Tuesday 23 April 2024
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Doing ‘More and Better with Less’ in Ghana’s cocoa industry

Political stability, good governance and increasing export revenues have turned Ghana into one of the largest and fastest-growing economies in sub-Saharan Africa, and the cocoa industry has played a key role in this process

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Now the second largest exporter of cocoa in the world, Ghana employs over 800,000 smallholders in the cocoa industry, which contributed as much as 14% of GDP in 2011. With the sector playing such a crucial part in the economy, the need for a sustainable cocoa industry that makes wise use of its resources and maintains profits is clear.

Resource-efficient and cleaner production methods offer a way to ensure the industry remains competitive and resilient, and Ghanaian companies are already making the transition and reaping the rewards. One such company is Niche Cocoa Industry Ltd. from the Tema Free Zone enclave.

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In 2012, Niche signed up for the Resource Efficient and Cleaner Production (RECP) Programme, coordinated by the Ghana National Cleaner Production Centre, the Ghana Environmental Protection Agency and UNEP.

The Programme trained Niche’s staff on low-waste production technologies, enhancing the efficient use of water, energy and raw materials, and optimizing existing technologies to improve production efficiency levels. Since joining RECP, Niche has managed to reduce its waste by 60 per cent.

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Only in its fourth year of operation, Niche Cocoa Industry has almost doubled its operational capacity, produces over 40,000 metric tonnes of cocoa products per annum and boasts 350 full-time staff. Mr. Paul Ayeh, General Manager of Niche, puts much of the company’s success down to judicious use of its resources.

“Our efforts in recent years to improve the company’s efficiency levels and reduce waste along the production line have reduced the cost of our operations and thereby increased our profitability and competitiveness, both nationally and internationally,” he said.

Some of the changes that have brought about this improvement include: replacing energy-intensive machinery with new technology, such as a more efficient hammer mill for processing cocoa beans; fitting meters to monitor and reduce gas usage; recycling wastewater; and undertaking a Free Fatty Acids (FFA) analysis to save on butter in the production process.

“In addition to making Niche more competitive, I think the most rewarding and important long-term goal of what we are doing is to protect the environment,” said Belinda Lawson, Environmental Health and Safety Manager at Niche. “Employing cleaner production measures in my work is a motivation. I know I am contributing to Ghana’s future.”

Niche’s commitment to reducing waste has also benefited the surrounding environment and communities where Niche operates.

Thanks to the installation of extraction systems along the production line, which prevent particulate matter entering the environment, and the introduction of a new system of recycling chemical reagents used in the production process, Niche has reduced the company’s contribution to water and air pollution in the area.

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