COCOBOD to expand cocoa rehab with $200m World Bank loan

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Ghana Cocoa Board’s (COCOBOD) Deputy Chief Executive in Charge of Operations, Dr. Emmanuel Opoku, has disclosed that the board will invest part of the USD$200 million World Bank loan to expand rehabilitation exercises in areas attacked by the swollen shoot virus across the country, the Cocoa Post has reported.

According to the report, the virus has destroyed about 500,000 hectares of cocoa farms, causing a reduction in cocoa yields. New seedlings would be planted under the programme.

Ghana’s output declined to 600,000 metric tons last year after peaking at 1.048 million tons in the 2020/21 season, as the cocoa swollen shoot virus, aging plantations, illegal mining, and smuggling took a toll on the sector.

According to a project information document sighted by the Cocoa Post, a total of $132.8 million of the loan secured by the government last year and the counterpart funding will finance Cocobod’s rehabilitation of farms and help to enhance knowledge on the virus strains.

“The rehabilitation will take a minimum of five years to start getting economic production,” Cocobod’s Emmanuel Opoku told Reuters, adding that efforts had been hampered by the country’s economic crisis and the board’s limited funds.

Under the programme, the board will take over disease-infested farms, cut and replace sick cocoa trees, aiding growth to a fruiting stage before handing them back to farmers.

In 2018, Cocobod used part of a $600 million Africa Development Bank (AfDB) loan to rehabilitate aging plantations and those affected by the disease.

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Cocoa tree attacked by the virus

But the programme, originally meant to cover 156,000 hectares of plantations, was caught up in Ghana’s worst economic crisis in a generation during which inflation spiralled and the cedi currency depreciated sharply, Opoku said.

He said the AfDB facility benefited more than 88,000 hectares of farmlands, of which 40,000 hectares were ready to be given back to farmers in “the coming days.”

Alhassan Bukari, president of the country’s Cocoa, Coffee, and Sheanut Farmers’ Association, told Reuters that rehabilitation efforts needed to be aggressive as many farmers were affected.

Ghana’s graded and sealed cocoa arrivals fell by 35% between the start of this season on Sept. 1 and Jan. 31 this year due to the intensity of the seasonal dry Harmattan wind and what Cocobod described as production challenges.