The
industry players are however optimistic business will pick up gradually before closure
of the main crop season.
“When
you have a bounty harvest the previous year, the following year is likely to be
a bit slow,” explained Emmanuel Arthur, Managing Director of Kuapa Kokoo
Company Limited, a Ghanaian farmer-based organization.
The Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) has projected a production
target of 850,000 metric tonnes for the 2014-2015 cocoa crop season.
The
upward review of the producer price of cocoa and premium payments for certified
cocoa beans are factors expected to motivate farmers to boost production.
“The
season being slow does not mean we are not getting the cocoa but it is not as
brisk and as bountiful as it used to be, but it is likely we can meet target,”
stated Mr. Arthur.
He
has also observed that the 62 percent increase in producer price of cocoa announced
in October 2014 is attracting a lot more people to venture cocoa farming.
“People
are now rehabilitating their farms and trying to put up new farms; people are
now going back to the hinterlands looking for their lands which they abandoned,”
Mr. Arthur noted. “I believe that if we will be very brave and be marching our
local price against the world market price, especially anytime it goes up, then
I believe a lot of people will go into cocoa farming”.
Improved
port activities will also enhance haulage of cocoa beans for export, he added.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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