The Ministry of Trade and Industry on Tuesday held a national cashew policy validation workshop in Accra, as a road map to regulate the industry.
Participants at the forum funded by the Cashew
Industry Association of Ghana (CIAG), deliberated on the rationale for a cashew
policy; components of the policy; incentives and regulatory regimes as well as
challenges in the sector.
The discussion also considered the production,
processing, and distribution of the raw cashew nuts.
The Minister of Trade and Industry, Ekwow
Spio-Garbrah, noted that the roles of non-governmental actors in ensuring that
the policy is comprehensive and holistic cannot be over emphasised.
He added that the government cannot work in vacuum
and requires support from local authorities, financial institutions,
agro-related industries and organisations such as Economic Community of West
African States (ECOWAS) and African Union (AU) to boost the industry.
Mr Sam Seddoh, the Project Manager of Mennonite
Economic Development Associates (MEDA), a faith based international development
organisation, assured the ministry of contributions towards profitable
production of cashew, yield increment and ultimate livelihood improvement for
the farmers.
MEDA, which has its headquarters in Canada with
projects in 62 countries, is interested in sustainable livelihood improvement
for tree crop farmers and the profitable growth and development of businesses
along value chains of targeted tree crops
The President of CIAG, Mr Wilfred Osei Owusu said:
“The policy must clearly have a sustainable programme,” and must make room to
create a fund to run the affairs of the industry as well as institutional and
legal framework.
Cashew contributes 54 per cent of export revenues
of the sub-sector as the leading agricultural non-traditional export product in
Ghana.
The estimated value of the cashew sector (raw
cashew nuts) and kernels is estimated at $ 276 million.
The Cashew Policy Draft said the cashew industry
is confronted with several challenges. It includes the absence of an apex body
to administer activities in the industry, no targeted regulation for the
industry, no approved standards in cashew trading, fluctuation and uncontrolled
raw cashew nuts as well as lack of financial/credit assistance.
The President of the Ghana Cashew Farmers
Association (GCFA), Kwaku Adu says that bushfires has been a threat to the
farmers. He also mentioned that because the cashew trade is not regulated
people steal cashew from the farm to sell to their customers.
“We will be very glad if the policy comes up with
a payment system that will allow only cashew farmers sell their produce to
sieve out pilferers,” Mr Adu said.
Cashew is mostly grown by smallholder farmers with
farm size ranging from 0.8 hectares to 3.0 hectares. Large plantations account
for 12 percent of cashew farms in the country with sizes between 4 hectares to
40 hectares.
The policy draft also proposed a governing board
to encourage and monitor cashew production, research and extension, marketing
and quality control.
It also said, “the necessary institutional,
infrastructural and legal framework will be put in place to ensure effective
implementation of the prescriptions in the policy for the achievement of the
set objectives”.
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