Audio By Carbonatix
The Western North New Patriotic Party (NPP), led by the Regional Communications Officer, Addo Harry, has accused the government of deliberately neglecting the cocoa sector, warning that the situation is pushing the once-thriving industry towards collapse.
In a press release dated January 11, 2026, the party said the government’s growing interest in gold trading under the GOLDBOD initiative has come at the expense of cocoa, Ghana’s traditional foreign exchange earner.
According to the NPP, the Ministry of Finance has made significant financial commitments to support GoldBod. At the same time, the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) has been left under-resourced, which affects its ability to operate effectively.
The party noted that since November 2025, licensed buying companies (LBCs) across the country have not received adequate funds to purchase cocoa from farmers at the farm gate. As a result, many cocoa farmers are reportedly sitting on large quantities of bagged cocoa without buyers, forcing them to store their produce for extended periods.
“More worrying is the acute shortage of cocoa jute sacks nationwide. For the first time in decades, cocoa buying companies are unable to access the approved jute sacks, compelling both farmers and buyers to use fertiliser sacks to store cocoa beans—a practice that compromises quality and violates international standards,” part of the statement read.
Describing the situation as unacceptable, the NPP called on the government and COCOBOD to act immediately by releasing adequate funds to LBCs to enable nationwide cocoa purchases and urgently supplying cocoa jute sacks to all buying companies.
The party warned that continued neglect of the cocoa sector could lead to increased smuggling of cocoa to neighboring countries, deepening poverty among cocoa farmers, and a growing trend of frustrated farmers leasing or selling their farms to illegal miners.
“Cocoa farmers need prompt payment for their produce, and buying companies need funds and jute sacks to operate effectively,” the statement stressed, urging authorities to stop “starving the cocoa sector.”
Latest Stories
-
Oil price at two-year high after Qatar warns all Gulf production could stop within days
1 hour -
Ireland condemns missile attack that injured Ghanaian soldiers in Lebanon
1 hour -
‘Massive’ numbers killed by gunmen in latest Nigeria attack, senator tells BBC
1 hour -
Ghana@69 feels different: Jerseys, songs, and digital culture celebration takeover
2 hours -
EX WO1 Josiah Stephenson Kingful aka Old Soldier
2 hours -
State of the Nation at 69: The Ghana we have vs. The Ghana we want
2 hours -
Ghana@69: Ghana’s High Commissioner to Canada urges Ghanaians in the diaspora to drive development
2 hours -
UNIFIL condemns air strikes that injured Ghanaian peacekeepers in Lebanon
3 hours -
Assembly member shot as armed robbery wave grips Agona East District
4 hours -
Armed robots take to the battlefield in Ukraine war
4 hours -
AI-generated Iran war videos surge as creators use new tech to cash in
5 hours -
Kufuor calls for intellectual revolution to fix Ghana’s structural cracks
6 hours -
This Saturday on Prime Insight: Experts to tackle Mahama’s land transit ban on rice and ORAL progress
7 hours -
‘Tragic event’: Israeli Ambassador reacts to missile attack on Ghanaian soldiers in Lebanon
7 hours -
Huge US bomber lands at UK air base
7 hours
