The
traders complain they can no longer use the old method of preservation to store
fresh vegetables for future sales.
They
believe farmers are either applying excessive chemicals or wrong ones on
vegetables as compare to previous years.
Vegetable
sellers at the Kumasi Central Market say they are running at a loss because of
their inability to find a lasting solution to the problem.
There
are also concerns for consumer safety as produce going bad are sold cheap to
food vendors.
Akosua,
a tomato seller who has been in the business for over 20years, told Luv Biz “the
chemicals used destroy the tomatoes nowadays”.
She
and her colleagues expect the government to help establish storage facilities
to preserve the fresh vegetables during bumper harvest.
Post-harvest
loss is one of the major challenges in Ghana’s food value chain.
Samuel
Mensah Asumadu, a lecturer at the General Agric Department of Sunyani
Polytechnic, attributes the challenge to the production of new crop varieties,
which may have shorter shelf-life.
He
also identifies other factors to include poor soil nutrition and poor application
of chemicals to ward off pests and diseases.
According
to him, value addition to produce is a major way out in addressing the
post-harvest losses.
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