Ghana farmers sweet on cocoa minimum price drive

Last week, Ivory Coast and Ghana decided to rise the global price of cocoa. (AFP)
Updated 01 July 2019
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Ghana farmers sweet on cocoa minimum price drive

  • Ivory Coast and Ghana had earlier threatened to stop selling their products to buyers unwilling to meet a minimum price of $2,600 per ton
  • The two African nations together account for 60 percent of the world’s cocoa production

ACCRA: Kwame Boadu was forced to abandon his cocoa plantation to work in Ghana’s capital Accra, but when the government announced plans for a price floor he began dreaming of a return to his fields.

A higher guaranteed price for the crop means a cocoa farmer “can afford fertilizer, he can afford weedkiller, he can employ more laborers, so he can increase his production,” he said.

And moreover, it would guarantee that farmers get more money when they increase output, the 34-year-old added.

Earlier this month, key producers Ivory Coast and Ghana threatened to stop selling their products to buyers unwilling to meet a minimum price of $2,600 per ton.

The two African nations — which together account for 60 percent of the world’s cocoa production — want to end a situation where cocoa producers make only $6 billion in a global chocolate market worth around $100 billion.

The move sent world cocoa prices briefly above $2,500 per ton, but they have since fallen back below that level.

IN NUMBER

The likely price of a ton of cocoa following Ghana and Ivory Coast’s decision to introduce a price floor.

After spending much of 2015 above $3,000 per ton, world cocoa prices slumped, fluctuating around $2,000 in 2017. The price drop squeezed farmers, who welcome government intervention.

“We don’t have anything to sell apart from cocoa,” said Alhaji Alhassan Bukari, who heads up Ghana’s farmers’ union.

“So if the government has thought about the farmers, they come together to fight for the farmers, we support them,” he said.

Cocoa is a key sector of the national economy, according to the Ghana Cocoa Board, both in terms of providing employment to around 800,000 families and generating revenue for the government’s coffers.

Ghana’s Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia said earlier this month at a meeting with farmers and buyers that Ghana and Ivory Coast made their proposal to ensure farmers get “a fair share of the wealth that the industry generates.”

Establishing a price floor would also help revive rural communities.

“A satisfactory price of cocoa beans will go a long way to complement the government's investments in rural infrastructure and improve the wellbeing of the communities,” said Bawumia.

But farmers are not the only ones concerned by the discussion over cocoa prices.

While chocolate has long been a marginal product in Ghana, despite the country being a major producer of its primary ingredient, in recent years a new batch of chocolate makers has set up shop.

Selassie Atadika, the chocolatier at Midunu, a maker of handcrafted chocolates, says she has noticed more local chocolate on the shelves in Ghana’s shops.

“I think in general there is more awareness, people are using it at more events and things like that so there is probably an increase in people’s interest in buying chocolate.”

These local producers have an interest in cocoa prices, and fear a jump in prices could hurt their businesses.

Atadika said she hopes a price floor would help cocoa farmers.

But for those trying to develop chocolate as a product “issues remain, even if the price of cocoa beans does not change, the price of sugar, milk powder and electricity will still be a major influence in their capability to make the chocolate,” she said.

Local producers buy beans from the second, smaller harvest. Moreover, they enjoy a subsidy on the purchase of beans from this harvest, according to the Ghana Cocoa Board.

“What would make an impact on domestic chocolate makers is if there was a loosening of regulations regarding who can sell and buy main crop beans, which would open opportunities for new domestic sourcing routes for cocoa,” said Kristy Leissle, a cocoa industry expert and lecturer at the University of Washington Bothell.

A development which would benefit all is if more cocoa was processed in Ghana, capturing more of the value added in the industry.

“We need to add value in Ghana, so we can send the world’s best products from here,” said chocolatier Atadika.


Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 10,414 

Updated 17 December 2025
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Closing Bell: Saudi main index closes in red at 10,414 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index closed lower on Wednesday, shedding 38.85 points, or 0.37 percent, to finish at 10,414.06. 

Total trading turnover on the benchmark index reached SR3.46 billion ($920 million), with 123 stocks advancing and 134 declining. 

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu also shed 41.61 points, or 0.18 percent, to close at 23,428.67. 

The MSCI Tadawul Index edged down 0.45 percent to 1,368.36. 

Arabian Drilling Co. was the best-performing stock on the main market, with its share price rising 6.8 percent to SR102.90. 

Naqi Water Co. gained 4.30 percent to SR58.25, while Saudi Ground Services Co. advanced 3.78 percent to SR38.42. 

Tihama Advertising, Public Relations and Marketing Co. saw its share price fall 4.95 percent to SR16.31. 

AlAhli REIT Fund 1 also declined 3.53 percent to SR6.29. 

On the announcements front, United Mining Industries Co., listed on the parallel market, said it has begun commercial production of gypsum board at its plant in Yanbu. 

In a Tadawul statement, the company said the financial impact of the project’s commercial production will be reflected in the first quarter of 2026. 

United Mining Industries Co.’s share price was unchanged, closing at SR42.54.  

Dkhoun National Trading Co. said its shareholders approved the board’s recommendation to distribute interim dividends on a semi-annual or quarterly basis for 2025. 

According to a Tadawul statement, shareholders also approved transferring the balance of the company’s statutory reserve, valued at SR2.43 million, to retained earnings. 

Dkhoun National Trading Co.’s shares saw no trades and closed at SR65.