…but its planting is still seen as taboo
Export earnings from shea butter products last
year reached US$64 million, up from US$52 million in 2014, a 23 percent growth
over the previous year, according to the latest figures from the Ghana Export
Promotion Authority (GEPA).
In 2014, the sector recorded a growth rate
of about 100 percent in export earnings when it increased from US$26 million in
2013 to US$52million in 2014. In the past five years, shea has been part of the
top ten leading Non-Traditional export products from the country.
Within the agriculture sub-sector for
instance, shea nuts was the second highest export earner with US$34 million in
2015 behind cashew nuts.
Despite the importance of shea to the
country exports, many shea tree growing communities in the Upper East Region
still believe that it is a taboo to plant the cash tree.
“The
people believe that if you plant a shea tree and it starts to bear fruit you
will die. Most of the old trees are dying and they are not being replaced
because of this belief that the people hold,” Lucy A. Akanboyuure, a gender activist,
championing women empowerment in the Kassena-Nankana West District of the Upper
East Region told the B&FT.
She explained that the situation poses a
threat to livelihood in the area, particularly women who have long been
collecting and processing shea nuts into shea butter for ages.
The shea industry in northern Ghana is mainly
centered on women. Approximately 16 million rural women in Africa contribute to
their livelihoods and support their family and children's education by
collecting, processing, and selling shea kernels and butter for local
consumption or export.
In spite of the fact that women do not own
shea farms, shea butter has been traditionally extracted by women from the
dried kernels of the shea tree for many years.
This notwithstanding, shea farmers in the
country say the absence of any form of support and effort by government to grow
the sector is seriously affecting their activities.
“We have never received any form of
support from anywhere to help us increase our yield. We need roads, especially
bridges because when it rains we are unable to cross the many water bodies to
our farms and it is when it rains that the reaped fruits fall off. So when this
happens, animals usually eat up the fruits which is not good for us,” said Akurigo
Samuel, whose family operates a large shea farm located in a town called
Kandiga in the Kassena-Nankana District of the Upper East Region.
The sector, just like many others in the
country is not streamlined and the cash tree still continue to suffer from bad
farming practices and cultural beliefs.
Annually, bush fires resulting from bad
farming practices destroy many hectares of shea farms in shea growing
communities in the three northern regions. The tree is also battling deforestation
as more and more people are moving to settle on lands where the plants used to
grow.
“Much
needs to be done for the sector because a lot of women’s livelihood and their
families is at stake. Yields are decreasing yearly because old trees are not getting
replaced and things can’t continue like this. NGOs are doing their best but the
government also need to turn its attention to the sector,” Mrs. Akanboyuure added.
Source:B&FT
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