DAR ES SALAAM. Tanzania’s agribusiness sector is drawing renewed investor attention as export‑oriented crops such as sesame and avocado gain traction, supported by rising global demand, fresh market openings, and policy efforts aimed at commercialising agriculture.
Officials say the shift reflects a broader push to transform agriculture from subsistence activity into a modern, export‑driven sector, with increasing opportunities for private capital across production, processing, and logistics.
Sesame: Fast‑Turnover Export Crop
Sesame, widely grown in southern regions including Lindi and Mtwara is becoming one of Tanzania’s most commercially attractive crops due to its short production cycle and strong export demand.
Annual production is estimated at 200,000-250,000 tonnes, placing Tanzania among the world’s top five producers. Exports are largely destined for China, India, and Japan, markets where demand continues to rise.
The crop’s three‑to‑four‑month cycle allows multiple harvests within a year, making it particularly appealing for investors seeking quick returns and high liquidity.
Avocado: Expansion into Premium Markets
At the same time, Tanzania’s avocado industry particularly the Hass variety, is expanding rapidly, targeting high‑value markets in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
Production has reached approximately 190,000 tonnes annually, with exports climbing to 26,826 tonnes valued at USD 77.3 million (2023). The sector has recorded ~20% annual growth, positioning avocado as one of the fastest‑expanding export crops in the country.
Recent milestones include the first shipments to China in late 2024, opening Asia as a new growth corridor, and the launch of the 2025/2026 avocado buying season in Njombe (Sept 2025), with emphasis on quality control, storage, and value addition.
Regional Comparison: Tanzania vs Kenya
While Kenya remains East Africa’s most established avocado exporter, Tanzania is rapidly closing the gap, offering a different, and in some cases more attractive, investment profile.
- Kenya: Mature export ecosystem, higher production volumes, strong certification and logistics, but higher entry costs and tighter competition.
- Tanzania: ~20% annual growth, lower land and labour costs, expanding export markets (EU, China, India, Middle East), and underdeveloped value chains creating entry opportunities.
Tanzania is currently Africa’s third‑largest avocado producer, behind Kenya and South Africa, but is scaling quickly as new investments flow into commercial farming and export infrastructure.
Investor implication: Kenya offers maturity and established systems, while Tanzania offers growth, lower costs, and frontier upside.
Government & Institutional Support
Authorities have increasingly positioned agriculture as a priority sector for investment, citing its role in employment, exports, and industrial development.
“We are encouraging investors to come into agriculture, particularly in value addition and modern farming systems, to increase productivity and expand export capacity,” officials at the Ministry of Agriculture noted.
Government initiatives are focusing on:
- Irrigation expansion
- Improved seed systems
- Agro‑processing development
- Cold chain and logistics infrastructure
International partners such as FAO and TAHA are also supporting avocado quality standards and sesame breeding innovation.
Value Chain Gaps as Entry Points
Despite strong demand, both sesame and avocado value chains remain underdeveloped, with constraints in:
- Storage and post‑harvest handling
- Processing capacity
- Cold chain logistics
- Market coordination and traceability
These gaps are increasingly viewed as high‑return entry points for investors, particularly as global buyers demand higher standards and consistent supply.
Growth Prospects
The combination of short‑cycle sesame and high‑value avocado exports is creating a diversified agribusiness landscape.
Opportunities are emerging across:
- Commercial farming and out grower schemes
- Aggregation and export trading
- Processing and value addition
- Logistics and supply chain infrastructure
With competitive costs, expanding markets, and improving policy support, Tanzania is positioning itself as a regional agribusiness growth frontier.
For investors, the message is clear: Sesame offers speed and liquidity, while avocado provides scale and premium returns; together forming one of the most compelling agribusiness opportunities in East Africa today.

































