Ghana plans to raise its fixed
cocoa price next season to ensure that smuggling into neighbouring
grower Ivory Coast is unattractive, the chief executive of cocoa sector
regulator Cocobod said.
Ghana’s falling cedi currency has fuelled smuggling of cocoa into Ivory Coast since October, reversing a trend.
“The government is doing everything to get the cedi stabilised and it
is our hope that by September this will have been sorted out when the
new price is fixed.
“With the new price, farmers will be more comfortable and smuggling
will be discouraged,” Cocobod’s Chief Executive Stephen Opuni said.
Cocoa prices were set for the 2013/14 season which started on October 1.
At that time, Ghana’s price of 3,392 cedis per tonne was roughly at
par with Ivory Coast’s minimum guaranteed farmer price of 750 CFA francs
($1.59) per kg.
However, the cedi has fallen by more than 20 per cent against the dollar this year, creating a gap between the two prices.
“The price will increase but I cannot tell by how much,” Opuni said on the sidelines of the World Cocoa Conference in Amsterdam.
Top grower Ivory Coast plans to raise the fixed farmer price above
800 CFA francs per kg for the season starting on Oct. 1, a source at the
country’s finance ministry said last month.
Opuni, who was appointed in November, said Ghana planned to review
guidelines for the internal marketing of cocoa in the coming months.
In 2012 Cocobod investigated a shortfall of around 70,000 tonnes of
beans between official cocoa purchases and its inventory after buyers
reported inflated volumes.
At the time, local buyers were overstating cocoa purchases in order to gain advance funding.
“As the regulator, we expect anyone who works with us not to violate
our guidelines,” Opuni said, while declining to give details of what the
review would entail.
“Before the next season begins we will have done the review.”
The world’s second largest producer also plans the expand the volume
of beans processed locally to up to 40 per cent from around 25 to 30 per
cent, Opuni said.
According to him, some plants already have expansion plans.
Ghana could produce up to 900,000 tonnes of cocoa in the coming
2014/15 crop season, on par with the International Cocoa Organisation’s
forecast for the country’s current crop, Opuni said.
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