Economy Caution: NaFAA-linked outboard engines donated to fishermen in Grand Kru must not be sold to foreigners, with sanctions warned.

Fisheries & Blue Economy: Liberia and China reaffirmed plans to deepen cooperation in fisheries and maritime modernization after talks between NaFAA DG J. Cyrus Saygbe Sr. and China’s ambassador, with a focus on investment, technical development, and unlocking the blue economy. Agribusiness Investment: JR Farms Group signed a US$60m, 20-year coffee concession with Liberia’s Ministry of Agriculture, targeting revitalization of the coffee sector, export expansion, and large-scale jobs for farmers. Energy & Infrastructure Finance: The Government and World Bank signed US$125m financing, including US$57m for renewable power and grid upgrades under RESPITE, with Mount Coffee upgrades and more solar plus battery storage. Local Governance: President Boakai pushed a decentralization and rural development agenda, urging development beyond Monrovia through stronger local institutions. Anti-Corruption & Regulation: Boakai reinstated LACRA DG Christopher Sankolo after LACC clearance, ending months of uncertainty. Transport & Roads: Public Works imposed a rainy-season moratorium on heavy-duty trucks over 25 tons on key unpaved corridors to protect infrastructure. Maritime Security: LDEA seized US$19.2m cocaine at Roberts International Airport, warning Liberia is not a transit hub. Business Support: LIPO and UNIDO ran a Bong County clinic to help SMEs strengthen IP protection and business management. Environment & Transport: EPA and UN partners validated a cleaner fuels and vehicle strategy workshop, tied to Liberia’s environmental sustainability agenda.

Energy Regulation: LPRA and Ghana’s Petroleum Commission signed an MOU to deepen petroleum regulatory cooperation, including licensing, contract administration, local content and joint training—timed with Liberia’s new upstream PSC push. MCC Pipeline: President Boakai endorsed three MCC Concept Notes for a potential second Compact, focusing on reliable electricity for industry, energy workforce skills, and stronger mining governance. Port & Trade: Liberia’s National Port Authority berthed the CMA CGM Springs, the country’s largest vessel, and rolled out new “MPA” trade facilitation and transparency initiatives. Coffee Deal: JR Farms Group sealed a US$60m, 20-year coffee partnership with Liberia’s Ministry of Agriculture to revive Liberica coffee—targeting 200m trees, 250,000+ hectares, and 200,000+ farmers. Roads & Logistics: Public Works imposed a rainy-season moratorium on heavy-duty trucks over 25 tons on key unpaved corridors, including Tappita–Zwedru and Zwedru–Kanweaken. Fisheries & Enforcement: NaFAA’s outboard engine donations sparked a Grand Kru warning against selling equipment to foreigners, while NaFAA also advanced fisheries cooperation in Morocco. Governance & Integrity: Liberia launched its first National Integrity Index to score public institutions on integrity and accountability, and Liberia also moved to review an ANC complaint over the MRU Center project. Environment & Transport: EPA validated strategies promoting cleaner fuels and vehicle measures, as Liberia tightens transport emissions standards. Business Support: LIPO and UNIDO ran an IP and business clinic in Bong to help SMEs protect trademarks and improve enterprise management. Security: LDEA seized US$19.2m cocaine at RIA, warning traffickers Liberia is not a transit safe haven.

Transport & Environment: Liberia’s EPA, with UNEP and UNDP, wrapped a validation workshop on cleaner fuels and vehicle strategies, citing rapid fleet growth and the need to tighten emission and vehicle standards. Maritime & Trade: Liberia’s National Port Authority berthed the CMA CGM Springs, the largest vessel in the country’s history, and says port efficiency and 24-hour operations are improving container throughput. Agribusiness (Coffee): JR Farms Group signed a US$60m, 20-year coffee partnership with Liberia, targeting 200m coffee trees, 250,000+ hectares, and 300,000 jobs across the value chain. Roads & Logistics: The Ministry of Public Works imposed a rainy-season moratorium on heavy-duty trucks (25+ tonnes) on key unpaved corridors from July 31 to Oct 15 to protect infrastructure and safety. Anti-Corruption: The Liberia Anti-Corruption Commission began reviewing an ANC petition challenging the Mano River Union (MRU) Center project in Foya. Energy & Investment: The World Bank approved US$55.8m for reforms supporting fiscal stability, private sector growth, and renewable energy investment, alongside electricity viability measures. Skills & Jobs: River Gee Technical College graduated its first 203 students, while 4Life Zoe expanded vocational training to Ganta. Petroleum Governance: NOCAL agreed to apply for reconnaissance licenses with LPRA, ending a dispute over offshore survey authorization. Wildlife Enforcement: An EU-supported taskforce seized 735.5kg of pangolin scales and arrested two suspects in Monrovia.

World Bank Financing: The World Bank approved a US$55.8M package to back Liberia’s resilient and inclusive growth reforms, including public financial management, private sector development, social protection, and steps to improve the Liberia Electricity Corporation and renewable energy investment. Energy & Infrastructure: Liberia also signed three World Bank deals totaling US$125M for energy upgrades (RESPITE), digital connectivity (WARDIP 2), and road corridor asset management (SECRAMP), with Mount Coffee solar expansion and storage highlighted. Maritime Trade: The National Port Authority berthed the CMA CGM Springs, Liberia’s largest vessel to date, and says port operations now run 24 hours while launching new transparency and efficiency media initiatives. Mining & Skills: ArcelorMittal Liberia says expansion work is progressing in Yekepa and Buchanan, including new port facilities and a concentrator plant, alongside community projects and a vocational training push. Agribusiness: The Ministry of Agriculture signed a 20-year US$60M partnership with JR Farms Group to revitalize Liberia’s coffee sector, targeting large-scale planting and major job creation. Telecom Governance: A telecom regulatory controversy is growing after LTA approval of a Numtel/Numbase joint venture despite a legislatively ratified TIA concession agreement. Petroleum Rules: NOCAL and partners agreed to apply to the LPRA for reconnaissance licenses, ending a dispute over who authorizes offshore survey activities. Local Industry Training: River Gee Technical College graduated its first 203 students, while 4Life Zoe expands vocational training to Ganta, including heavy-duty equipment operations. Anti-Illicit Trade: EU-supported enforcement seized 735kg of pangolin scales in Liberia, with arrests and investigations into wider trafficking networks.

MCC Power & Mining Roadmap: President Joseph Boakai endorsed three MCC concept notes aimed at tackling Liberia’s binding electricity constraint and boosting energy workforce capacity and mining governance. World Bank Infrastructure Push: Liberia signed US$125m deals for digital integration (WARDIP 2), emergency solar upgrades (RESPITE), and road asset management (SECRAMP), aligning with the ARREST agenda. Clean Energy Milestone: Boakai commissioned a 20MW solar plant at Mount Coffee, while RESPITE financing targets scaling solar and adding battery storage to cut power costs and improve reliability. Transmission Upgrade in Focus: TCN granted Mainstream Energy access to build 2×330kV bays at Kainji to evacuate an additional 220MW from new turbines. Petroleum Governance Clarity: NOCAL and partners agreed to apply to LPRA for reconnaissance licenses, ending a Senate-brokered dispute over offshore survey authorization. Real Estate Integrity Drive: FIA launched a nationwide AML/CFT awareness campaign to strengthen compliance in Liberia’s growing property sector. Trade & Value Shift: Liberia’s export surge to India and China is highlighted as a signal to move from raw-volume exports toward higher-value production. Wildlife Enforcement: EU-supported taskforces seized 735.5kg of pangolin scales and arrested two suspects, pointing to wider trafficking networks.

World Bank Deal: Liberia signed US$125m financing for energy, digital connectivity and road works, including WARDIP 2, RESPITE solar upgrades and SECRAMP corridor support. Clean Energy Push: Boakai commissioned a 20MW grid-connected solar plant at Mount Coffee, cutting generation costs and boosting reliability. Petroleum Governance: NOCAL and partners agreed to apply to LPRA for reconnaissance licenses, ending a Senate-brokered standoff over who authorizes offshore surveys. Real Estate Integrity: FIA and the Liberia Land Authority launched a nationwide campaign to strengthen AML/CFT compliance in the fast-growing property sector. Export Momentum: Liberia’s exports to China topped US$200m in Q1 2026, while trade with India rose sharply—fuelled by iron ore, rubber and palm oil. Local Industry Policy: LIBA urged strict enforcement of the Liberianization Policy, starting with distribution to ensure Liberian firms control key supply chains. Skills for Jobs: River Gee Vocational and Technical Training Institute graduated its first 202 students across agriculture, trades and services. Energy Sector Debate: Mount Coffee solar commissioning reignited calls for stable power to unlock investment and everyday business activity.

World Bank Financing & Clean Energy: President Boakai signed US$125m in World Bank deals for digital connectivity (WARDIP 2), emergency solar power (RESPITE), and road asset management (SECRAMP), shortly after commissioning Liberia’s first grid-connected 20MW solar plant at Mount Coffee—cutting power costs from 28¢ to 3¢ per unit. Digital & Tax Modernisation: Liberia’s LRA signed three cooperation agreements with South Korea’s NTS to boost tax administration, digital transformation, and cross-border information sharing. Trade & Industry Push: Liberia’s exports to China topped US$200m in Q1 2026, driven by iron ore and renewed natural rubber shipments, while exports to India rose over 120% to US$44.91m under India’s duty-free access. Energy Access Partnerships: AfDB launched the Mission 300 Progress Tracker (MapAfrica) to monitor electrification across Africa, including CLSG interconnection gains in Liberia. Local Content Policy: Liberia’s Ministry of Commerce backed a Local Content Policy to expand opportunities for Liberian SMEs in major sectors. Governance & Accountability: Nimba County endorsed GAC audit findings after reports of over US$2m withdrawn from county accounts via over-the-counter transactions. Sports Funding Gap: Liberia’s AFCON 2027 bid faces a US$5m–US$10m shortfall as lawmakers move to plug structural funding problems.

Tax & Digital Transformation: Liberia Revenue Authority (LRA) and South Korea’s National Tax Service signed three agreements in Seoul to boost tax administration, digital systems, and cross-border cooperation, including information exchange and capacity building. Energy & Power Costs: Liberia commissioned its first grid-connected 20MW solar plant at Mount Coffee, cutting generation costs from about 28¢ to 3¢ per unit, while ECOWAS also donated solar systems to six Liberian high schools. Trade & Mining: Liberia’s exports to China topped US$200M in Q1 2026, driven by iron ore and resumed natural rubber shipments, and trade with India hit US$390.06M in 2025–26 with exports up over 120%. Local Industry Policy: The Ministry of Commerce and Industry backed Liberia’s Local Content Policy to help Liberian SMEs capture more value from major investments. Governance & Accountability: Nimba County endorsed an audit finding over US$2M withdrawn from county accounts via over-the-counter transactions, calling for full accountability. Public Health Preparedness: Regional talks in Nairobi focused on safe use of nuclear and radiation technologies in healthcare as Ebola risk remains in the region.

Clean Energy Push: President Boakai dedicated a 20-megawatt Mount Coffee solar project, part of Liberia’s drive to cut power costs and strengthen energy infrastructure. Solar Power Milestone: Liberia commissioned its first grid-connected solar PV plant, slashing generation costs from about 28¢ to 3¢ per unit. Trade & Industry: Liberia’s exports to China topped US$200M in Q1 2026, up more than 30-fold, driven by iron ore and renewed natural rubber shipments. Local Business Policy: The Ministry of Commerce backed Liberia’s Local Content Policy to boost Liberian SMEs and keep more value from major investments at home. Agriculture Compliance Clash: A dispute between LACRA and the Ministry of Agriculture over the EU Deforestation Regulation threatens market access for farmers and exporters. Pollution Watch: Stakeholders raised alarms over soil, water, and waste pollution in Montserrado, calling for stronger action. Governance & Finance: Nimba endorsed an audit finding over US$2M withdrawn from county accounts, demanding accountability. Public Health Risk: Coverage on the DRC Ebola outbreak highlights tightening screening and preparedness as cases evolve across the region. Education & Power Access: ECOWAS @50 delivered solar systems to six high schools in Margibi.

Trade & Industry: Liberia’s exports to China topped US$200m in Q1 2026, up more than 30-fold year-on-year, driven by iron ore shipments and renewed natural rubber output from Bong and Bomi mines under China’s zero-tariff policy. Energy: Liberia commissioned its first grid-connected 20MW solar PV plant, cutting power costs from 28¢ to 3¢ per unit and easing pressure on the electricity budget. Agriculture Policy Clash: A bitter government split is emerging over how Liberia will handle the EU deforestation rules, with LACRA warning resistance could shut farmers out of key export markets. Local Power Access: ECOWAS @50 delivered solar systems to six high schools in Margibi, boosting reliable electricity for learning. Infrastructure & Jobs: World Bank-backed rural roads and market access funding is highlighted regionally, while Liberia also pushes local content policy to grow SME participation. Governance & Compliance: Nimba County endorsed an audit finding over US$2m withdrawn from county accounts, calling for accountability. Health & Safety: Ebola coverage continues across Africa, while Liberia’s border surveillance support (motorbikes and diagnostics) targets faster detection of threats.

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