Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister-designate for Agriculture, Dr Owusu Afriyie Akoto, has revealed that farmers will start getting paid for cocoa from Monday February 22.
Speaking at his vetting by Parliament's Appointments Committee, he stated that the Central Bank is collaborating with COCOBOD to raise funds to pay Licensed Buying Companies (LBCs).
This, Dr Afriyie Akoto explained, will ensure that the LBCs, who have not paid farmers for their produce, get the needed finance to in turn pay farmers.
He explained that the payment had delayed because of the decline in chocolate production across Europe and America because of the coronavirus.
Dr Afriyie Akoto stated that because of the decline, the country was unable to sell enough contracts to trigger the release of the last tranche of the cocoa syndication loan worth about $190 million.
“By now before the end of the year, normally we should have had enough contracts for the release of the whole amount $1.3 billion, unfortunately we could not sell that fast."
"So now that we have the contracts sold, we are expecting that coming week early next week the last tranche $190 million will be with us and then we can pay for all the outstanding debts and that issue will be behind us.”
When asked to specify when farmers will get paid Dr Afriyie Akoto said “Monday farmers will start getting paid.”
His comment comes after NDC MP for Buem, Kofi Adams had alleged that Licensed Buying Companies (LBCs) in the cocoa sector are carting cocoa from farmers without paying.
According to Mr Adams, reports from his constituency and other constituencies in the cocoa-growing regions has it that, cocoa farmers have not been paid by LBCs for their cocoa purchased in the last two months even though they are in the third month of the main cocoa season.
He indicated that the inability of Cocobod to pay the LBCs has also affected the livelihoods of cocoa farmers since LBCs are unable to pay the cocoa producers.
Ghana COCOBOD admitted to delaying its payment to some Licensed Buying Companies (LBCs), a development that has created anxiety in the cocoa industry.
In an interview with Joy FM on Thursday, Cocobod’s Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Dr Emmanuel Opoku said it is not intentional on the part of his outfit.
According to him, the Covid-19 pandemic has significantly affected the patronage of cocoa beans on the world market.
Agric Minister-designate Dr Afriyie Akoto said it is unfortunate that the virus has affected operations and payment but they are looking forward to resolving the issue as soon as possible.
Latest Stories
-
Does Goldbod owe BoG US$214m, or has BoG lost US$214m? A policy and financial risk analysis
2 hours -
US Congressman says airstrikes first step to ending killings in Nigeria
2 hours -
Afenyo-Markin urges NPP to move from talk to action after 2024 election loss
3 hours -
BoG’s international reserves could cross $13bn by end of 2025
3 hours -
Afenyo-Markin urges discipline, unity as NPP prepares for 2026 flagbearer primary
3 hours -
Haruna Iddrisu demands tough sanctions for officials implicated in galamsey
4 hours -
‘Opoku-Agyemang is very capable of leading the country’ – Haruna Iddrisu
4 hours -
Precision strikes hit terrorist targets as Nigeria, U.S. strengthen security cooperation
4 hours -
Trade Minister confident of continued gains in 2026
4 hours -
Transport shortages hit Ashaiman during Christmas
4 hours -
BoG says IMF praises Ghana’s macroeconomic gains, gold loss claims speculative
5 hours -
Press Freedom questioned after High Court ruling
5 hours -
TMPC urges caution and vigilance in use of traditional and alternative medicine
5 hours -
Ada PWDs boycott Assembly disbursement over procurement concerns
5 hours -
Christmas surge in ride-hailing fares hits consumers
5 hours
