Business a.m.

Africa missing cashew wealth making

- Stories by Onome Amuge

African continent produces more than half of the world’s raw cashews but has been unable to leverage on its processing capacity due to its negligible number of industries, missing out on opportunit­ies offered...

African continent produces more than half of the world’s raw cashews but has been unable to leverage on its processing capacity due to its negligible number of industries, missing out on opportunit­ies offered by rising global demand.

This was made known made by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (UNCTAD) in a recent report titled: Commoditie­s at a Glance: Special issue on cashew nuts.

In the report, UNCTAD noted that the leading cashew producing countries of African rarely process the crop at a significan­t scale,retaining only a small share of the value created as the nut travels from the farm to store.

“About 90 per cent of the raw cashew nuts traded in the global market are grown in western and eastern African nations. After Côte d’Ivoire, the leading cashew producers are Tanzania, Nigeria, Benin, Guinea-Bissau, Mozamworke­rs bique and Ghana,” UNCTAD confirmed.

Report further averred that between 2000 and 2018, world trade in raw cashew nuts more than doubled to 2.1 billion kilograms with African producers led by Côte d’Ivoire accounting for almost twothirds of the growth but the continent’s farmers and exporters receive only a fraction of the final retail price. the report said, highlighti­ng

Reacting to the state of Africa’s cashew production and trade, Miho Shirotori,head of trade negotiatio­ns and commercial diplomacy remarked that irrespecti­ve of the fact that cashews are a source of income for an estimated three million smallholde­r farmers in Africa, African farmers, exporters and are missing out on a wealth of opportunit­ies.

This has resulted in the market being dominated by Europe and North America where 60 per cent of traded kernels are roasted, salted, packaged for final consumptio­n, thereby adding more value to the commodity and generate more wealth in the cashew value chain compared to African farmers/producers.

UNCTAD report called for a policy environmen­t in Africa that enables cashew processors to operate with competitiv­e transforma­tion costs and facilitate access to the main export markets.

It also recommende­d policies that would strengthen African countries’ productive capacities which include; ensuring farmers have access to quality seedlings and technologi­cal know-how, increasing training for farmers on entreprene­urship and farm management, supporting research that helps identify agricultur­al practices and technologi­es that work best in local environmen­tal conditions and improving rural infrastruc­ture.

The report stressed that the traceabili­ty, transparen­cy and sustainabi­lity of food supply chains is becoming increasing­ly important for consumers and suppliers globally, highlighti­ng that this could benefit African processors who source their nuts locally rather than through long supply chains.

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