
Audio By Carbonatix
A major agricultural transformation is taking shape along Ghana’s Volta corridor — but its success, the Millennium Development Authority (MiDA) says, hinges on one critical factor: land.
On a high-powered inspection tour of the White and Black Volta basins led by the Board Chairman of MiDA, Dr Charles Abugre; the MiDA Chief Executive Mr. Alexander Kofi-Mensah Mould directly appealed to traditional leaders to release lands to drive President John Dramani Mahama’s 24-Hour Plus Programme through the creation of large-scale Agro-Ecological Parks (AEPs).
“The success of the 24-hour agricultural programme depends heavily on land availability,” Mr. Mould stressed during a courtesy call on the Worawora Traditional Council. “We are counting on you to help unlock the agricultural potential of this area.”
Worawora commits land for large scale farming
In a strong show of support, Daasebre Sarfro Baah III, Chief of Worawora, announced that thousands of acres have already been set aside for the commercial cultivation of ginger, chilli pepper and rice for export.
“The people of Worawora are ready,” the chief declared, urging government to back the initiative with irrigation and farm inputs to scale production.
The proposed Agro-Ecological Parks are expected to operate as integrated 24-hour agro-industrial zones — combining farming, processing, storage, logistics and export to boost jobs and foreign exchange earnings.
Water wasted, dams questioned
However, the tour exposed serious infrastructure bottlenecks that could undermine the vision.
Despite proximity to Lake Volta, many communities lack irrigation, relying solely on rainfall for farming.
“Water is flowing beside these communities, yet farmers depend on rain,” the MiDA boss observed.
In parts of the Northern Region, incomplete facilities under the One Village One Dam initiative drew sharp criticism.
“What we saw in some cases are dugouts masquerading as dams,” Mr. Mould stated bluntly.
Export ambitions
Kubungu has meanwhile been identified as a potential cold chain logistics hub linked to Tamale Airport to support fruit, vegetable and nuts exports.
MiDA is expected to submit a comprehensive technical report in the coming months to guide investment and inter-agency coordination.
Latest Stories
-
US warns citizens to reconsider Nigeria travel on safety grounds
18 minutes -
Ivan Toney questions refereeing in Saudi Pro League title race after Al-Ahli draw
19 minutes -
Angola appoint Aliou Cissé as new head coach
31 minutes -
Virtual Security Africa showcases digital security vision at Kwahu Business Forum
35 minutes -
EBID strengthens regional integration role amid global economic uncertainty
1 hour -
Two assault rifles, ammunition retrieved in Police probe of Tamale gang attack
1 hour -
EBID records strong financial growth with $722m disbursements in 2025 – President, Dr George Donkor
1 hour -
EBID to mobilise $2.69bn under new 2026–2030 growth strategy – Dr George Donkor
1 hour -
An open letter to telcos, regulators and security agencies on mobile money fraud in Ghana
1 hour -
Mobile Money Merchants are driving fraud
1 hour -
Alban Bagbin declines minority’s motion to investigate sale of gold reserves at BoG
1 hour -
NACOC leadership tours drug testing centres in Accra
2 hours -
OSP’s power to prosecute without AG’s authorisation unconstitutional – AG files at Supreme Court
2 hours -
Seven African referees selected for World Cup 2026 as Ndala, Issa Sy miss out
2 hours -
Why diaspora investors are using Accra real estate to hedge against global uncertainty in 2026
2 hours