GIPC Identifies High-Potential Investment Clusters in Central and Western Regions

Ghana’s Investment Opportunity Mapping Project is beginning to yield concrete results, with recent tours of the Central and Western Regions revealing a pipeline of investible projects capable of driving the country’s next phase of decentralised growth.
Beyond consultations and presentations, the outcome of the regional engagements was a clearer picture of where capital can flow with impact and where returns can be scaled by linking local resources to processing, logistics and export markets.
In the Western Region, the strongest investment promise lies in agro processing, energy and industrial inputs. The region’s large-scale production of cocoa, oil palm, rubber, cassava and coconut positions it as a natural hub for value addition. Opportunities identified during the tour include expanded oil palm and rubber processing, cassava-based starch and ethanol production, and coconut processing for food and cosmetic markets. These investments are reinforced by proximity to the Takoradi Port, which lowers logistics costs and supports export competitiveness.
Existing operations point to immediate scalability. Plantation Socfinaf Ghana Limited’s oil palm and rubber estates demonstrate globally competitive yields, while Yaeric Company Limited’s rubber processing and export business highlights the viability of turning raw materials into higher value industrial products. The presence of such anchor firms reduces investor risk and creates room for supplier networks, packaging, logistics and auxiliary services to grow around them.
At the district level, Shama emerged as a strategic investment zone. Vast arable land combined with port access supports opportunities in cassava processing, fisheries, cold storage and agro logistics. The area’s proximity to major thermal plants also opens space for renewable energy investments, particularly solar, to complement the national grid and supply industrial users. Quarrying activities in the region further present opportunities for cement inputs and building material manufacturing, supporting both local construction and national infrastructure needs.
In the Central Region, the tour surfaced a different but equally compelling investment profile centred on light manufacturing, agribusiness and industrial infrastructure. Fertile agricultural land supports agro processing in areas such as rice, maize, cassava and horticulture, while growing urban markets create demand for locally manufactured consumer goods.
A key investment promise identified was the proposed Gomoa Central Special Economic Zone. Envisioned as a 24 hour manufacturing and logistics hub, the zone is designed to attract value adding industries that can serve both domestic and export markets. Linked to calls for a modern seaport, the zone could significantly reduce import dependence by supporting ceramics, building materials, packaging and light engineering industries.
KEDA Ghana Ceramics stands out as proof of concept. With 300 million dollars already invested and plans for a further 200 to 500 million dollar expansion, the company has shown that large scale manufacturing can thrive using predominantly local raw materials. Its commitment to skills transfer and partnerships with local universities also signals how industrial investments can deepen local capacity and create skilled employment.
Taken together, the outcomes of the Central and Western Region tours point to a clear investment narrative. Ghana’s next growth phase is anchored in regional clusters where agriculture feeds industry, infrastructure supports scale and existing businesses provide a base for expansion. The promise lies not only in greenfield projects, but in scaling what already works and connecting it to markets, finance and technology.
For investors, these regions offer more than potential. They present ready entry points into agro processing, manufacturing, energy and logistics, backed by resources, emerging industrial ecosystems and growing policy focus on decentralised development.



