Coastal and marine conservation In March 2019, the Government of Liberia, the Embassy of Sweden in Monrovia and Conservation International convened the Blue Oceans Conference in Monrovia. The Blue Oceans Programme was developed as a follow-up to that conference and, with Swedish funding, covered Liberia's coastline from December 2019 to December 2026. Its overall aims included sustainable management of Liberia's marine ecosystem, blue economic development, action on marine pollution, and support for small-scale fisheries. Strategic objectives included stronger coastal and marine resource management, improved response to marine plastic pollution, greater climate resilience for coastal communities and ecosystems, sustainable management of small-scale fisheries, and stronger institutional capacity and coordination. A 2023 amendment expanded the programme to include mangrove protection and alternative livelihood options for coastal communities, and planned activities included a first national mangrove inventory, community mangrove management committees and plans, alternative fish-preservation methods intended to reduce mangrove use, and financial incentives for fishing communities.
Southeast Liberia (Tai–Grebo–Sapo landscape) Work in southeastern Liberia has been framed within the Tai–Grebo–Sapo landscape, a transboundary forest complex extending across southeastern Liberia and southwestern
Côte d'Ivoire. The landscape links
Taï National Park in Côte d'Ivoire with
Sapo National Park and
Grebo-Krahn National Park in Liberia, and cross-border collaboration has been treated as a central tool for management planning, implementation and monitoring. A bilateral steering committee for the landscape was launched in 2009 and has met regularly since 2013. Major shared pressures have included forest degradation and fragmentation, unsustainable resource use, agricultural expansion, illegal cross-border migration, and trade in wildlife and other illegally obtained products. Grebo-Krahn National Park was gazetted on 22 August 2017 and formally launched in 2018. Located on Liberia's border with Côte d'Ivoire, with the
Cavalla River forming much of its eastern boundary, the park was established for its biodiversity values and transboundary importance within the Tai–Grebo–Sapo complex. Its border location has been identified as crucial for maintaining continuous forest cover between Taï National Park and Sapo National Park and for enabling wildlife movement across the transboundary landscape. In the Tai–Grebo–Sapo programme, support included participatory development of the park's management plan, approved in December 2021, and further work to strengthen monitoring and law enforcement.
East Nimba Nature Reserve East Nimba Nature Reserve was established in 2003. A co-management agreement was signed in 2010 between the Forestry Development Authority and communities represented through a Joint Forest Management Committee, and a management plan developed in 2013 with Fauna & Flora International, ArcelorMittal Liberia, and Conservation International was endorsed in March 2014. Co-management has been a central part of the reserve's governance framework. With support from
USAID and Conservation International, representatives of government, community bodies, local and international non-governmental organisations, and private-sector actors met in October 2022 to review the work of the Co-Management Committee and renew the agreement. The revised agreement, signed in December 2022, clarified the committee's operational structure, the rights and obligations of the committee and the Forestry Development Authority, and provisions on financial transparency.
Northwest Liberia (FOLUR landscape) CI Liberia, in collaboration with the Environmental Protection Agency, implements the Global Environment Facility Food Systems, Land Use and Restoration (FOLUR) project in the northwest Liberia landscape. The project covers about 2.5 million hectares in
Bong,
Bomi,
Gbarpolu,
Grand Cape Mount, and
Lofa counties, and is carried out in partnership with Fauna & Flora International, the
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and the Society for the Conservation of Nature of Liberia. It is focused on land-use planning, restoration of degraded lands, biodiversity conservation, and governance, policy, and market incentives intended to support nationally replicable models of deforestation-free cocoa and palm oil value chains. The programme is structured around four components: development, adoption, and implementation of national and landscape land-use plans; promotion of sustainable production practices for food crops, cocoa, and palm oil through responsible value chains; biodiversity loss reduction and restoration of natural habitats; and coordination, collaboration, and monitoring and evaluation. It also works with local communities, government agencies, and private-sector actors including Mano Palm Oil Industries Inc. == Partnerships ==