The Guardian (Nigeria)

Massive Loss As Opportunit­ies In Cocoa Industry Remain Untapped

- By Gbenga Akinfenwa

NIGERIA is losing over $ 2b yearly due to under explored value chain opportunit­ies within the global Cocoa industry, caused by a lack of the cocoa culture and full appreciati­on of the value propositio­ns.

It was learnt that the built up processing capacity in the country is about 200,000 metric tonnes ( MT) to convert cocoa to butter, liquor and cake/ powder, but the country is operating at about 30 per cent capacity because the cocoa industry and the domestic market are not properly structured in the manner that will attract the right investment­s to develop the market to compete with western market offerings.

These were part of the communiqué of the Internatio­nal Cocoa and Chocolate Forum ( ICCF 2024 – Nigeria), held in both Abuja and Lagos, as a follow up on the discussion of ICCF 2023 – UK edition of October 2023, with the theme: The new EU policy, its effect on cocoa producing regions and the way forward for the global cocoa trade and an industry that supports transforma­tion with regard to the resilience of cocoa farmers.

Jointly signed by the Founder, Internatio­nal Cocoa Diplomacy ( ICD), HRM Oba Dokun Thompson; ED/ CEO, Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria ( CRIN), Dr. Patrick Adebola and MD/ CEO NEXIM Bank, Mr Abba Bello, the stakeholde­rs said there is lack of proper and creative funding to fully develop the opportunit­ies within the industry.

“CRIN is underfunde­d and NEXIM Bank is not structured or funded like its similar counterpar­ts – AFREXIM or EXIM Bank of India to undertake major investment­s and financing of necessary and required major infrastruc­ture projects to further the export trade.

“Manufactur­ing has become unattracti­ve due to lack of necessary infrastruc­ture to support the services rendered that will make cost of production and quality competitiv­e with imported products and we need agricultur­e that must lead into industrial­isation.

“N100b was set aside for an Agric Developmen­t Fund out of the 2024 Agric Budget of N900b to support endeavours such as the ICD Forum, which had world views because the country will be competing with other countries who may have several policies and subsidy regimes to take advantage of market share and it is important to recalibrat­e government policies now and again to compensate for gaps and to provide infrastruc­ture that will ensure various sectors of the economy work,” the communiqué read.

The stakeholde­rs disclosed that the cocoa sector is dominated by a few global players creating an oligopolis­tic market, which makes trading difficult because they determine the price, sustainabi­lity measures and certificat­ions, required training modules for farmers, and many more.

“Although, Nigeria remains the fourth largest producer of cocoa with about 6.5 per cent of the world’s production output and remains the fourth largest exporter with receipts of close to $ 700m, the industry continues to decline even though cocoa can be produced in over 24 states in the country with tremendous potential for growth.

“Europe remains the biggest market for West African cocoa and its derivative­s, but cocoa from the region will be subjected to the new European Union Deforestat­ion Regulation ( EUDR) policy, which will come into effect on January 1, 2025 and will possibly disrupt the industry supply chain and the country’s forex earnings from cocoa and other products namely coffee, soya, timber, palm oil, rubber and cattle and their derivative­s.

“The different aspects of the Nigerian cocoa supply chain and the smallholde­r cocoa farmers appear to be unaware of the new EUDR policy and its compliance requiremen­ts and remain unprepared as to who is responsibl­e for what.”

They recommende­d the imperative of de- commoditis­ing cocoa as the prerequisi­te to fully achieve value addition and make cocoa a vehicle for inclusive developmen­t, wealth and prosperity creation with sustained awareness about the economic value of cocoa and its value chain opportunit­ies.

The stakeholde­rs opined that the country needs to transit from being a cocoa producing to a consuming one, suggesting that there must be deliberate and intentiona­l consumptio­n of cocoa products as a way to create the cocoa culture being promoted by ICD including cocoa derivative­s or cocoa beverage in the existing schools feeding programme, to encourage domestic and internatio­nal investment­s into the sector.

“There is need to establish a cocoa developmen­t fund in partnershi­p with the private sector to drive all the investment­s needs and strategies for developmen­t of the industry into a self- sustaining model through collaborat­ion with ICD developing a working committee of key stakeholde­rs to develop the plan that will organise and structure the sector , identifyin­g all the different components and putting the right rules in place to attract funding with the goal of creating a cocoa marketing agency that will guide the transforma­tion of the cocoa industry, guarantee farmers income and provid e rural infrastruc­ture as key to incentivis­e the youths.

“CRIN needs to be provided with improved and targeted funding for research and developmen­t, flavour profile quantitati­ve analysis, data collection and collation with developmen­t of a mechanism in collaborat­ion with ICD for cocoa classifica­tion and denominati­on, as well as governance and monitoring protocols to improve the specialty chocolate and cocoa offerings in the country.

“Introducti­on of technology and innovation into the sector by ICD with sustained education and training for farmers and capacity building for e ntr epreneurs employing ICD modules for market intelligen­ce and ability to properly apply the right skills and understand­ing to optimise production output and productivi­ty with the highest quality and standards obtained.”

They sug gested that as government­s use tariffs to protect economic activities, it is important to introduce policies that will discourage export of raw cocoa beans, encourage val ue addition at origin, to promote, guide and guard the cocoa industry, as well as protect local players.

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