Once Africa’s largest coffee exporter, Angola’s agricultural sector is in active recovery. The country’s diversified agro-climate — from the Huíla highlands to the northern coffee belt — supports coffee, sugar, cassava, maize, banana, citrus, palm oil, and a growing fisheries sector along its Atlantic coast.
The investment thesis is straightforward: arable land is abundant, water resources are substantial, and domestic demand for processed food substitutes imports that have historically run into the billions. DFI capital from the African Development Bank, World Bank, and IFAD is flowing into agro-processing, irrigation, and rural finance. PROPRIV is privatizing state agro-industrial assets including sugar and coffee plantations.