The Borneo Post

Nigeria moves to boost cocoa sector

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IBADAN, Nigeria: Cocoa House in Ibadan, southwest Nigeria, was built with the earnings from exports of cocoa beans and at 26 storeys was once the country’s tallest building.

Profits from sales of the commodity -- prized around the world as the basic ingredient for chocolate -- used to be ploughed into providing free education and health services, rural developmen­t and other infrastruc­ture projects.

But today, like the sector from which it takes its name, Cocoa House is a shadow of its former self: the paint is faded, the roof is failing and offices lie empty.

“Cocoa House used to be the glory of the west,” said Pa Olusina Adebiyi, referring to Nigeria’s former Western Region, which was reorganise­d into smaller, separate states from 1967.

“If you go there now, it’s an eyesore with all sorts of characters loitering in the area,” the 85-yearold former clerk in the building told AFP.

Agricultur­e was once the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy and provided jobs for more than 70 per cent of the population until the discovery of oil.

President Muhammadu Buhari and his government are now trying to revive agricultur­e to diversify the oil- dependent economy that has been battered by the fall in global crude prices.

One sector seen as ripe for developmen­t is cocoa and the Cocoa Associatio­n of Nigeria (CAN) has outlined a 10-year action plan to boost production.

“We have made laudable recommenda­tions that can change the cocoa story in Nigeria,” said CAN president Sayina Riman.

“We hope those recommenda­tions will be faithfully implemente­d in the interests of the industry.” Riman pointed out that Nigeria’s oil industry, which accounts for some 70 per cent of government revenue and 90 per cent of foreign earnings, was initially developed using cocoa money.

As oil’s stock rose, cocoa’s declined and since the 1970s, it has been the West African giant’s “most neglected commodity”, he added. Production in 2016 was 237,000 tonnes, according to data from the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on. — AFP

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