European Union Threatens Import Ban On Ghana’s Cocoa

The European Union has threatened to impose import restrictions on Ghana’s cocoa entering its jurisdiction over deforestation and child labour concerns.

A Deputy Chief Executive of Ghana Cocoa Board, in charge of Agronomy and Quality Control, Dr Emmanuel A. Dwomoh, said the European Union had attributed the problem to cocoa farming, which unfortunately was not the case but illegal mining or galamsey, Graphic.com.gh has reported.

The EU is Ghana’s largest market for cocoa, exporting 80 percent of annual produce to the region.

Dr Dwomoh made this known Thursday, April 15, 2021, when he presented a paper titled “Illegal Mining in Cocoa Areas -The Position of Ghana Cocobod” at the National Consultative Dialogue on Small-Scale Mining in Accra.

“Now they are threatening to sanction or pass legislation that is going to prevent the EU from buying cocoa from Ghana. But we are engaging them,” he said.

“The EU position is that they are talking about child labour and deforestation and you see one key thing about deforestation is that in the 70s and 80s, if you take Amansie West, for instance, the place was full of cocoa. Cocoa is always cultivated with economic trees so that economic trees are on the top of the canopies followed by cocoa itself and the undergrowth is always plantain, cocoyams and things like that.”

“So in the 70s and in the 80s, those satellite images that were taken were all indicating that all those places were covered with forest. But with the beginning of galamsey, all those places have been removed and so when you take a satellite image the place shows red, an indication that the place is not forest-covered again,” Dr Dwomoh, said.

Deforestation has resulted in the loss of economic trees such as Funtumia elastica (Ofuntum), Alstonia boonei (Nyamedua), Pycnanthus angolensis (Otie), Milicia excels (Odum) and Spathodea campanulata (Akuakuoninsuo).

On what needed to be done to address the problem of illegal mining, Dr Dwomoh, among other things, called for the development of policies that prohibited mining in cocoa farms.

“Where mining is inevitable on any cocoa farm, the miner should pay compensation according to Cocoabod recommended projected revenue formula. This formula includes the cost of destruction of properties,” he said, saying that there should be “no issuance of license or lease for mining in cocoa farm lands until public farum is organized which must be done at a centralized area in communities where a lot of the inhabitants can attend for their consent concurrence”.

Again, Dr Dwomoh said no concession area (topo sheet) should be issued to companies from Accra without a public forum in a cocoa community and that the Minerals Commission should do land truthing before issuance of a license.

Dr Dwomoh who said the government and Cocoabod had secured over $200 million to rehabilitate cocoa swollen shoot virus disease-affected farms in cocoa-growing areas, said there was a need for the country to find ways of handling the issue of illegal mining or galamsey which was causing so much destruction, resulting in the EU, which purchased a chunk of its cocoa, to issue threats.

In the Western Region, for instance, over 5,040.70 hectares of land have been affected by galamsey activities. The number of communities is 502, 8,557 farmlands with 5,702 farmers affected.

Also in the Ashanti and Eastern regions, a total of, 11,508.51 hectares of land have been affected by galamsey activities. The communities affected in the two regions are 1,004,12,833 farms and 9,093 farmers affected by illegal activities.

Throwing more light on whether the quality of cocoa beans was another factor as a result of the chemicals used by illegal miners, he said “No, we have not had any report from anybody about that”.

COCOBOD, he told the media, was virtually doing everything for the farmer, adding that “right from the word go we provide the farmers with agriculture extension officers who educate them on good agricultural practices”.

Again, he said COCOBOD was providing the farmer with disease control products, insecticide for the control of insects and pests that attacked cocoa as well as fertilisers for cocoa farmers.

Dr Dwomoh said COCOBOD had also recruited 30,000 pollinators all over the cocoa-growing regions doing hand pollination for cocoa farmers.

He said cocoa was the mainstay of the country’s economy generating more than $2 billion in foreign exchange annually and was a major contributor to government revenue and Gross Domestic Product.

Apart from the over two million families engaged in cocoa production in the country, over 200,000 other individuals were engaged in either trade, transportation or processing of cocoa.

“Cocoa is a strong pillar in stabilizing the Cedi, unlike other commodities which have a high capital flight. Cocoa helps in the restoration of the forest in the middle belt because of the nature of its cultivation,” he said.

Child labourCocoaCOCOBODDeforestationEuropean UnionExportGalamseyGhana
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