Fruits, Nuts and Oil News
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Sod Cut For US$10 Million Sheabutter Plant
- 15/11/09
Ghana Vice President, John Dramani Mahama, broke the ground for the construction
of a US$10 million sheanut processing
plant in Buipe. The project is part of the Savanna Accelerated Development
Authority [SADA] initiative is expected to be in
operational in 6-months and already has a marketing agreement with the Produce
Buying Company Limited [PBC] in Ghana
and agreements with Brazil.
Under SADA, other projects to be executed included
the Northern Ghana Groundnuts Project [NGGP] for the processing of
groundnuts oil for export to Europe. A group from India was also conducting
feasibility studies towards setting up a jute
factory for the mass production of sacks for export to neighbouring countries,
while a 25,000ha sugar cane factory is to be
set up in Makango in the East Gonja District to process ethanol for export
to mainly Sweden. [Peacefm 15/11/09]
GGC Ready for 2009/2010 Trade Season
- Estimates to Buy 25,000 Tons of Groundnuts
- 11/11/09
As the 2009/10 groundnut trade season is being ushered in, officials at the
revived Gambia Groundnut Cooperation [GGC]
have stressed their resolve to ensuring a successful trade season. The Corporation
indicated that they are well prepared
and ready with the hope to buy an estimated 25,000 tons of groundnuts. Surveys
have been undertaken, depots prepared
and once the price is determined marketing will start. According to the Cooperation
there will be no credit buying with
farmer’s getting their cash as soon as they deliver the nut at the
secco. In addition, they hope to eliminate the middlemen,
noting that the GGC deals directly with the farmers so as to ensure that
farmers enjoy cash on delivery and the
commissions. [DO 11/11/09]
Banana Deal Emerging - 05/11/09
An end is in sight to the world's longest-running trade dispute, involving
bananas, and a deal could be in place by the end of
the year according to senior European and Latin American trade negotiators.
Settling the banana dispute would be a fillip for
the World Trade Organisation, whose long-running Doha round to free up global
commerce, like other trade negotiations,
has at times been held hostage by the decades-old row.
"
We are not yet there, but I perceive a willingness on all sides to come to
an agreement," Costa Rica's WTO ambassador,
Ronald Saborio Soto, who coordinates Latin American countries at the WTO
in negotiations on tropical products.
Cesar Montano Huerta, the top diplomat at the
WTO mission of Ecuador, the world's biggest banana exporter, said officials
were negotiating intensively and even hoped to clinch a deal in the next
couple of weeks. "We feel the elements are now
there, we feel we could close this quite quickly," said David O'Sullivan,
director-general for trade in the European
commission.
The deal, which could be reached before the WTO's
ministerial conference starting 30/11/09 would see the European Union
cutting tariffs on bananas for suppliers in Latin America and elsewhere.
In return the Latin Americans would drop
outstanding challenges to the EU at the WTO, and Brussels would provide
compensation to African, Caribbean and Pacific
[ACP] countries who would lose their preferential access to the European
market. The detailed terms are likely to resemble
an agreement almost reached in July last year on the fringes of a meeting
of trade ministers seeking a breakthrough on the
Doha talks.
That banana agreement was linked to a broader
Doha deal in agriculture, and when the July meeting collapsed, the
European Union walked away. Under that deal, the EU would have cut the tariff
on bananas to US$114 a tonnes by 2016
from US$176, with an initial cut to US$148. Negotiators say those tariff
figures are likely to be in a new deal, but the timing of
the reduction is still open and may not complete in 2016. The WTO has ruled
that the current EU regime for bananas for
Latin American countries, who market their fruit through U.S. distributors
like Chiquita and Dole, is unfair compared with
preferential arrangements for ACP states. Brussels has replaced these with
new Economic Partnership Agreements [EPA’s]
to comply with WTO rules, but the Latin Americans say their fruit still suffers
discrimination, and Ecuador has threatened to
retaliate against the EU under WTO rules.
One issue still to be decided is whether the
Latin Americans will drop their outstanding challenges at the WTO once Brussels
has notified the WTO of its tariff plans, or when they have been certified,
become legally binding and irrevocable, a legal
process that could take years. Another is the future treatment of bananas
under a Doha deal, whenever that happens. If
there is no Doha deal, the phasing of tariff cuts could be delayed, but
would go ahead eventually.
But if there is a deal, Brussels would want assurances
that bananas will be treated as normal agricultural goods and not as
tropical products, which would be subject to faster and deeper tariff
cuts than other farm products. That is to assure the ACP
countries, who would lose their preferential treatment under a stand-alone
banana deal, that they would not become even
less competitive in a Doha pact.
The Latin Americans already have some 80% of the EU market and less efficient
ACP states, used to years of duty-free
access to the EU market, fear they will be squeezed further. The EU will
also have to persuade all its member states to
support a deal which is resented by domestic producers, mainly in Spain's
Canary Islands and the French Caribbean. [RT
02/11/09]
African Cashew Alliance Builds A Global
Voice - October 09
Cashew in Africa abounds with profitable opportunities and the 4th annual
African Cashew
Alliance [ACA] annual conference,, organized with the West Africa Trade Hub
[WATH]
support, allowed businesses to start making deals.
Interest in processed cashew nuts, cashew fruit and cashew nut shell liquid,
an ingredient
in a variety of chemical and industrial products, fueled the one-on-one meetings
at the
conference. The event drew over 220 people from around the world, representing
every
aspect of the cashew industry, to Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire, Sept. 1-3. And
it helped the ACA
build momentum for a truly global cashew alliance involving everyone from
cashew
farmers to processors, traders to retailers, banks to investors. Representatives
from
Sindicaju the Brazilian cashew organization and Vinacas the Vietnamese Cashew
Association also attended.
In Africa, roughly 90% of the raw cashew nuts
farmers harvest are exported for
processing abroad. Processing companies in India and Vietnam buy up the
raw cashews,
allowing their companies to operate throughout the year, long after the
cashew harvest in
India has ended. Building processing capacity in Africa, which could create
tens of
thousands of jobs and produce millions of dollars in revenues for African
economies.
The ACA conference allowed industry stakeholders
to look at a variety of issues, from tree yields, which could be increased
dramatically, to processing, which is growing, to marketing, which will ultimately
drive the industry's growth. The ACA is
barely 4-years old, but we're showing the world the great potential for African
cashew.
The African Cashew Initiative, a new project led by GTZ under the umbrella
of the ACA, presented its first report of activities
at the conference. In the 5-countries targeted by the US$50 million project – Benin,
Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana and
Mozambique – the ACi has set up country teams including representatives
of private companies, non-governmental
organizations and government.
" We've already helped processors develop
business plans and implement a number of technical changes to improve their
efficiency and productivity," said Peter Keller, director of the initiative
at GTZ. "Farmers have been trained in the best
practices of cultivation, too." At business-to-business meetings
at the conference, companies and banks and investors met individually to
strike cashew
trade deals or look at investment and partnership opportunities. Access
to finance remains a critical issue for companies
within the sector, but with clearly profitable opportunities for lending,
banks were aggressively engaging companies.
As the technical assistance has helped companies develop better presentations
- clearer business models and compelling
cases for profitable activity - we are seeing banks step up with the financing
necessary to help businesses expand," said
Judson Welsh, the Trade Hub's financial services expert. "We'll see
some concrete deals coming from these meetings and
that's going to open the door for more agribusiness in the region."
"If
we want the cashew industry to be competitive on international markets, everyone
in the sector, from companies to
government, needs to understand that the cost of transport is an important
issue," Annequin said. "Private industry can find
ways to reduce these costs significantly. With the entire industry working
on this, there's no reason it can't be done." [WATH
October 2009]
Burkina Faso Leather Industry Recession-Proof
- 19/10/09
At the Tan Aliz factory in Burkina Faso's capital, Ouagadougou, workers
sort through fresh goat and sheep skins. Tan Aliz is
the largest factory of its kind in West Africa processing about 25,000
skins a day with a capacity to reach 30,000 skins per
day. The factory makes over US$10.5 million a year with 70-80% of production
sold to Italy. Tan Aliz also expects to expand
its export base to Spain, India and China.
Burkina Faso's promising leather industry could help reduce the country's
dependency on cotton production which accounts
for 60% of the country's export revenues. Global trade in cotton was predicted
to shrink this year and countries have been
advised to find ways to cushion against these effects. [Tang TV 19/10/09]
Processing Plants Fear Shortage Of African
Raw Cashews - 14/10/09
At a cashew industry conference in Abidjan [Ivory Coast], the buzz was about
African plans to develop processing plants at
home, rather than export raw nuts to processors in, for example, Vietnam.
African cashew producers have decided that it is
time to follow Vietnam’s example and strive to export processed products
instead of raw materials.
This move is bad news for Vietnam, because Africa is a principal supplier
of raw cashews to Vietnamese processing plants.
Though the number of cashew nut processing plants has been increasing in
Vietnam, domestic nut production has been
decreasing. This has forced Vietnamese cashew processors to rely on imported
nuts. For many years, Vietnamese
processors have had to import 40% of the raw nuts needed from Africa, or
about 300,000 tonnes, worth US$180 million a
year. The figure is expected to increase in coming years, because Vietnamese
farmers have chopped down cashew plants
to grow rubber, coffee and other more profitable crops.
Some 14 African nations
grow and export cashew nuts. In East Africa about 25% of the production is
processed locally, but
in West Africa the processing rate is only 5-10%. These countries, members
of the African Cashew Alliance and with
advisory assistance from the Gates Foundation [US], are now making serious
plans to boost local processing capability.
The most practical way for the Vietnamese cashew industry to avoid being
squeezed would be to make direct investments in
Africa. There Vietnamese enterprises could do preliminary processing, then
export semi-processed nuts to Vietnam, where
Vietnamese processing plants could make finished products to be launched
into the world market. In other words, the
Vietnamese cashew industry would imitate many industries in advanced countries
by ‘going up the value chain.’ They would
make finished products and get higher added value instead of making semi-processed
products as at present. However,
Vietnamese businessmen hesitate to invest in African facilities. A problem
lies in the fact that Vietnamese processors are
now only halfway up the ‘value chain’ themselves, exporting semi-processed
nuts to Chinese, European and US processing
companies that roast and market the nuts.
Oltrema, an Indian company, was at the African
cashew conference, offering cashew nut processing equipment and taking
many orders. The Indians have been aware of the changing viewpoint of the
African cashew producers who provide them
80% of the raw nuts they use. Already several Indian cashew processing
and export groups have established processing plants in Africa which can
serve as the ‘springboard’ for
a lot more. In this case, the big Vietnamese processing plants that
have contracted to Indian companies are likely to be ‘orphaned.’ They
will have to find their own way to survive.
It is high time for Vietnamese enterprises to start investing in African
plants, for while Vietnamese enterprises have
vacillated, the Indians have cemented their firm positions in the market.
[Vietnam Net 14/10/09]
Liberia: Sime Darby Plantation Eyes African
Markets - 18/09/09
Malaysian Sime Darby Plantation Sdn Bhd is exploring opportunities in
other African countries besides Liberia for its palm oil business expansion.
Its parent company Sime Darby Bhd had, in May, signed an US$800million
concession agreement with the Liberian government to restore and expand
the country’s rubber plantation and help develop its palm oil industry.
The concession agreement allows Sime Darby Plantation to develop 220,000ha
of land, with the company allocating an initial investment of RM70million.
[The Star 18/09/09]
World Cashew Association to Be Established
- 17/09/09
The Vietnam Cashew Association [Vinacas], together with the Cashew Export
Promotion Council of India [CEPC] and the Brazilian Association of Cashew
Nut Manufacturers [Sindicaju], recently discussed a plan to establish a
world cashew association. They met on the sidelines of the 4th annual conference
of the African Cashew Alliance [ACA] in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire. According
to the discussions, the world cashew association will be established within
a year. Vinacas said that it will talk about the matter further at
a meeting in late September to discuss the import of raw cashew from African
countries. Vietnam cashew processors import about 100,000 tons of raw cashew
nuts from Africa annually. [Saigon News 17/09/09]
Bakrie Sumatera Oil Palm
to Expand to Africa - 17/09/09
Indonesian PT Bakrie Sumatera Plantations Tbk [UNSP] is planning to develop
the oil palm and rubber plantations in African countries, considering
the similar climate to Indonesia in the country.
According to UNSP land in Africa is promising for oil palm and rubber
plantations development since there have not been many investors who
notice the potential,
despite the fact the climate in African countries is tropical as in Indonesia. "We
know that Indonesia is considered attractive by CPO and rubber investors.
If the field here is limited, [we] need to find a new field that has the
same climate," the company announced who are looking at expanding into
Liberia and Cote d’Ivoire. [VIVA 17/09/09]
Guinea Bissau Exports Over 132,000 Tonnes
Of Cashew Nuts - 25/08/09
Guinea Bissau has so far this year exported 132,000 tonnes of cashew nuts,
the best sales season of the country’s main export product. Hélder
Barros, the director general of Trade and Competition, said that the amount
already exported to India, the main purchasing market for the product, had
already exceeded the target of 120,000 tonnes. In order to maximum exports
the land borders were strictly controlled in order to prevent illegal exports
of cashews. The country is expected to net around US$80 million
from cashew exports. Barros noted, however, that the political and military
events of
March [assassination
of the President of the Republic and the Head of the Armed Forces] and
June [assassinations of two members of parliament accused of an attempted
state
coup] had had a negative effect on the cashew export season. [Macauhub
25/08/09]
Brazil To Boost Agriculture Exports From
Ghana - 11/08/09
The Brazilian Ambassador to Ghana, Lvis Fernando Serra has said that his
country is ready to partner government to boost and strengthen its agricultural
sector in order to increase its export to Brazil which is currently low.
He noted that the Ghanaian market is the largest market for Brazil and
was hopeful that Ghana will increase her exports to his country to change
the current tread, adding that Brazil has not bought any Shea butter from
Ghana and that rice, as well as Shea butter projects will be built by the
end of the year. [GBC 11/08/09]
Nigeria: Cashew Production - Investors
Invited to Consider the Potential - 28/07/09
The Kwara State Government is inviting investors to consider the opportunities
available in the cashew sub-sector.
· Investors interested in processing
activities can decide on whether to grow their own cashew or buy from local
growers. Olam Nigeria Limited
recently showed its faith in the sub-sector by investing in a cashew processing
factory at Ogbondoroko in the state.
· Investors will have a ready market in Nigeria with its population of
close to 150 million.
· Nigeria enjoys preferential trade agreements with the ECOWAS [Economic
Community of West African States] countries.
· Opportunities for export to America and the EU also exist.
· The soon to be completed cargo terminal at Ilorin International Airport
will further simplify the transport of goods from Kwara State.
· The Kwara State Government is committed to create an enabling environment
for investors and have introduced a number of incentives. These include assistance
with obtaining land, the provision of all required infrastructure [roads,
electricity, water] and various tax incentives.
Nigeria is the world's 4th
largest producer of raw cashew but there is still plenty of room for increased
production. [TIA 28/07/09]
Cashew Attracts Global Demand In Spite
Of Downturn - 13/08/09
The African Cashew Alliance’s [ACA] 4th annual conference is to be
held on 1-3/09/09 in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire. It will focus on improving
value and increasing efficiency as well as to help development agencies and
the industry to come up with the right set of policies that will favour catalytic
growth in the cashew sector. This year’s conference will feature thematic
panels on market trends and quality management, as well as sessions on cashew
processing and visits
to processing sites. Companies and financial institutions will leap-frog
access to finance constraints through a targeted business-to-investors forum.
And the $50 million 4-year African Cashew Initiative will also be a hot topic
at the event. [VAN 13/08/09]
Ghana & Burkina Faso: Tomato Trade
Liberalization - 03/07/09
A 2-day sub-regional meeting held in Navrongo, Ghana, deliberated the issues
of tomato trade between Ghana and Burkina Faso. The programme was organised
by the Ghana Trade and Livelihood Coalition [GTLC], a civil society organization
seeking to strengthen tomato trade liberalisation. Figures compiled by
the Customs Excise and Preventive Service [CEPS], within the 2008/2009
season, recorded that about 6,562.43 metric tonnes of tomato was brought
from neighbouring countries into Ghana. [TC 03/07/09]
Benin To Become A Rice Exporter - 16/07/09
The UN’s Food and Agricultural Organisation [FAO - www.fao.org] has
set aside US$500,000 help for Benin to achieve its ambitious goal of producing
300,000 tons of rice, double the curent production in 2011. According to
FAO data, imports of rice in West Africa reached 6 million tons in 2001,
and forecasts indicate that this figure will be 11 million tonnes in 2010.
According to FAO experts, with the increased production, Benin could not
only meet the needs of local consumption but also export the surplus to
the subregional and regional markets. FAO estimates the net increase would
amount to more than US$55 million. [AFROL 16/07/09]
West African Specialty Foods
- The Next Big Thing? - 13/07/09
The US$60 billion specialty foods market has doubled its share of the overall
food market, from 8 to 16%, in the past 5-years. This June’s Fancy
Food Show drew more than 24,000 buyers to the biggest specialty foods trade
show in North America, which featured an African presence assisted by the
West Africa Trade Hub, the Ghana Export Promotion Council, Technoserve,
Association Africa Agro Export and Agence Sénégalaise de
Promotion des Exportations. Interest was driven by the unique pavilion
modeled on West African architecture, custom-built in Ghana and positioned
directly in front of one of the main entrances. It showcased 19 exhibitors
from Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire, Gabon, Ghana and
Nigeria.
Africa has a natural advantage in this novelty-crazed
market, few people are familiar with its flavors. Africa is one of the few
markets
still to be absorbed
into the mainstream. Some thought that companies from sub-Saharan Africa couldn’t
produce high-quality and competitive food products, but they are being proved
wrong. Despite the momentum, West Africa still lags behind, commanding less
than 1% of the specialty foods market. [WATH 13/07/09]
Ghana: Papaya - A Rising
Commodity in the Export Business - 09/07/09
A strategic investment in the commercial cultivation of papaya [paw paw]
could boost the country's export earnings and contribute substantially
to the country's economic growth according to the Federation of Associations
of Ghana Exporters [FAGE] if appreciable practices were applied. Ghana's
geographical location offers a favourable climate for the production of the
commodity,
while Ghana's proximity to Europe was also a logistical
advantage over major producing countries such as Brazil and Ecuador, who
control 65% and 10% of the European market respectively.
These observations
were noted at a 1-day forum, organised by FAGE and the Trade Investment
Program for a Competitive Export Economy [TIPCEE] on the
increasing potential of papaya in Ghana's export business. Notable developments
have been the successful introduction of golden papaya which has led to
increased yields from 45 metric tonne p/ha to 65-80 metric tonne p/ha. FAGE
however
noted that the need for further investment in the sector was driven by
the existing market opportunities, both on the local and export, and high
returns
on investment resulting from high yielding varieties.
Available figures
provided by FAGE indicate that in 2008 the 15 core member states of the European
Union imported 35,750 metric tonnes of papaya with
a CIF value of €53-million. Ghana's papaya amounted to 1,061 metric
tonnes, representing a market share of only 3%. [TC 09/07/09]
China Near Senegal
Deal To Grow Peanuts - 10/07/09
China is close to a deal with farmers in Senegal to use 100,000 ha for
growing peanuts. President Wade noted that under the agreement, the Chinese
would
export 30% of the production and 70% will remain for local factories.
During a visit to Senegal in February, Chinese President Hu Jintao signed
deals
worth US$90 million, including an agreement to buy 10,000 tonnes of Senegalese
peanut oil. Farmer cooperatives, unions and associations will lease the
land and the Chinese will provide fertilisers and other assistance. [RT
10/07/09]
Ivory Coast's SIFCA Seeks To Double Palm
Oil Output - 06/07/09
Ivory Coast's SIFCA group will double its annual palm oil output to 500,000
tonnes over the next 3-years with technical and financial investment
from Singapore's Wilmar International.It said that the increased output
and
the SIFCA group's purchase of its own ship to improve regional deliveries
should help reduce the reliance on Asian imports while also easing a
deepening shortfall in palm oil across West Africa.
With this project,
palm oil production from Palmci [a part of the SIFCA group] will increase
from 250,000 tonnes to 500,000. Wilmar will bring its
techniques and experience in boosting production from plantations and reducing
factory and refining costs to make the finished product more competitive
for a growing market. SIFCA, a privately owned agro-industry company, has
secured support from banks as well as Wilmar for a project that will see
US$85.28 million spent on building four new factories to improve processing.
A further 11 billion CFA francs will be spent every year providing agricultural
inputs for farmers. Output from plantations is expected to jump from 12
tonnes p/ha to 20 tonnes p/ha while small-scale farmers should see their
yields
improve from 5 to 12 tonnes p/ha.
SIFCA said West Africa's deficit currently
stands at 300,000 tonnes per year but it could jump to 500,000-600,000
tonnes if production is not boosted
to meet growing needs in the region. Ivory Coast, the world's biggest cocoa
grower, is Africa's top palm oil producer with output of 390,000 tonnes last
year. Many cocoa farmers are
turning to palm oil, which they say is more profitable and less labour intensive.
SIFCA hopes that the new investments will help it tackle the twin challenges
of a shortage in palm oil in the region and the tendency of Asian, rather
than local, companies to fill the gap. [RT 06/07/09]
New Sheanut Processing
Plant For Buipe, Ghana - 07/07/09
Ghana and Brazil have signed a US$7-million agreement for the establishment
of a sheanut processing plant at Buipe in the Northern Region. The facility,
which would start operations in August, would be the first of the 3-plants
to be established under the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority.
The agreement is between Ghana Cocoa Board [COCOBOB], Saka Worldwide
Trading Limited, a Ghanaian company, and Sysgate Brazil Limited which includes
the purchase and process of 40,000 tons of sheanut. Curotibah, a company
in Brazil, will buy about 5,000 tons of the processed sheanut, while
many
other companies had expressed interest in the processed product. [GNA
07/07/09]
Guinea Bissau: Government Finds Buyers
For Cashew Nuts - 14/05/09
The government of Guinea Bissau has found buyers for the country’s
cashew nut crop, thus avoiding a sharp drop in prices paid to farmers. Two
Guinean and one Senegalese businessman will buy the cashews for 200 cfa francs
per kilo [0.30 euro] in the country’s interior and for 230 cfa francs
[0.35 euro] in Bissau. The measure by the government, which is prevented
from setting the price of cashew nuts, the country’s main export product,
aims to minimise losses to farmers, who were selling the product at 100 cfa
francs [0.15 euros] per kilo, or exchanging it for rice. Last year, each
kilogram of cashew nuts in Guinea Bissau sold for 300 cfa francs [0.45 euro],
with the country exporting 110,000 tonnes of the product. Guinea Bissau has
no cashew processing industry and essentially exports to India. [Macauhub
14/05/09]
Optimism Reigns At Cashew Project Launch
- 12/05/09
Barely a year old, Mim Cashew in western Ghana is an example of the potential
the industry holds for Africa. The company employs about 300 people who
work to produce up to 2,000 tons of raw cashew nuts annually. Representatives
of the world’s largest buyers, technical experts and farmers visited
the company’s 540 acre plantation of about 56,000 cashew trees as
part of the launch of a US$45 million project to increase farmer productivity,
improve links between smallholder farmers and the marketplace, increase
African processing capacity and promote a sustainable global market for
African cashews. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is providing US$25
million and private industry and other stakeholders are providing US$20
million to transform the industry in Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire,
Ghana and Mozambique.
The project, led by the German development group
GTZ under the umbrella of the African Cashew Alliance, was launched on 18/04/09
at a meeting of
its key partners in Accra. They met for 3-days to put in place a steering
committee and to discuss how to implement the project. The 4-year project
intends to increase the incomes of 150,000 farmers in the 5-countries.
The
project includes virtually every aspect of the cashew value chain, from development
agencies like GTZ, TechnoServe, FairMatch Support and USAID’s
West Africa Trade Hub, to the African Cashew Alliance, an industry body involving
public and private sector stakeholders. International food companies including
Kraft Foods, OLAM and Ahold are involved as are African cashew processing
companies and farmers. It is hoped the industry would create 250,000 new
jobs and over US$150 million in revenues. A local processing industry would
also contribute to stabilizing farm gate prices for cashew farmers and stimulate
them to improve the current quality and low yield in order to receive better
prices. [WATH 12/05/09]
Nigerian Government Signs MoU On Rice
Production With Popular Farms - 12/04/09
Popular Farms & Mills a subsidiary of the Stallion Group owned by
the Vaswani Brothers has commenced work on N162billion rice project soon
after
it signed a MoU with the federal government. The 1-millon hectare commercial
rice development project will not only help to make Nigeria self-sufficient
in rice production but would also make the country a net exporter of rice.
The project has the capacity to produce 1.5-million tonnes of rice per
annum by 2013. [DT 12/04/09]
Gambian Officials Confident Of Bumper
Groundnut Harvest This Year - 14/04/09
Gambian government officials believe that this year’s groundnut harvest
will prove the once-devastated industry is about to bounce back for the first
time in 10 years. Groundnuts are Gambia’s biggest cash crop, bringing
in 43% of agricultural revenues and 13% of overall income. But the industry
has been crippled since the early 1990s when the main company marketing the
crop was forced to shut down by presidential decree due to corruption.[AA
14/04/09]
Ghana’s PBC Signs Sheanut Processing Plant
Mou With Brazil’s
Sysgate - 15/04/09
Ghana’s Produce Buying Company [PBC] has signed a MOU with Sysgate
of Brazil towards the establishment of a sheanut processing plant. The establishment
of the plant, which is a brainchild of vice president John Mahama, would
allow for the export of sheabutter and help Ghana tap into a fast expanding
global shea trade projected to gross US$500-million per annum within the
next 5-years. The estimated market value of shea butter in Brazil alone is
$40-million per annum. [PA 15/04/09]
Japan Donates To Gambia To Enable It Purchase
Rice - 12/04/09
Japan has granted Gambia D120-million under its Food Aid Programme. The
grant is aimed at helping Gambia to purchase rice. [DO 12/04/09]
Nigeria:
Yam Exports Deal Planned With The European Union - 08/04/09
Nigeria may soon maximise its position as the world’s number one
producer of cassava, yams and cocoyams by exporting the crops. Arrangements
have been
concluded to export yams to the European Union [EU] with expected foreign
exchange earnings of US$200-million. Production volume currently stands at
32 tonnes per annum. This was made known by the executive director of the
National Root Crop Research Institute [NRCRI], Dr Kenneth Nwosu, during the
opening ceremony of 2009 annual research review and planning workshop of
the institute. He said the export of yam tubers to the EU would be realised
with the collaboration of NRCRI with the Nasarawa State government and a
British company. [TD 08/04/09]
Ghana Seeks To Woo Investors Into Its
Cashew Industry - 09/04/09
The Ghana Investment Promotion Centre is inviting investors to cultivate
and process cashew nuts. A recent USAid report shows West Africa’s
cashew industry has a new status as a major supplier of raw nuts, accounting
for almost a third of the world’s output. The report also noted that
the global trade in cashew nuts could do with increased tonnage from Africa.
Ghana’s exported raw nuts reached 47,000 tonnes in 2006. This figure
is considered very small when compared with world excess demand of 430,000
tonnes of raw nuts. Less than 50% of Ghana’s exports is derived from
domestic sources, with cross border trading accounting for a large chunk
of this. There are plans to process cashew nut locally to earn more money
and create jobs. Processing locally would increase cashew revenue by 50%.
[TI 09/04/09]
Guinea Bissau President Seeks Processing
Of Cashew Nut - 29/03/09
Guinea Bissau has launched a campaign to promote the commercialisation of
the cashew nut. The country is also in the process of setting up a National
Cashew Nut Institute as well as a fund to encourage local processing. Guinea
Bissau exported 110,000 tonnes of cashew nuts last year, an increase of about
4,000 tonnes, compared with 2007. The country is the leading raw
cashew nut exporter in Africa and the fifth in the world. Last year, the
government was wary of fixing the reference price of the kilogram of cashew
nuts, but the kilogram was sold at 300 CFAF while the average export tariff
increased from US$550 per tonne in 2007 to US$750 per tonne in 2008. [PANA
29/03/09]
Africa Pushed To Broaden Cashew Processing
- 09/03/09
African cashew farmers are expecting to produce more than 600,000 tonnes of raw
cashew nuts [RCN] this year but the sector is being urged to expand its processing
capacity rather than ship the bulk of its produce in raw form. Christian Dahm
of the Ghana based African Cashew Alliance [ACA] said: "The harvest is under
way and West African producers are set to produce over 600,000 tonnes of cashew
this year, roughly 33% of the world's supply. Cashews hold enormous potential
for West Africa and as more processing capacity is developed, the region's farmers
will see increased incomes and thousands of new jobs will be created."
ACA officials said the industry could contribute
much more to the region's economy if more of its raw nuts were processed
locally. As it is, less than 10% of the RCN produced in West Africa is processed
before being exported. Africa as a whole exports about 650,000 tonnes of
RCN a year. In Guinea-Bissau, where exports are this year likely to be 110,000
tonnes, revenues from RCN exports are expected to fall by 20% to 30%. Tanzania
is anticipating a crop of more than 100,000 tonnes and, with local processors
complaining about the high costs of operation, a large proportion of this
is likely to be available for export in raw form to India or Vietnam. Ghana
is expecting a favourable harvest and Mozambique is on track for 95,000 tonnes
against 90,000 tonnes last season. [PL 09/03/09]
2008 Yam Exports Fetch N56bn - 02/03/09
The Nigerian Export Promotion Council [NEPC] has realised N56-billion from
yam exports for 2008 compared with the N37-billion in 2007. This was
achieved through the efforts of the NEPC in sensitising citizens on the
export of
non-oil products. Nigeria is the largest producer of yam in the world
followed by Ivory Coast, Ghana and Benin. Global yam production is 51.4m
tonnes per year, of which Nigeria accounted for 36.7m tonnes, Ghana 3.6m
tonnes and Ivory Coast 4.8m tonnes. [AA 2/03/09]
Ghana - New Mango Nurseries
Promote Market Access - March 2009
The Ghana Export Promotion Council [GEPC] has established four mango
centres located at Ho and Nkonya-Kwamekrom in the Volta Region, Kpalo-Salaga
in
the Northern Region and Ada-Afiadenyingba in Greater Accra Region, involving
a total of 120,000 grafted seedlings of export variety exotic mangoes.
African
Cashew Alliance Helps Sector Win Grant - March 2009
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s US$25 million grant to the
German development organization GTZ and inflated to $50 million with contributions
from the industry, was the culmination of over a year’s work to help
develop the cashew sector. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit
[GTZ] Gmbh will lead the cashew project with assistance from the African
Cashew Alliance [ACA], FairMatch Support, and TechnoServe.
The African Cashew
Alliance [ACA], founded in 2005 with support by the West Africa Trade Hub,
has worked with key partners to develop the cashew sector:
improving yields, increasing local processing capacity and enhancing marketing.
The move could bring over US$150 million in new revenue, create tens of
thousands of jobs and boost incomes of hundreds of thousands of poor cashew
farmers.
The ACA provided the Gates Foundation and key
partners with market intelligence, figures on cashew production and processing
capacity and important
links
to industry stakeholders. Close collaboration with the grant’s partners
ultimately led to a proposal to address key issues along the cashew value
chain for regional and global markets.
The Gates Foundation’s grant will fund activities in five African
countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana and Mozambique.
The activities aim to improve the quality of raw cashew nuts, increase farmer
productivity, improve links between smallholder farmers and the marketplace,
increase African processing capacity, and promote a sustainable global market
for African cashews. For example 3-years ago Sotria-B a cashew processor
in Burkina Faso had 130 workers and processed about 60 tons of cashew for
export. This year, the company expects its 350 workers to produce almost
200 tons of cashew for export – outlined in a business plan it developed
with help from TechnoServe during a technical expert's visit sponsored by
the Trade Hub.
Financial support, in-kind contributions and other
support for the cashew project come from supply chain managers and processors
Global
Trading Agency
BV [GTA] and Olam International Ltd.; branded manufacturers Intersnack Group
GmbH & Co. KG and Kraft Foods; retailer Costco Wholesale Corporation;
equipment manufacturer Oltremare; and other contributors, the German investment
and development company DEG - Deutsche Investitions-und Entwicklungsgesellschaft
GmbH and the United States Agency for International Development. [This article
originally appeared in the WATH Factor, a monthly newsletter published by
the West Africa Trade Hub, a USAID-funded project promoting export development
and trade facilitation. www.watradehub.com]
Ghana: Salt Export Strategy Ready - 18/02/09
Players in Ghana's salt industry met in Accra to discuss and finalise a
strategy document aimed at enhancing the products export. A draft strategy,
produced by the Ghana Export Promotion Council with the support of Commonwealth
Secretariat, provides a framework for the development of the sector isolating
the different categories of salt producers on the basis of their volume,
scale of operation and growth potential. The report recommends actions
to be taken at various levels and has been formally submitted to Government
for implementation.
The document estimates that Ghana has about 500km
coastal front with a total production potential of 2.2million metric tonnes
per year.
Over 60% of this
is in the Songhor basin. The country currently produces about 250,000 metric
tonnes per year, worth an estimated US$2,558-million. It is clear that
Ghana will not be a world player in the salt sector in the short to medium
term.
But, the country has a long history of supplying neighbouring States and
the strategy will be to build on this strength.
The focus on the salt sector
is in line with Ghana's effort to diversify its export base by including
non traditional exports such as salt, with a
view to attain middle income status by the year 2015. [CNIS 18/02/09]
USAID Commits US$5.3m To Expand Cassava
Production Across Africa - 04/02/09
A US$5.3million United States Agency for International Development [USAID]
funded sub-Saharan project is seeking to raise cassava production by 30%
in 7-African countries. The project, themed Unleashing the Power of Cassava
in Response to the Food Price Crisis, aims to maximise the utilisation of
cassava to address food price crisis in Nigeria, DRC, Ghana, Malawi, Mozambique,
Sierra Leone and Tanzania. The Ibadan-based International Institute for Tropical
Agriculture [IITA] and its national partners across the 7-countries will
implement the project, which has a time frame of 2-years. [PU 04/02/09]
Gambian
Cashew Food-For-Progress Initiative Launched - 02/02/09
The American embassy in Gambia, the US Department of Agriculture’s
Foreign Agricultural Service and the Department of State for Forestry and
the Environment, have launched a food for progress initiative. Designed to
improve the income gained from the production and processing of cashew in
The Gambia river basin, the programme is under the aegis of a US non-governmental
organisation International Relief and Development [IRD].
Given the high potential
for cashew in the sub-region, the programme will work with farmers’ organisations,
processors and traders in the Casamance region of Senegal and northern Guinea-Bissau,
as well as the South Bank of
The Gambia. The goal of The Gambia River Basin Cashew Value Chain Enhancement
Project is to enable 59,000 cashew farmers maximise returns from production
and improve their livelihood in the targeted regions of The Gambia, Senegal,
and Guinea-Bissau. This will be achieved by increasing the competitiveness
of the sub-regional cashew value chain. [DO 02/02/09]
Disease Threatens Banana
Harvests Across Africa - 29/01/09
Efforts by banana farmers across sub-Saharan Africa to increase production
of the crop that currently feeds about 100m people on the continent are
being threatened by diseases resulting in growers losing as much as half
of their produce. Scientists warn that this can soon lead to more severe
food shortages in some parts of Africa. [DI 29/01/09]
China Signs Senegal
Peanut Oil Deal - 14/02/09
Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao's delegation has signed a deal under
which China will buy 10,000 tonnes of Senegalese groundnut oil, although
Le Soleil gave no timeframe for the purchases. Groundnuts are one of
the West African country's main crops. [RT 14/02/09]
Senegal Worried About
Slow Take-Up Of Sesame Seed Production - February 2009
Senegal’s government is worried about the slow take up of sesame seed
production by its farmers despite having invested millions of dollars in
the sector. As profits decline for the country’s main cash crops peanuts
and cotton and Asia’s demand for sesame seed grows, some producers
are reconsidering the abandoned crop. Government agricultural advisor Khardy
Ndiaye, said farmers have been reluctant to cultivate sesame seed but face
pressure to find a viable cash crop with higher food prices and lower profits.
In recent years, international prices for cotton
and national subsidies for peanuts have decreased. Fuel price increases have
further eroded farmers’ profits
but despite increased worldwide demand and potential profits for sesame seed,
some farmers have yet to take to sesame. Sihounké Diatta of the government’s
local agricultural agency, said: “It is still only considered as a
back-up crop here. There is traditional preference for other cash crops and
the price is not that good.” [All Africa]
Kano Farmers Step Up Sugarcane
Production With New Hybrid - 25/02/09
Farmers in Kano State are stepping up the production of sugarcane as part
of a drive to generate revenue from new sources. Sugarcane is one of
the major cash crops grown in Kano State. While most areas of the state
are
producing the crop. Two species of sugarcane is being cultivated in Kano,
the old one known as yar Hausa and the new one, which was imported into
the country. Although the old one is still being grown by some farmers
the bulk of sugar cane grown is the new specie due to is its lasting
quality. Yields improved from just 3-months to 1-year. [DT 25/02/09]
Cameroon’s CDC Plans Huge Investment
In Palm Rubber And Bananas - 12/01/09
Cameroon’s state-owned commodities company plans to increase palm oil
output by 20% by 2012 as it prepares to be split up the corporation under
an eventual privatisation plan. The Cameroon Development Corporation [CDC],
the country’s top agro-industrial company and second biggest employer
after the state, also plans to invest 20-billion CFA francs [US$40m] over
5-years to boast rubber and banana output. CDC’s plan also involves
the installation of a new 7bn CFA francs oil mill with a processing capacity
of 15 tonnes an hour.
CDC produces the majority of Cameroon's palm oil
and operates 43,413 hectares of rubber, palm and banana plantations out of
Cameroon's
total of 98,000
hectares of land concessions. The investments, intended to consolidate
CDC ahead of a future privatisation, would raise rubber production by 5%
and
banana production by 10%.
CDC produced 22,356 tonnes of rubber in 2008,
mostly for export to Asia, and 98,443 tonnes of bananas, which are mainly
exported
to the European Union,
which has a preferential banana import policy for former colonies like
Cameroon. Already one of Africa's top banana exporters, the government hopes
to increase
annual exports to 400,000 tonnes from 250,000 tonnes. It is also the world's
fifth biggest cocoa grower.
Palm oil, which is used in food and for manufacturing
industry, is sold mainly within Cameroon or in neighbouring states in the
Economic and Monetary
Community of Central Africa [CEMAC]. Cameroon produces a tiny proportion,
0.5% of world palm oil production, which is dominated by Asian producers
including Indonesia and Malaysia. Interest in palm oil, already the most
common source of vegetable oil, has increased in recent years as its use
in biofuels has risen.
However, questions over the environmental impact
of palm oil plantations and the biofuel trade in general has taken the
shine off its green credentials
and prices have sunk as the global economic crisis has hit commodities
markets. As part of its plan to rehabilitate 8,000 hectares of palm oil plantations,
CDC has grown 266,000 improved variety seedlings which should more than
double
yield to 15-20 tonnes per hectare from 7 tonnes now. The company will start
planting them in April, meaning they will be mature and start producing
fruit by 2012. As the palm oil plantations are in the remote Boa plain, the
company
also plans to upgrade 738 km [460 miles] of roads to improve access. The
plantations are near the Bakassi Peninsula which Nigeria handed back to
Cameroon last year under a World Court ruling. [RT 12/01/09]
Cameroon: CDC
Begins Planting Boa Plain Oil Palms Next April - 22/12/08
With some 266,000 oil palm seedlings already growing in a new oil palm
seedling nursery at Bounjari, the Cameroon Development Corporation, CDC,
is set
to begin planting the very first oil palm trees in April, 2009. The planting
marks a milestone in the on-going operation launched in January 2008,
by CDC to develop 6000 hectares of land in the Boa Plain [Illoani] area
with
the planting of more oil palm trees within the next 5-years [in Dikoume,
Mbongo and Bounjari]. CDC will also erect a new FCFA 7-billion oil mill
in Boa with production expected to start by the close of 2009. Construction
will start in April.
[Post 22/12/08]
heanuts Producers Appeal For Regulation
Of Industry - 20/12/08
Members of Sunbawiera Sheanuts Producers Association at Kperisi, a farming
community in Wa Municipality have called on the management of Ghana Cocoa
Board [COCOBOD] to speed up regulation of the industry. Alhaji Ayitey,
Chairman of the association noted that the disorganised nature of the industry
made it difficult for producers to benefit and called for measures to be
instituted to arrest the situation.
The Ministry of Trade, Industry and President's
Special Initiatives had planned to organise training programmes for the
producers to acquire skills
to enable them improve quality of their produce and the co-ordinator of
sheanuts at COCOBOD was preparing a manual to regulate the industry in 2009
and urged
producers to organise themselves into groups or associations to benefit
from the regulated industry. [GNA 20/12/08]
Unilever Completes Deal To Dispose
Of Ivorian Edible Oil Assets - 04/12/08
Unilever has completed the sale of its edible oil business in Ivory Coast
together with its interests in local oil palm plantations, Palmci and
PHCI. The businesses have been sold to SIFCA and to a 50:50 joint venture
between
two Singapore-based companies, Wilmar International and Olam International.
At the same time it has acquired the soap business of Cosmivoire, an
Ivorian producer with a market presence throughout Francophone West Africa.
Cosmivoire
is a subsidiary of SIFCA, the parent company of an Ivorian agro-industry
group. [PL 04/12/08]
Senegal: Peanut Output May Rise 66% To
550,000 Tons - 08/12/08
Peanut production in Senegal is likely to increase 66% to 550,000 metric
tons in the 2008-09 season after plantings increased, according to the
US Department of Agriculture. Output fell 28% to 331,200 tons in the 2007-08
season, from the previous year, because of poor rainfall. [BL 08/12/08]
Gambian Groundnut Season To Begin On December
5 - 02/12/08
Gambia’s Agribusiness Services and Producers’ Association [ASPA]
declared 05/12/08 as the official start date for this year’s groundnut-marketing
season. ASPA said the session will last until 31/03/09 and added that in
consultation with the government, it has fixed a groundnut producer price
of 8,000 dalasis per tonne. ASPA said that this year’s producer price
had been arrived at using the officially recognized producer price determination
mechanism, which takes into account the world market price for groundnut
products as well as parameters and ratios relevant to the domestic marketing
system. [DO 02/12/08]
Ifad To Fund Cassava Processing And Marketing
In Nigeria - 01/12/08
The International Fund for Agriculture Development [Ifad www.ifad.org] plans
to invest US$50m to improve cassava processing in Nigeria and increase market
accessibility of the product. Furthermore, plans are underway to diversify
the huge focus on cassava and spotlight other crops that would better the
lives and livelihood of small scale rural farmers. Ifad is a specialised
financial agency of the United Nations, focusing exclusively on poor farmers
and rural communities with the aim of reducing poverty in the rural areas.
Perin Saint Ange, the regional portfolio adviser for Ifad in Nigeria, who
made the disclosure at an interactive session in Abuja, was responding to
criticisms directed at the agency for over-emphasising on cassava production
to the neglect of market accessibility and other crops. [TD 01/12/08]
New Boss
Appointed To Head Gambian Groundnut Body - 03/12/08
Alieu Mboge has been appointed as the director general of the Gambia Groundnut
Cooperation [GGC] effective December 2008. [DO 03/12/08]
Nigeria: FG Imports
$650 Million Frozen Fish - 29/11/08
President of the Fisheries Society of Nigeria [FISON], Foluke Areola, has
said Nigeria imported 739,700 tonnes of frozen fish worth US$650.53 million
in 2007. The figure was lower than the 800,000 tones imported in 2006.
The bulk of the supply comes from Europe, Asia, South Pacific, South
America and some African countries. Scandinavia also supplies about 160,000
tonnes
of stockfish worth more than US$400 million annually. Official statistics
indicate that Nigeria's demand for imported frozen fish, especially mackerel,
herring and croaker, is growing. Nigeria was re-certified to export shrimps
to the United States in 2007. [TD 29/11/08]
Gambia Groundnuts - 20/11/08
With the groundnut trade season almost upon us, the issue has ignited intense
Parliamentary debate centered mainly on poor prices being paid to producers.
At the time of writing, no producer price has been set. It is expected
that Gambia will see a dramatic increase in groundnut harvest due to
the good rains during the current rainy season. It is unfortunate that
of the
500 tons of seed purchased by Government, almost one third of this total
was rejected as being unsuitable for purpose. [WABA 20/11/08]
Africa's Top
Cashew Exporter In Processing Bid - 10/11/08
Guinea-Bissau, Africa's top exporter of raw cashew nuts [RCN] which currently
processes just 3% of its annual production, is set to boost processing
capacity with 4-factories to be opened by early 2009. With annual production
of 130,000 tonnes, the small west African country is the world's fifth
largest producers of cashew, but there is only rudimentary processing
by small-scale processors. Andre Nanque, president of the country's National
Cashew Commission, said the area under cashew cultivation is rising by
4% a year and exports are projected to reach 105,000 tonnes of RCN this
year.
The rising production and an end to government-fixed farmgate prices
were attracting foreign processors into the country. Two processors of
medium
capacity are re-launching operations and a Libyan investment group has
invested US$4m to establish three plants each with 2,500 tonnes processing
capacity.
According to Bien Amie of the non-governmental
organisation SNV which supports the sector in Guinea-Bissau, cashew nuts
from the country
are highly disease
resistant and free from any chemical treatment, thus qualifying for organic
certification. Traders said the lack of finance for raw material purchases,
price competition from RCN exporters, and a non-business-friendly policy
environment present some of the main obstacles to processing in Guinea-Bissau.
Industry
official Mario Mendonca said prices are now not fixed by government but determined
by the market. Export and trade licensing procedures have
been simplified and financing from banks had soared to unseen levels. "As
a result the entire value chain has benefited. Prices went up from the farm
gate via the intermediaries to the fob price," said Mr Mendonca who
heads cashew promotion agency No Fianca.
No Fianca recently joined forces
with Heriot, a South African trade finance fund, ATE Finance Bissau, a
cashew trading company, the national agriculture
association, regional and local co-operatives and the government, whereby
Heriot provides finance to ATE to purchase raw nuts, while No Fianca mobilises
co-operatives and farmer associations who negotiate prices with buyers.
Last
month, a conference of cashew industry stakeholders called for formation
of a national cashew institute and a law to encourage processing. Participants
said government should offer more extension services and training to growers,
and called for establishment of a Mozambique-style guarantee fund for cashew
production and processing in order to ease access to finance. [PL 10/11/08]
Nigeria's Second Sugar Refinery Starts
Production - 22/10/08
Nigeria's second sugar refinery, with a capacity for 720,000 tonnes a year,
has started operation and plans to expand by 50% in 2009. BUA Sugar Refinery,
a subsidiary of privately-owned BUA Group, began production in September
at 60% of installed capacity and should attain full capacity before year-end.
The plant, located at Lagos Tin Can Island port, produces around 2,000
metric tonnes a day and plans to expand capacity, by another 1,000 tonnes
per day in the next year. BUA is also looking at the possibility of listing
the sugar unit on the Nigerian Stock Exchange.
Nigeria's sugar industry has
expanded rapidly in the last 8-years, buoyed by new investments estimated
at US$1 billion. Nigeria hopes
to slash sugar imports to 30% of national demand by 2010. [Nigeria
still imports about 1.2 million metric tones of sugar annually, 90%
of the country’s needs.] The government has privatised most
of its companies, which are being revamped by new investors. BUA
and Dangote Sugar Refinery, Nigeria's biggest maker of the sweetener,
have a combined capacity for over 2 million tonnes per annum, enough
to save Nigeria about US$500 million yearly in sugar imports.
Dangote is expanding
its capacity to around 2.1 million by end-December to meet surging
national and regional demand, while Singapore-based
commodities trader Olam International said last month it would
invest US$91 million in a Lagos port-based 49:51 joint venture sugar refinery.
It is hoped by 2009 it will be unprofitable to import refined sugar
because of the advantages enjoyed by local manufacturers. [RT 22/10/08]
Nigeria
Exported Shrimps Worth $65m in 2006 - 24/09/08
Nigeria exported shrimps worth more than US$65 million in 2006. According
to former Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development,
Bamidele Dada Nigerian shrimps were in high demand in Europe and
America. He stressed the need to boost fish production to meet
the protein needs of the population, adding that "there is
a gap between supply and demand, so we need to double our efforts
in marine production, as well as in fish farming. [TD 24/09/08]
Africa: Going
Bananas - 10/10/08
Arguably one of the world's most popular fruits, bananas are
poorly marketed as a value-added commercial crop in Africa. But
that is
about to change as a plan is being conceptualised to transform
the way Africa produces and sells bananas.
A 5-day conference organised
by the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture [IITA]
and Biodiversity International, focussing
on banana and plantain research throughout Africa was held in Kenya's
second largest city Mombasa. The conference, was attended by over
400 delegates, including banana growers, buyers, scientists, government
officials, donor organisations and policy makers. A 10-year plan
to transform banana production in Africa was developed which addressed
themes such as farmer cooperatives; processing and value-addition;
and seed systems.
Starchy varieties of banana and plantain are a
staple food in Africa where most of the produce is sold on the local market.
Due
to marketing
constraints, a very small quantity is exported. Bananas provide
income, jobs and nutrition for small-scale farmers.
While bananas earn around
US$5-billion dollars annually, only 13% of the global production of around
104 million tons is traded, indicating
a potential for Africa to increase commercial trade in bananas.
The challenge is to determine how Africa can claim a larger portion of
the market in a way that puts money in the pockets of the continent's
small-scale growers. Lack of markets, limited value addition and
high post-harvest losses are some of the key factors that have
hindered Africa from making the most of its bananas and plantains. Water
and
soil nutrition are also strong limitations in banana production
across the continent.
Some of the research findings presented during
thematic sessions at the Banana 2008 conference indicated a lack of capital,
inadequate
transportation, taxes and inconsistent prices. These problems significantly
limit the ability of small-scale farmers to benefit from growing
cross-border banana trade between countries such as Rwanda, Burundi
and the DRC.
Scientists and farmers participating in the conference
are also discussing new production methods and organic farming techniques,
which will help small-scale growers overcome current and emerging
threats to production, including plant diseases, poor soil and
climate
change. Among the most serious challenges to Africa's banana production
are diseases which cause yield losses of up to 50%. Banana xanthomonas
wilt attacks all varieties of bananas, causing annual losses of
over 500 million dollars across the East and Central African region.
Discussions
also focused on how investment in banana processing can greatly expand
income opportunities for banana farmers. In Africa,
products made from bananas and banana plants include beer, wine,
juice, sauce, mats, handbags, envelopes, postcards, flour, soup
and breakfast cereals. [IPS 10/10/08]
African Cashews – The Ultimate
Source - October
The third annual conference of the African Cashew Alliance in Dar
es Salaam, Tanzania heralded cashew as “the ultimate source” for
economic development and poverty reduction in Africa. It’s
not hard to see why: Farmers are willing and able to grow more
cashews. The number and quality of processors in Africa is on the
rise. And cashews top consumers’ nut preferences.
The conference, organized
by the West Africa Trade Hub in its capacity as secretariat of the alliance
and hosted and co-sponsored by the
Cashewnut Board of Tanzania, the Cashewnut Processors Association
of Tanzania, and other stakeholders, covered virtually every aspect
of the industry – from how to increase cashew tree yields to
how to market the final product to consumers.
Over 130 industry stakeholders
from 19 countries participated, including 60 active ACA members.
Confident in the future of the cashew sector
in Africa, they made and attended presentations, panels and discussions,
visited local cashew processors, shared best practices and sealed
cashew deals with newly found business partners.
Cashew growing is more
advanced in West Africa, and processing is more advanced in East Africa.
Thus, one of the keys to development
will be to help the east and west to learn from each other. partnership
among the players in the cashew industry – private, public
and non-profit organizations – is well-positioned to provide
resources, expertise, and advocacy to enhance the African cashew
market and yield benefits to smallholder farmers.
Two banks that also co-sponsored
the conference, Ecobank and NMB, presented their plans of financing
African agriculture and processing,
while Greylock Capital Management, a New York-based investment fund
outlined its strategy of tapping into Africa’s emerging market.
Another
panel explored policy and incentive frameworks for investments in the
cashew sector. The tools available are in place, they said,
citing tax exemptions, favourable tariffs, taxation of raw cashew
nut exports, and flexible labour regulation. Those measures need
to be applied in a systematic and consistent manner to produce
an investment-friendly climate, said Ashok Krishan, Spices and Cashew
Manager for OLAM.
While much work remains on effective farmer and
processor representation at the government level, participants agreed that
the development
of the African Cashew Alliance, now just 3-years old, represented
a big step forward. [WATH October 2008 - This article originally
appeared in the WATH Factor, a monthly newsletter published by
the West Africa Trade Hub, a USAID-funded project promoting export development
and trade facilitation. www.watradehub.com]
Senegal Projected To Double Its
RCN Exports In 2-Years - 22/09/08
Senegal raw cashew nut [RCN] exports are this year projected to double
compared with two years ago, with the limited local processing capacity
leaving virtually the entire production heading to export markets.
RCN exports in 2006 were estimated at 10,000 to 15,000 tonnes but
rose to 15,000 to 20,000 tonnes last year. This year, they are projected
to rise to more than 30,000 tonnes.
While the Senegalese crop is fairly
small, Senegal also exports cashews produced in Guinea-Bissau and
Mali, through its ports of Ziguinchor
and Dakar. Senegal has no industrial processing facilities; it has
one semi-industrial facility which exports part of its production
to the fairtrade market in Europe. The country also has a network of
15
smaller scale processors, and frequent informal cottage processing
units in the cashew-producing south. Total annual processing capacity
is a paltry 350 tonnes of RCN, but local processors complain that
competition from exporters of raw nuts makes it impossible for them
to secure even
these volumes.
Under a US Agency for International Development programme
Senegal is working on improving the quality of RCN, enhancing productivity
and expanding production. [PL 22/09/08]
Producers, processors and major buyers
and marketers from Africa, Asia, Europe and the US discussed ways
of boosting production, marketing
and processing; as well as opportunities and trends in African and
global markets. Participants noted that the price of cashews on international
markets has risen, which promises improved returns to producers.
On the other hand, the yield of cashew trees in many parts of Africa
is
much less than the yield in other parts of the world. In some countries
such as Mozambique, yields are as low as 175kg to 200kg per hectare,
versus about 800kg per hectare and more than 1,000kg per hectare
in India and Vietnam respectively.
Another challenge facing the African
industry is the continuing exports of RCN, mainly to India and Vietnam,
where the nuts are processed and
shipped to the US and Europe for consumption. Since 2005, African
processing capacity has been growing rapidly. East Africa now processes
more than
30% of its cashew crop. West Africa has expanded its processing capacity
and is still adding processing plants, but it has not yet reached
10%, due to the large volume of RCN it produces. About 12% of the African
product is processed on the continent. It is critical that cashew
farmers,
traders, processors and marketers on the continent work together
now to build this industry in order to realise its potential. [PL 22/09/08]
Olam, which will be in charge
of overall management of the refinery, will have an option to raise
its stake to 51% at market value for three
years after commissioning of the refinery. With sizeable port land
and access to jetty facilities, Modandola Group will be instrumental
in obtaining the necessary concession, port
land access and licences for the sugar refinery. The Singapore company
already produces and exports items like cashew, sesame, coffee, cocoa
and rice from Nigeria.
In the second scheme, Olam will acquire a 49%
stake in Standard Flour Mills [SFM], currently owned by Modandola
Group for $32.5m. Olam will
them invest an additional $4.9m to raise Lagos-based SFM's operating
capacity to 2,000 tonnes per day from 1,200 tonne per day currently.
Olam will also take a lead role in sourcing wheat and managing the
day-to-day operations of the wheat mill. Olam said it has the capacity
to market and distribute wheat through its well-established distribution
networks in Africa, which imports 32m tonnes of wheat or 60% of its
consumption and accounts for 26% of global wheat trade. [PL 15/09/08]
According to the delegates
of the Yaounde meeting, it is possible to establish a positive evolution
in the international market for banana.
In this light, the ACP and European Union delegates expressed the wish
for a negotiated, balanced specific solution capable of promoting a
sustainable agreement for all the parties within the unique framework
of WTO. Banana, they stated in the Yaounde, should not be given the
same consideration with tropical products. "It should be an object
of a legally indisputable agreement", the Call said.
No agreement,
the delegates stated, should be accepted on banana without the participation
of ACP countries in its negotiation. "All agreements
should take into account engagements within the framework of bilateral
negotiations between the European Union and Latin American countries",
the Call, said.
The banana problem, though being an economic issue,
has become a political problem. The pertinence of the banana war is
such that it has held
the WTO talks hostage for over a decade. "If there is no accord
with banana producers on imports in Europe, then there could be no
wider deal on global trade liberalisation", European Trade Commissioner,
Peter Mandelson warned. Mr Mandelson said a deal worked out by WTO
head Pascal Lamy had to be accepted by both Latin American and African,
Caribbean and Pacific producers. But from every indication, no such
concession has been reached. [CT 27/08/09]
The facility which began
in 2006 under the Agricultural Services Sub-Sector Investment Programme
[AgSSIP], through a World Bank facility will support
the operations of Sea-Freight Pineapple Exporters of Ghana [SPEG].
It involved the conversion of an open shed occupying 4,400m2 into
eight fully refrigerated chambers completed with cold storage facilities.
It has a capacity of up to 300,000 metric tonnes to store fresh horticultural
produce annually.
A similar facility is to be constructed at Kotoka
International Airport by tapping into the Millennium Challenged Account
[MCA] as the second
phase of the programme, while the third phase will address the issue
of infrastructure both at the farm site and roads leading to the
farms. Currently the EU imports 90,000 tons of fresh produce from Ghana
since 2007 earning 80-million Euros. [GNA 08/09/08]