Audio By Carbonatix
Cocoa Processing Company Limited (CPC) in collaboration with the British Council (BC) and the Department of Nutrition and Food Science of the University of Ghana(UG), will outdoor a new sugar free chocolate 'ASPIRE' at the British Council auditorium next week Wednesday.
A statement issued in Accra yesterday said' ASPIRE' was born out of an industry-academia partnership between CPC and the Department of Nutrition and Food Science of the University of Ghana through the Africa Knowledge Transfer Partnership programme (AKTP), a British Council project aimed at bhdging the gap between industry and academia.
Genevieve Pawar, Marketing Manager, CPC, said the production of 'ASPIRE' was in line with CPC's goal to bring health benefits of cocoa to all categories of consumers.
"It is ideal for people who love chocolate but are conscious of their sugar consumption and those who aspire to better health. ASPIRE is to become an addition to the Golden Tree label," she said.
Frank Asante, Head, Research and Development, CPC, said that a lot of research and evaluation had gone into the production of 'ASPIRE' adding that "we are very confident therefore, that this new Golden Tree chocolate will meet the needs of the nonsugar eating public".
Moses Anibaba, Director, British Council, stated that the AKTP programme between CPC and University of Ghana was a pioneering and excellent example of how industry and academia in Ghana could work to improve competitiveness and productivity through better use of scientific knowledge, technology and skills.
"I am thrilled with the launch of 'ASPIRE on the Ghanaian and world market and proud of the efforts and collaboration in this initiative," he reiterated. .
Dr Esther Sakyi- Dawson, Department of Nutrition and Food Science, university of Ghana and Academic Supervisor of the project said product development efforts at the univesity usually ended at the prototype stage and they were really excited about the opportunity given them to see a prototype to be scaled up to a stage where it would be launched.
She lauded the British Council's AKTP project, saying that it addressed the issue of academia providing an immediate workforce for the world market.
Source: Ghanaian Times
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Israel to bar 37 aid groups from Gaza
1 hour -
High Court freezes GNAT elections amid claims of constitutional ‘subversion’
1 hour -
MTN announces airtime and data sales blackout for January 2 in preparation for new VAT tariffs
2 hours -
Not Semenyo’s ‘last game’, says Iraola as Man City close in
2 hours -
12 of the best TV shows to watch this January
3 hours -
NPP begins nationwide exhibition of voter register for 2026 presidential primaries
3 hours -
Senegal conclude Group D with comfortable win over Benin as both progress to Round of 16
4 hours -
Scores sleep overnight at Accra Sports Stadium more than 18 hrs ahead of Alpha Hour Convocation
4 hours -
When revenue collection hurts business
5 hours -
Creative Canvas 2025: Shatta Wale – Disruption as a strategy, dominance as the result
5 hours -
Is talk of “losses” by GoldBod just abstract drivel? Bright Simons asks
7 hours -
US Strikes: Ondo Amotekun arrests 39 fleeing suspected terrorists
7 hours -
New Passport Office opens in Techiman, bringing vital services closer to Bono East residents
7 hours -
Anthony Hopkins shares advice as he celebrates 50 years of sobriety
8 hours -
KTU Radio wins international award for its unique programme on World College Radio Day
8 hours
