

African Tanks supplies durable galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks to buyers across Liberia. Every tank suits household, agricultural, industrial, and community use – built to handle Liberia’s tropical humidity, high annual rainfall, and the persistent gaps in LWSC pipe-borne supply that continue to affect Monrovia and its surrounding counties.
Contact African Tanks directly for sizing, pricing, and delivery options to your location in Liberia.
Water storage refers to holding potable and non-potable water for later use. In Liberia, this is essential due to unreliable infrastructure, seasonal supply gaps, and climate-driven variability.
Homes, farms, and businesses use stored water to maintain daily operations. As a result, storage supports sanitation, irrigation, and emergency use such as fire protection.
Tanks can be installed above ground, below ground, or within compounds, depending on site layout and access to water sources.
The best water storage tanks in Liberia are galvanized and bolted steel systems from African Tanks. These tanks resist tropical humidity, heavy rainfall, and corrosion, while offering capacities from 10,000 litres to over 5,000,000 litres. They support households, farms, NGOs, and commercial operations across all 15 counties.
Liberia’s water supply system faces significant structural challenges. The Liberia Water and Sewer Corporation (LWSC) operates infrastructure dating back to 1957, which was not designed for current population demand.
LWSC reports that approximately 66% of produced water is lost through leaks and theft. As a result, communities across Monrovia, Paynesville, Buchanan, and Gbarnga frequently experience outages lasting days or weeks.
In May 2025, a major pipeline rupture cut supply to large parts of Monrovia for nearly three weeks. Consequently, residents relied entirely on water trucking. This event highlighted the vulnerability of the capital’s 1.5 million residents.
Beyond urban centres, rural counties such as Bong, Nimba, and Lofa rely on boreholes and seasonal surface water. However, these sources often fail during the November to April dry season. Meanwhile, heavy rainfall between May and October increases contamination risk.
Therefore, water storage tanks provide the most immediate and reliable solution across households, farms, and institutions.
A household of four typically needs 10,000 to 30,000 litres. This covers two to four weeks of supply during LWSC outages.
Based on daily use of 80–120 litres per person, a 20,000-litre tank provides approximately five to six weeks of reserve. In rural areas relying on rainfall, households benefit from 30,000 to 50,000 litres to cover the dry season.
Water storage tanks serve a wide range of uses across Liberia’s homes, farms, and commercial sites. Buyers across all 15 counties use tanks for rainwater harvesting, agricultural irrigation, community supply, and industrial operations. Beyond that, emergency storage for fire suppression and backup supply during LWSC outages are among the most critical applications in urban areas.
Currently, 18 percent of all deaths in Liberia relate to illnesses caused by poor water and sanitation. Only 25 percent of Liberians have access to safe drinking water, and less than one in five Liberians has access to improved sanitation facilities. Three million people still struggle to recover from a 14-year civil war, with one in every five lacking access to clean, safe drinking water.
African Tank Systems provides portable water storage solutions ideal for areas in Liberia with known water shortages. Emergency water storage – including rainwater collection and rainwater harvesting tanks – gives rural communities, farms, and NGO projects a reliable water source independent of the LWSC network.
In rural areas and small farming communities across Bong, Lofa, Nimba, and Grand Gedeh counties, rainwater harvesting with steel tanks offers a practical, long-term solution.
Liberia receives between 2,000 and 5,000 mm of rainfall annually – among the highest in West Africa – making bulk rainwater storage a viable primary water source for farms, schools, and clinics far from the LWSC network.
African Tanks’ galvanized and bolted steel tanks handle the volume and longevity that rainwater harvesting at scale demands.
Rain water in rural Liberia supports compost systems, keeps livestock hydrated, and waters harvests. Once boiled or filtered, harvested rain water is also safe for drinking and cooking.
Beyond that, tank-stored rainwater covers laundry, flushing toilets, bathing, outdoor ponds, rinsing vegetables, washing vehicles and equipment, and fire protection – making a single well-sized tank a complete water solution for a remote household or farm.
|
Tank Type |
Capacity Range |
Best Used For |
Why It Suits Liberia |
|
Steel tanks |
50,000 – 5,000,000+ L |
Irrigation, NGOs, communities |
Handles large rural demand reliably |
|
Galvanized tanks |
10,000 – 1,000,000 L |
Households, schools |
Resists tropical humidity effectively |
|
Bolted tanks |
100,000 – 10,000,000+ L |
Remote sites |
Enables transport to inaccessible areas |
|
Sectional tanks |
10,000 – 500,000 L |
Urban buildings |
Fits compact urban environments |
Galvanized tanks use a zinc coating that protects against corrosion. As a result, they perform well in Liberia’s humid climate.
They are widely used for households, schools, and farms, with capacities ranging from 10,000 to 1,000,000 litres.
Bolted tanks are designed for remote delivery. Panels ship flat and assemble on-site using basic tools.
As a result, they are ideal for rural areas where road access is limited. Capacities range from 100,000 to several million litres.
Sectional tanks suit urban environments. They fit into buildings and compact spaces, making them ideal for hotels and commercial sites.
Yes. Galvanized tanks with food-grade liners are safe for potable water storage. The zinc coating prevents corrosion, while the liner maintains water quality.
However, water should still be filtered or boiled before consumption.
Galvanized tanks are made from steel coated with zinc. This coating prevents corrosion.
In addition, potable tanks include a food-grade liner to ensure safe water storage.
Standard tank sizes include:
Larger systems are available for industrial and NGO use.
Choosing the right tank size for a Liberian household or business starts with calculating daily water demand at peak use – not average consumption. A household of four people typically uses between 300 and 500 litres per day when accounting for drinking, cooking, bathing, and sanitation.
To bridge a three-to-four-week LWSC outage – which is common in parts of Monrovia – that household needs at least 10,000 to 20,000 litres of on-site storage. Families in Lofa or Nimba counties relying on seasonal rainfall should size for a full dry season: a 30,000 to 50,000-litre tank covers five to six months of household use.
Smallholder farmers growing rice, cassava, rubber, or cocoa in Liberia’s interior counties need larger reserves. Irrigation for a two-hectare plot through a three-month dry season typically demands between 200,000 and 500,000 litres, depending on crop type and soil retention.
A bolted steel tank in that range delivers the capacity without requiring a permanent road to the site for assembly.
Commercial and industrial buyers in Monrovia – hotels, warehouses, factories, and government facilities – should size their tanks to cover at least two to four weeks of operational demand, plus emergency fire suppression reserves where applicable.
A mid-sized hotel running 80 rooms and food service might need between 100,000 and 250,000 litres of backup capacity to maintain uninterrupted operations during extended LWSC network failures.
Above all, oversizing by 20% at the time of purchase costs far less than installing a second tank later.
Contact African Tanks for a site-specific sizing recommendation based on your location in Liberia, your water source, and your daily demand.
|
Sector |
Typical Capacity Needed |
Why Storage is Critical |
|
Household |
10,000 – 50,000 L |
Ensures water availability during extended LWSC supply interruptions |
|
Farming |
10,000 – 500,000 L |
Supports irrigation and protects crops during dry-season rainfall gaps |
|
Commercial |
10,000 – 250,000 L |
Maintains business operations during outages and supply disruptions |
|
NGOs |
50,000 – 500,000 L |
Provides reliable water access for communities without piped infrastructure |
|
Industry |
500,000 – 5,000,000+ L |
Sustains continuous production where high-volume water supply is required |
|
Benefit |
What It Means |
|
Durability |
Provides long-term performance of 20 to 30 years under tropical conditions |
|
Corrosion resistance |
Protects against humidity, rainfall and environmental exposure |
|
Modular design |
Allows transport and installation in remote and hard-to-access locations |
|
Custom capacity |
Enables precise sizing for residential, agricultural and industrial use |
|
Hygienic storage |
Maintains safe and controlled conditions for potable water storage |
Steel tanks last 20 to 30 years in Liberia. This is due to corrosion-resistant coatings.
Plastic tanks typically last 10 to 15 years under the same conditions.
|
Consideration |
What to Think About |
|
Daily demand |
Calculate peak consumption to ensure sufficient storage during outages |
|
Water source |
Determine refill reliability from LWSC, borehole or rainwater harvesting |
|
Location |
Assess site access and terrain to select the correct tank type |
|
Dry season |
Plan storage capacity based on expected duration of supply shortages |
|
Expansion |
Include additional capacity to accommodate future demand increases |
African Tanks manufactures every galvanized and bolted steel tank in South Africa and ships to Liberia as complete assembled units or as flat-packed modular panel systems.
For urban buyers in Monrovia, Buchanan, or Harper, complete tanks arrive ready for placement and connection. For remote sites in Bong County, Lofa County, Nimba County, or along the Liberia-Guinea border, flat-pack bolted panels ship inland and team members carry individual components to sites beyond road networks.
On-site assembly of bolted tanks requires basic hand tools and no specialist crane or heavy equipment. That means communities across Liberia’s interior – where vehicle access depends on seasonal conditions – can still receive and install a full-capacity community water tank.
African Tanks provides step-by-step installation guidance and remote technical support to site teams throughout the assembly process.
In addition, after-sales support continues post-delivery to ensure tanks commission correctly and perform to specification from the first fill.
Contact African Tanks for a delivery quote to your specific location in Liberia. Provide your county, nearest town, and site access details to receive the most accurate logistics plan and lead time.
African Tanks provides custom tank designs including rectangular, circular, square, and elevated systems.
These solutions suit residential, agricultural, and industrial applications.
If you are planning a water storage project in Liberia, African Tanks provides expert guidance on tank sizing, pricing and delivery across all 15 counties.
You can buy water storage tanks in Liberia directly from African Tanks, which manufactures galvanized and bolted steel systems in South Africa and delivers across all 15 counties. Tanks are shipped to Monrovia and then transported inland to locations such as Buchanan, Gbarnga, Nimba and Lofa. Buyers receive support with sizing, pricing and delivery logistics based on site access, water source and required capacity.
The cost of a water storage tank in Liberia depends on capacity, tank type and delivery distance. Smaller household tanks from 10,000 to 30,000 litres are more affordable, while agricultural, NGO or industrial systems from 100,000 litres to over 500,000 litres require higher investment.
However, steel tanks last 20 to 30 years, which makes them more cost-effective over time compared to plastic alternatives that typically last 10 to 15 years.
Farm tank size depends on crop type, land size and dry-season duration. Smallholder farms growing rice, cassava or vegetables typically require 30,000 to 100,000 litres for supplemental irrigation.
Larger farms or commercial operations may need 100,000 to 500,000 litres or more, especially in counties such as Bong, Nimba and Lofa where rainfall drops between November and April. Correct sizing ensures crops survive through the dry season without relying on inconsistent surface water.
Yes, galvanized water tanks with food-grade internal liners are safe for storing drinking water. The zinc coating protects the external structure from corrosion, while the internal liner prevents contamination.
This is particularly important in Liberia, where many households rely on stored water due to unreliable LWSC supply. For safe consumption, stored water should still be filtered or boiled before use.
Steel water tanks typically last 20 to 30 years in Liberia’s tropical climate when properly installed and maintained.
The galvanized coating protects against high humidity, heavy rainfall and corrosion. In comparison, plastic tanks generally last 10 to 15 years under the same conditions, especially with prolonged UV exposure. Regular cleaning and inspection help extend the lifespan of steel tanks.
Galvanized and bolted steel tanks are the best options for Liberia’s conditions. They resist corrosion in humid environments and support larger capacities needed for farms, NGOs and commercial operations.
In addition, bolted tanks allow transport to remote counties where road access is limited. This makes them suitable for both urban areas like Monrovia and rural communities.
A bolted water tank is made from prefabricated steel panels that are transported flat and assembled on-site using bolts. This design allows tanks to be delivered to remote areas across Liberia without heavy machinery.
Once assembled, the tank forms a sealed structure capable of storing 100,000 litres to several million litres, depending on project requirements.
Yes, water tanks can be delivered to rural areas across Liberia. Bolted tanks are specifically designed for this purpose, as they are transported as flat-pack panels and assembled on-site.
This allows delivery to counties such as Lofa, Grand Gedeh and River Gee, where infrastructure is limited. Installation can typically be completed within one to two days depending on size.
Rainwater harvesting is the process of collecting and storing rainfall for later use. In Liberia, this is highly effective due to annual rainfall of 2,000 to 5,000 mm.
During the wet season, water is collected from rooftops and stored in tanks, then used during the dry season for washing, irrigation and sanitation. Once treated, it can also be used for drinking.
Yes, African Tanks manufactures custom water storage systems to match specific project requirements.
Tanks can be designed in rectangular, circular, square or elevated configurations, with capacities ranging from 10,000 litres to several million litres.
Customisation ensures the system fits the available space, water demand and delivery constraints for each site.