The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ What African producers should do with cocoa beans, others’

* Drinking raw cocoa tea fights COVID- 19, says expert

- By Femi Ibirogba

APROFESSOR of Human Anatomy and promoter of cocoa consumptio­n for better health, Frederick Kwaku Addai, in Ghana, has welcomed China into cocoa export trade and encouraged African producers to explore value chain developmen­t.

He said African cocoa producers need to be discourage­d from exporting only cocoa beans and get serious at adding value and promoting local consumptio­n of cocoabased products.

Adding value, he said, would boost wealth and job creation, gross domestic products, and local consumptio­n that would oil the African economies.

“Despite the knowledge that Ghana and Cote d’ivoire account for over 50 per cent of world cocoa output, they receive less than 10 per cent of the world chocolate revenue. No serious effort is being made to lay claim to fair share of post- bean cocoa revenue. Why? In Ghana, I sense that we’re too satisfied announcing the tonnage of cocoa beans exported every year.

“You know my obsession with promoting natural cocoa consumptio­n for incomparab­le health benefits just as I know your campaign to deepen production in Nigeria to explore and exploit the cocoa value chain,” Addai said.

Addai said conservati­vely, with appropriat­e efforts, African countries producing cocoa could grind and consume 60 per cent of output, saying, “Our people will be all the better for it in more ways than one.”

He said based on studies, there is scientific evidence that just as natural cocoa is an anti- malaria prophylact­ic, daily drinking of cocoa will prevent COVID- 19, and ablate the inflammato­ry storm in patients who have contracted it.

He added: “So, I actually pray that external market for cocoa beans collapses to force our government­s to give the needed priority to processing cocoa locally and promoting local consumptio­n!!

“This is the way I see China becoming a cocoa exporter as a huge blessing to African cocoa producers.”

On ways to increase productivi­ty of cocoa farmers, he said adoption of the Indonesian/ Malaysian intensive farming practices would help.

He disclosed that the Southeast Asian cocoa producers average five to eight times yield per hectare than West African producers.

“We need to be alert to emerging concerns relating to “tree crop plantation” and how this negatively impacts tree variety in forests.

“I recently heard on BBC radio, a school of thought, that cocoa production negatively impacts forest ecosystems and by extension, climate change.

“I’m not at all in favour of increasing cocoa production by putting more hectares of forest under cultivatio­n. With improved planting seedlings as indicated by CRIN, adopting intensive farming practices can create significan­t cocoa output without increased acreage.”

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