Audio By Carbonatix
The General Agricultural Workers Union (GAWU) has warned that Ghana could lose its enviable position as the second leading cocoa producer in the world if stringent measures are not taken to protect cocoa farms from illegal mining activities.
The caution comes after the Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Cocoa Board, Joseph Boahen Aidoo, disclosed that the organisation has refunded $250 million it acquired from the African Development Bank for irrigation purposes in cocoa farms due to contamination of water bodies in farming areas.
Ghana is currently the second leading producer of cocoa in the world after Ivory Coast. Ghana also produces the world's premium cocoa beans, making the commodity from the country the best preferred.
The General Secretary of GAWU, Edward Kareweh said other countries are making strong efforts to overtake Ghana in cocoa production by developing sustainable environmental practices.
He stated that more farmers are abandoning their farms due to the level of water pollution in farm areas.
“It’s no more lucrative to be in cocoa production. There are many factors which are real. Even the cocoa farmers who are patriotic and insist that they will not sell their farms and stay with their farms are forced to sell them out”.
He disclosed that while government looks on unconcern, illegal miners are forcibly ceasing cocoa farms with impunity for mining.
Mr. Kareweh said contaminated water bodies are diverted to cocoa farms, destroying the plants.
“The illegal miners will flood your farms with all the dirty water and will take your farm by force. You cannot even enter the farm again. It is so pathetic and heartbreaking that we can sit down and allow such a monumental criminal act to continue. This crime is against generations to come”.
Sounding distressed, Mr. Kareweh said it is a matter of time for Ghana to lose its production capacity and long good will as the country with the premium cocoa beans.
Latest Stories
-
‘We’ll meet you in court’- DVLA boss fires back at VEMAG over injunction on new number plates
1 minute -
John Mahama’s symphony of stewardship: The first anniversary of the Accra reset
25 minutes -
How Edmond Kombat reclaimed TOR from industrial decay
28 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo chooses Manchester City ahead of January move
54 minutes -
Western region records 465 road fatalities in 11 months; officials blame drunk driving, human error
1 hour -
DVLA extends use of DP stickers and DV plates amid new plate rollout delay
1 hour -
What’s in a nickname? AFCON 2025 teams have stories to tell
1 hour -
DVLA suspends rollout of new number plates planned for January 2026
2 hours -
Health Minister commends workers, pledges stronger health system in end-of-year message
2 hours -
Two dead, dozens injured in crash on Cape Coast–Takoradi highway
2 hours -
NPP Primary: Bawumia still in strong lead in latest Global InfoAnalytics survey
2 hours -
NPP Primary: Bawumia leads with 56% amongst committed voters in latest Global InfoAnalytics poll
2 hours -
Venezuela accuses US of ‘extortion’ over seizure of oil tankers
2 hours -
Zelensky says Ukrainian withdrawal from the East possible in latest peace plan
2 hours -
NDC highlights first year achievements, vows to stabilise economy and strengthen governance
3 hours
