Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) and lenders
have welcomed the first disbursement of $200 million of a syndicated loan
facility to boost cocoa productivity in the world’s second-largest producer.
The occasion was marked by a ceremony held in Accra, Ghana on Tuesday 23 June,
followed online by hundreds of observers across the globe. In attendance were
COCOBOD and government representatives and participating lenders, which
included development finance institutions: the African Development Bank (https://www.AfDB.org/), the Japan
International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the Development Bank of Southern
Africa and Cassa Depositi e Prestiti Spa. Commercial lenders were represented
by Credit Suisse AG, and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, London
Branch.
The $600 million syndicated loan agreement was signed in November last year at
the Africa Investment Forum in Johannesburg. JICA and the African Development
Bank agreed to provide $3.5 billion in joint financing under the fourth phase
of the Enhanced Private Sector Assistance for Africa Initiative.
“There are challenges with productivity in the country’s cocoa production, as
well as with the systems in place for processing and the distribution of cocoa.
By strengthening the cocoa bean-centric agricultural value chain and related
industries, the facility will help COCOBOD to contribute to achieving
Sustainable Development Goals,” said COCOBOD CEO Joseph Boahen Aidoo.
COCOBOD will use the facility to raise cocoa yields per hectare and increase
Ghana’s overall production. Activities under the facility will include the
allocation of financing to sustainably increase cocoa plant fertility, improve
irrigation systems, and rehabilitate aged and disease-infected farms. The funds
will also help increase warehouse capacity and provide support to local
cocoa-processing companies.
“African countries like Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire produce nearly three quarters
of the global supply of cocoa. This significant Bank-facilitated loan to
COCOBOD aims to improve the quantity and quality of local processing, boosting
incomes of local farmers and their communities and generating new and better
jobs,” said African Development Bank Vice President for Agriculture, Human and
Social Development, Dr. Jennifer Blanke, ahead of the event.
In March of this year, after the close of the syndication process, an amended
agreement brought on board the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA),
the Development Bank of Southern Africa and Cassa Depositi e Prestiti Spa, and
other commercial lenders.
“This loan marks the first time JICA and the African Development Bank will be
providing direct co-financing under the Enhanced Private Sector Assistance for
Africa initiative (EPSA4) as well as being the first non-sovereign project,”
said Chief Representative of JICA Ghana, Yasumichi Araki. “JICA will continue
to commit to the cocoa industry in Ghana through innovative interventions to
COCOBOD.”
JICA has supported COCOBOD to build capacity to quality-test cocoa beans. Ghana
supplies 70% of all cocoa beans imported into Japan and cocoa is seen as one of
the nation’s most essential import commodities.
The Development Bank of Southern Africa is also partnering with COCOBOD to
further enhance Ghana’s position as one of the leading producers of cocoa in
the world.
African Development Bank Group (AfDB).
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