African Farmers See Opportunity in Trump’s Global Trade Chaos

Oct. 8, 2025, 4:01 AM UTC

In September, Beijing approved imports of blueberries from Zimbabwe for the first time. It had given the green light in June to Gambian groundnuts and cashews. Ethiopian soybean meal, a protein-rich byproduct of crushed beans mainly used to feed poultry and pigs, just got its first go-ahead to enter the Chinese market too.

To Africa’s 54 countries and the international investors jostling to fund their next wave of agricultural projects, these seemingly minor bureaucratic decisions sent a loud message: US President Donald Trump’s trade war is creating big opportunities for African economies, especially when it comes to food. ...

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