Yara
Ghana Limited, a leading mineral fertiliser company in the country, in
collaboration with the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) has
embarked on an oil palm training programme for farmers.
The training programme covered four districts in the Western Region: namely Mpohor, Wassa West, Wassa East and Agona Nkwanta.
The main objective of the programme is to promote the sustainability of
oil palm production in the country through yield improvement techniques
and introduction of technology, as well as proper crop nutrition
strategies.
Yara Ghana also used the platform to launch its Yara Mila Palmae, a fertiliser for oil palm cultivation.
Mr. Henry Otoo, Market Development Manager of Yara Ghana, said: “Oil
palm is fast becoming an indispensable crop that is catching up on the
global markets, and it is, therefore, important to strategically
position players of the industry, especially farmers, to enable them to
rightfully benefit from the imminent growth of the sector”.
Farmers who benefitted from the programme as well as MoFA staff
expressed appreciation to Yara Ghana for the novel training they
received.
An oil palm farmer, P.A. Boateng who has farms in the Ekumfi District
of the Central Region, said the “training has been very helpful to us
farmers, and I hope Yara will organise these trainings programmes
often”.
Yara Ghana has already trained oil palm farmers in the Eastern and Central Regions.
According to Mr. Otoo, since 1984 the price of cocoa has been falling
consistently by some 1.2 per yearly, whereas that of oil palm has been
increasing by 3.2 percent.
He added that oil palm is the most effective crop employed in most
developing countries to get their citizens out of poverty. The product
is also used in land reclamation programmes.
According to experts, although palm oil will likely be expensive for
use as a bio-diesel, food demand due to chronic shortages of supply
faced by most countries of the world will likely force the price of the
commodity to increase in few years.
Ghana has been growing oil palm since the 18th century; however, lower
yields and lack of technology to improve upon production continue to
hamper fortunes of the industry.
Recently, it was revealed that new varieties of oil palm are capable of increasing the yield by three times more.
If further research to stabilise this yield potential is undertaken
through international collaboration, palm oil can be a sound candidate
to help solve not only future food shortages but also the bio-fuel need
of the world.
Ghana has a total of 387,000 hectares of oil palm under cultivation,
which forms just 7% of the total production within the West African
sub-region.
The average yield per hectare of oil palm is between 3-7 metric
tonnes per hectare (Mt/ha) compared to that of 20-33 Mt/ha in Malaysia,
where only 26% of production takes place.
Ghana currently has an unmet demand of 35,000 tonnes of palm oil. The
estimated unmet demand in the ECOWAS sub-region alone is 850,000
tonnes.
The yield per hectare in the country is quite low compared to other
oil palm producing countries,but the potential to increase yield is
there; the challenge has been due mainly to the under utilisation of
fertiliser in the oil palm sector, especially among the smallholder
farmers — who incidentally are also utilised as out-growers for the
corporate farms. Indeed, the bulk of oil palm cultivation (80%) is done
by smallholders in Ghana. |
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