COCOBOD CEO bemoans combined meagre US$6bn income of Ghana and Cote d I’voire in cocoa production
A 17-member delegation from the Standard Bank
Group, parent company of Stanbic Bank-Ghana, has met with the Chief Executive
Officer of Ghana Cocoa Board, (COCOBOD), Mr Joseph Boahen Aidoo, as part of the
company’s immersion programme of providing learning opportunities on how to
grow Africa’s business and banking sectors.
Briefing the delegation on COCOBOD’s operations,
Mr Aidoo outlined the numerous economic contributions of the Board to Ghana and
the world cocoa economy.
According to him, Ghana is second to La Cote
d’Ivoire in terms of top cocoa producing nations and produces premium quality
cocoa beans to feed the world’s confectionery market.
He revealed that Ghana was producing about 20
per cent world cocoa annually and together with La Cote d’Ivoire, both nations
produce about 60 per cent.
Mr Aidoo indicated that currently, Ghana
produces an average of 900,000 metric tonnes of cocoa yearly and this
translates into about $2 billion in revenue.
He bemoaned that revenue accruing to La Cote
d’Ivoire and Ghana annually is around $6 billion, an amount he believes is very
low considering the fact that the world cocoa market is valued at an estimated
$100 billion.
According to the Chief Executive, the low
revenue had forced some farmers to sell off their farmlands to illegal gold
miners, a development he says poses a threat to the survival of Ghana’s cocoa
industry and the world cocoa economy at large.
Mr Boahen Aidoo told the team that apart from
the falling global cocoa prices that affect farmers, the issue of climate
change has become a major threat to the sustainability of the cocoa sector,
adding that various steps are being taken to ameliorate the effect of climate
on cocoa production in the country.
He further stated that COCOBOD has introduced
the Productivity Enhancement Programmes (PEPs) such as the rehabilitation of
cocoa farms, mass pruning, and hand pollination among other interventions,
aimed at ensuring increased and sustainable cocoa production in Ghana.
For his part, the leader of the Standard Bank
Group, Mr. Steve Hall commended COCOBOD for its enormous contribution to the
world cocoa sector. He pledged his bank’s continued support in the Board’s annual
syndicated Loan Facility for the purchase of cocoa.
The meeting in Accra is part of a programme for
80 chief executives of the Standard Bank Group, and Ghana has been identified
as one of the countries that offers mind expansion experience and provides
opportunities to grow Africa’s businesses.
The team later visited the Cocoa Research
Institute of Ghana (CRIG), Cocoa Processing Company (CPC) and Cocoa Marketing
Company, Tema (CMC) to have a first-hand experience on the activities of the
Board.