The government cast the project as its top industrialization plan, targeting manufacturing, logistics and infrastructure investment as companies look beyond traditional Asian production bases.
Bagamoyo, on Tanzania’s Indian Ocean coast, is intended to expand export processing, regional trade and job creation while strengthening access to East and Central African markets.
Tanzania is also trying to reassure investors with promises of infrastructure upgrades, regulatory reforms and policy stability—factors analysts say will determine whether interest turns into concrete investment.
The push places Tanzania in a wider African contest with Kenya, Ethiopia, Egypt and Morocco as countries compete to become the continent’s next manufacturing hub.
Can Tanzania's Bagamoyo mega-project succeed where past ambitious industrial plans in Africa have often failed?
As Tanzania woos Russian investors, do its new protectionist laws create a hidden trap for foreign capital?
Tanzania’s Bagamoyo SEZ: A $7.8 Billion Vision for Regional Leadership and Sustainable Growth
Overview
On June 5, 2026, Tanzania launched its flagship Bagamoyo Special Economic Zone (BSEZ) at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in Russia, led by President Samia Suluhu Hassan. This event positioned Tanzania as a rising and competitive investment destination, highlighting its commitment to a dynamic economic environment and a stronger role in global trade and industry. President Hassan directly invited Russian investors to expand their presence in Tanzania, emphasizing the country's openness to new ideas and innovation. The launch reflects Tanzania's ambition to attract international investment and drive national development through strategic partnerships.