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World Bank commits $75 million to rehabilitate Ghana cocoa farms

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By: Franklin ASARE-DONKOH

The World Bank Ghana office says it has committed approximately $75 million to Ghana’s Cocoa Rehabilitation Project to rehabilitate diseased and ageing cocoa trees.

According to the Bank, the initiative is aimed at restoring about 25,000 hectares of cocoa farms affected by disease and declining productivity.

The funding, mobilised under the West Africa Food Systems Resilience Programme, will support the replacement of diseased and ageing cocoa trees with improved, high-yielding, and disease-resistant varieties, while promoting better farm management practices among farmers.

Speaking at a World Bank Civil Society Organisation engagement on food security in Accra, Agricultural Economist at the World Bank Ghana, Ashwini Sebastian, said the cocoa rehabilitation project forms part of broader efforts to strengthen food systems resilience across West Africa.

“The West Africa Food Systems Resilience Programme, financed by the World Bank and implemented by the Government of Ghana, has enabled us to leverage grant financing,” she said, adding that seed funding from the Norwegian government is being deployed to support key agricultural value chains.

Dr Sebastian described the cocoa component as a flagship intervention under the programme. “We are putting in almost 75 million dollars to rehabilitate 25,000 hectares of cocoa farms that have been affected by disease,” she said.

According to her, the Bank’s immediate target is to restore about 5,000 hectares by July.

In addition to cocoa rehabilitation, the programme is supporting seed system development in selected clusters, including trials of improved crop varieties that can withstand dry-season conditions, particularly in northern Ghana.

The initiative further includes the provision of cashew seedlings to farmers as part of efforts to diversify income sources and strengthen agricultural livelihoods.

Ghana’s cocoa sector has been under increasing pressure in recent years due to swollen shoot disease, ageing tree stocks, and the effects of climate variability, all of which have contributed to declining yields and reduced farmer incomes.

Analysts say large-scale rehabilitation is essential to sustaining Ghana’s position as one of the world’s leading cocoa producers and to safeguarding foreign exchange earnings derived from cocoa exports.

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