Aging farmers and lack of access to subsidised fertilisers have been
identified as major factors hindering the cultivation of oil palm in the
country, Rosemary Addico, Oil Palm Programme Manager at Solidaridad has
said.
“Aging farmers in the oil palm sector is a major problem in the
country’s farming sector, while lack of access to an improved subsidised
fertiliser supply chain up to the farm gate also poses a major
challenge to development of the crop.
“If Ghana invests in an improved fertiliser supply chain, it is going to support the oil palm crop growers.
“Fertiliser is the driver. With fertiliser we can hit over 200
percent increase of crop yields,” she told B&FT in an interview,
after a workshop aimed at brainstorming on revival of the Ghana Oil Palm
Development Association (GOPDA) to serve as a strong and vibrant
mouthpiece to begin constructive negotiations and dialogue with
government on developing the oil palm sector.
The workshop, funded by Business Sector Advocacy Challenge Fund
(BUSAC) and organised by Solidaridad -- a not-for profit organisation
that is interested in developing small- and medium-scale oil palm
producers to be sustainable and profitable, was targetted at developing a
vibrant sector, one dominated by small-scale farmers, to be more
productive and profitable.
It brought together various practitioners in the value chain ranging from agronomists to oil palm farmers.
Addico said: “We have seen the potential in the oil palm sector. The
crop has a huge potential but nobody is supporting the sector. We have
subsidised fertilisers for other crops but oil palm is not getting any
support.”
She described the oil palm value chain as a sector that can be
described as a good crop for poverty alleviation, food security, and
job-creation for the youth, observing that there are a lot of
opportunities existing in the crop’s value chain: “If you go to the
rural areas a lot of women are into oil palm processing, and this has a
huge benefit for the local economy”.
She acknowledged the BUSAC fund for supporting trevival of a vibrant advocacy body for a better business environment.
Mr. Nicolas Jorgensen Gebara, Fund Manager, BUSAC Fund explained that
the outfit decided to support Solidaridad’s oil palm programme because
of the huge potential the crop holds for the country’s economy.
“It is the second-most important crop with good export potential, and
it’s an essential avenue for a lot of people to create growth and
employment. All these factors meet our objectives, we believe that by
providing support to the sector for the creation of sound business
association that will advocate and represent its members from the palm
oil sector will promote the quality, the standards and export,” he said.
The Fund is expected to run till 2015, and will support advocacy
training of the operators in the oil palm value chain to help develop
credibility to stand as partners and as counterparts for constructive
negotiation with government, he remarked.
Oil palm is the fifth-largest crop in the country in terms of area planted after cocoa, maize, cassava and yam.
Approximately 305,758 hectares of plantation is being cultivated
nationwide, with an additional 20,000 hectares needed to meet local
demand.
In 2010, oil palm processing groups projected a production output of
260,000 metric tonnes of palm oil, which indicates a deficit of 35,000
metric tonnes -- leaving government with no other option but to spend
US$100million annually on importation of oil palm to make up for the
deficit.
An estimated unmet demand of oil palm in the ECOWAS sub-region is
between 850,000 and 1,000,000 metric tonnes annually, a huge market the
country can take advantage of if properly managed.
The country is said to have a total area of 305,758 hectares of oil
palm. More than 80 percent of this is cultivated by private small-scale
farmers who mostly use varieties of unimproved planting material. This
has contributed to the very low productivity in the Ghanaian oil palm
industry.
The rising trend in international demand has been precipitated by increasing demand for palm oil in bio-fuel activities.
Crude Petroleum Price determinants continue to push upward pressure
on the price, and demand for crude palm oil (CPO) is steadily rising in
India, China, Europe and America for bio-fuel. In view of this
development, investors have been diverting their investment portfolios
into CPO.
Friday, December 19, 2014
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