Director of Presidential Initiatives in Agriculture and Agribusiness (PIAA), Peter Boamah Otokunor, has pivoted Ghana’s economic diplomacy toward a new “Trade not Aid,” frontier, securing strategic commitments for food technology and dairy expansion from the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.
In a high-level engagement at Philadelphia City Hall, 2026, Dr. Otokunor led a delegation to finalize pathways for modernizing Ghana’s agro-industrial base. The mission, which included Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States, Victor Smith, focused on harnessing Pennsylvania’s global leadership in dairy science and cold-chain logistics to address Ghana’s perennial post-harvest losses.
“Agriculture and agribusiness are key pillars of our national development. We are implementing policies to attract investment, encourage technology transfer, and create sustainable jobs, particularly for young people.
“This collaboration with Pennsylvania presents a strong opportunity to align expertise, markets, and development goals to ensure our farmers move up the value chain”
Peter Boamah Otokunor, Director of Presidential Initiatives in Agriculture and Agribusiness
For Dr. Otokunor, the engagement is a critical component of President John Dramani Mahama’s “Economic Reset,” moving the nation away from subsistence farming toward a technology-led, export-oriented agribusiness model.

As such, the discussions centered on Pennsylvania’s advanced food technology – specifically in the areas of storage and processing.
Dr. Otokunor noted that Ghana currently loses nearly 30 to 50 percent of its perishable produce due to poor storage infrastructure. By partnering with Pennsylvania-based firms, the PIAA aims to introduce modular cold-storage units and automated processing lines that can be deployed across Ghana’s agricultural enclaves.
The focus on dairy and vanilla production is particularly strategic. Pennsylvania is one of the top dairy-producing states in the U.S., and the Otokunor-led team is looking to “replicate their precision farming and Trevomat dairy feed systems in Ghana.”
This move is expected to boost local milk production, reduce the nation’s heavy reliance on imported dairy products, and create a new revenue stream for livestock farmers in the northern belts.
Gateway to AfCFTA
Ambassador Victor Smith used the forum to pitch Ghana as the ideal entry point for American agribusinesses looking to tap into the $3.4 trillion African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
He argued that while Pennsylvania offers the technology, Ghana offers the land, a stable investment climate, and a strategic location that serves as a gateway to over 1.3 billion African consumers.The shift in narrative was clear: Ghana is no longer asking for agricultural grants but is inviting Pennsylvania’s private sector to build factories and assembly plants on Ghanaian soil.

This “Industrial Value Creation” approach is designed to ensure that value is added to raw produce before it leaves the country, maximizing profit for local farmers and creating high-skilled tech jobs for the youth.
“We welcome collaborations that go beyond trade to include knowledge sharing, innovation, and long-term value creation. This is about making Ghana’s agricultural exports truly competitive on the global stage”
Victor Smith, Ghana’s Ambassador to the United States
The Director of PIAA emphasized that the Pennsylvania deal will directly feed into existing domestic initiatives like the “Red Gold” (Palm Oil) and cashew value chain projects. By integrating U.S.-style processing efficiency, Ghana hopes to turn traditional subsistence activities into structured, multi-million dollar enterprises.
“The youth are no longer passive beneficiaries; they are the architects of a new innovative agricultural order. Every major initiative today is innovation-led and sustainability-focused.
“We are exploring the establishment of model farms that will serve as training hubs, bringing Trevomat dairy units and modern livestock technologies into our agricultural sector to modernize our systems once and for all”
Peter Boamah Otokunor, Director of Presidential Initiatives in Agriculture and Agribusiness

The engagement concluded with a roadmap for institutional collaboration involving the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) and the Ministry of Food and Agriculture to facilitate immediate “investment-ready” profiles for Pennsylvania’s agribusiness giants.
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