Government
has, as part of its industrialisation drive, outlined measures aimed reviving all
collapsed cashew processing factories in the country.
Key
among the steps is a joint effort by the Ghana Export Promotion Authority
(GEPA) and the Exim Bank to offer financial support for the retooling of troubled
factories to use state-of-the-art technologies to ensure efficient processing
for optimum output.
There
are 13 cashew processing factories in the country, with a total production
capacity of about 65,000 metric tonnes. The majority of cashew factories are
small-scale and situated in the Brong Ahafo Region, which is the cashew hub of
Ghana.
Challenges
such as lack of capital to compete for the raw nuts and use of obsolete
machines have caused most of the plants to fold-up, leaving only two in
operation.
In
an interview with B&FT, the Deputy CEO of GEPA, Eric Twum, said government
is committed to retooling all cashew companies to revive and sustain processing
rather than exporting raw nuts.
“GEPA
has got in touch with those factories that need support; an audit will be
conducted to ascertain the exact support that each firm will require.”
The
authority, he noted, has also initiated moves to support private investors to
venture into processing cashew fruit.
Statistics
show that last year about 250,000 metric tonnes of cashew fruit got rotten on
the farms. Cashew fruit can be processed into jam, ethanol and juice, among
others.
“Henceforth
the cashew industry will be catered for properly by strategic interventions,
not by default,” he added.
The
revival of cashew processing will be the carry-through of an international
protocol Ghana has signed. He explained that the protocol requires about 50%
processing of cashew produced in the ECOWAS sub-Region by 2030. The Deputy GEPA
boss urged exporters to show interest in the cause of processing raw nuts
locally.
Other
interventions targetted at development of the cashew industry include the
proposed cashew export levy. Government is in the process of slapping an export
levy on raw cashew nuts (RCN).
The
levy is expected to discourage excessive exportation of RCN and promote local
processing of the commodity. It will generate revenue into the coffers of the yet
to be established Cashew Development Fund, planned to give a financial backbone
to cashew development initiatives.
A
mass spraying and distribution of grafted seedlings programme has also commenced.
The programme covers improvement of existing cashew farms through farm
clearing, spraying and pruning to set a roadmap for farms’ expansion, and
establishment of new ones to boost production level.
The
exercise targets about 70,000 acres every year; it is expected to increase
cashew production by 30%.
Current
production is pegged at 70,000mt. The commodity is one of the fast-growing cash
crops in the country.
It
is presently Ghana’s leading agricultural non-traditional export (NTE),
fetching about US$197million in 2016, representing 53% of the total US$371million
earnings from the agricultural NTE sub-sector.
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