14.12.11 Ghana Politics and Security
Sustainable cocoa project launched as Ghana cocoa continues to command premium

Ghana's cocoa production is strong and it commands a premium over that produced
elsewhere which rose in recent weeks to between US$130-US$165 per metric tonne
compared to prices quoted on the NYSE Liffe exchange in London. The growing
demand for “certified” cocoa has been recently noted by local officials including minister of finance
Kwabena Duffour at an Accra cocoa conference in November. As previously
reported
in Ghana Politics and Security he noted the increasing Western preference for “certified” and often “organic” produce.
The Singapore based agricultural trader, Olam International, and Rainforest Alliance which certifies cocoa, have announced that they will
together fund a US$1 million investment over the next three years to produce “sustainable” cocoa in Ghana which is certainly timely. They plan to train around 2000
farmers, significantly increase cocoa yields, and plant native trees to
regenerate
depleted forests in cocoa growing regions to help counter Ghana's annual
deforestation rate of just over 2 per cent. The two - who have already
implemented
projects in Cote D'Ivoire, Nigeria and Indonesia, say that Ghanaian farmers
should be
able to claim an even greater premium for “certified” cocoa.
Despite a recent cocoa surplus and market price reductions caused mainly by high
2011 production in Cote D'Ivoire and Ghana, long term international cocoa
demand
should rise. The leading chocolate maker Barry Callebaut AG, claims that approximately one million more tonnes of cocoa per year – i.e.
more than Ghana's currently production – will be needed to meet demand by 2020.
For more news and expert analysis about Ghana, please see Ghana Politics & Security.
© 2011 Menas Associates