Dubai Telegraph - Nigeria seeks to cash in on soaring cocoa prices

EUR -
AED 3.979939
AFN 78.410261
ALL 99.350331
AMD 427.501425
ANG 1.955407
AOA 991.005543
ARS 1153.983848
AUD 1.723916
AWG 1.950577
AZN 1.846513
BAM 1.955807
BBD 2.190607
BDT 131.82044
BGN 1.953468
BHD 0.408501
BIF 3214.210717
BMD 1.083654
BND 1.443805
BOB 7.497025
BRL 6.272083
BSD 1.084904
BTN 94.288314
BWP 14.752049
BYN 3.550612
BYR 21239.610816
BZD 2.179307
CAD 1.557373
CDF 3115.50453
CHF 0.954532
CLF 0.026197
CLP 1005.293352
CNY 7.839422
CNH 7.851233
COP 4450.014837
CRC 548.601829
CUC 1.083654
CUP 28.716821
CVE 110.265368
CZK 24.946469
DJF 193.200644
DKK 7.460309
DOP 67.870226
DZD 144.407481
EGP 54.918183
ERN 16.254804
ETB 141.850973
FJD 2.48894
FKP 0.839134
GBP 0.839814
GEL 3.007182
GGP 0.839134
GHS 16.817056
GIP 0.839134
GMD 77.485406
GNF 9381.031278
GTQ 8.368028
GYD 226.990757
HKD 8.420802
HNL 27.744093
HRK 7.536165
HTG 142.450475
HUF 398.113084
IDR 17663.553893
ILS 3.932417
IMP 0.839134
INR 94.4396
IQD 1421.304739
IRR 45621.817492
ISK 147.128069
JEP 0.839134
JMD 170.080567
JOD 0.768748
JPY 160.429542
KES 140.400468
KGS 94.765925
KHR 4348.014497
KMF 493.116993
KPW 975.317513
KRW 1568.604902
KWD 0.333863
KYD 0.904103
KZT 532.441775
LAK 23491.078323
LBP 97211.824119
LKR 320.551069
LRD 216.990723
LSL 19.665666
LTL 3.199748
LVL 0.655492
LYD 5.237017
MAD 10.549735
MDL 19.692066
MGA 5082.016944
MKD 61.530205
MMK 2274.688295
MNT 3760.725259
MOP 8.684129
MRU 43.279144
MUR 49.003226
MVR 16.699512
MWK 1881.306273
MXN 21.962592
MYR 4.783793
MZN 69.249507
NAD 19.665666
NGN 1641.735596
NIO 39.930133
NOK 11.768374
NPR 150.861503
NZD 1.897651
OMR 0.417191
PAB 1.084904
PEN 3.963913
PGK 4.430015
PHP 61.990447
PKR 303.787013
PLN 4.171614
PYG 8591.028644
QAR 3.955413
RON 4.976792
RSD 117.180391
RUB 96.500322
RWF 1527.605093
SAR 4.065514
SBD 9.11492
SCR 15.978514
SDG 651.276189
SEK 10.930168
SGD 1.442239
SHP 0.851582
SLE 24.761887
SLL 22723.680549
SOS 620.102068
SRD 38.798765
STD 22429.441902
SVC 9.493032
SYP 14090.172453
SZL 19.660066
THB 36.579852
TJS 11.826039
TMT 3.803624
TND 3.351211
TOP 2.538029
TRY 39.445863
TTD 7.365025
TWD 35.589393
TZS 2869.709568
UAH 44.718549
UGX 3981.013273
USD 1.083654
UYU 46.230154
UZS 14016.046732
VES 69.980666
VND 27638.585401
VUV 134.525423
WST 3.053818
XAF 655.959187
XAG 0.033339
XAU 0.000372
XCD 2.928628
XDR 0.815803
XOF 655.959187
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.449603
ZAR 19.778218
ZMK 9754.186788
ZMW 30.894103
ZWL 348.936021
  • RIO

    0.6200

    62.31

    +1%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    60.83

    +2.29%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    23.11

    -0.39%

  • GSK

    0.7500

    40.05

    +1.87%

  • SCS

    0.2100

    11.73

    +1.79%

  • BCC

    0.8300

    101.62

    +0.82%

  • RBGPF

    70.2100

    70.21

    +100%

  • AZN

    0.0300

    77.5

    +0.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.33

    -0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.2400

    10.55

    +2.27%

  • BCE

    0.3100

    24.8

    +1.25%

  • VOD

    0.4100

    9.42

    +4.35%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.75

    +0.31%

  • RELX

    0.8600

    48.1

    +1.79%

  • BTI

    0.7400

    40.9

    +1.81%

  • BP

    0.3600

    32.07

    +1.12%

Nigeria seeks to cash in on soaring cocoa prices
Nigeria seeks to cash in on soaring cocoa prices / Photo: PIUS UTOMI EKPEI - AFP

Nigeria seeks to cash in on soaring cocoa prices

Booming cocoa prices are stirring interest in turning Nigeria into a bigger player in the sector, with hopes of challenging top producers Ivory Coast and Ghana, where crops have been ravaged by climate change and disease.

Text size:

Nigeria has struggled to diversify its oil-dependent economy but investors have taken another look at cocoa beans after global prices soared to a record $12,000 per tonne in December.

"The farmers have never had it so good," Patrick Adebola, executive director at the Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria, told AFP.

More than a dozen local firms have expressed interest in investing in or expanding their production this year, while the British government's development finance arm recently poured $40.5 million into Nigerian agribusiness company Johnvents.

Nigeria is the world's seventh biggest cocoa bean producer, producing more than 280,000 tonnes in 2023, according to the most recent data compiled by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization.

The government has set an ambitious production target of 500,000 tonnes for the 2024-2025 season, which would move it into fourth place behind Ivory Coast, Ghana and Indonesia.

Adebola doubts Nigeria can reach the target this season, but he believes it is feasible in the next few years as there is rising interest in rehabilitating old plantations or establishing new ones.

He said Nigerian growers are much more exposed to the highs and lows of the global cocoa market than their peers in Ivory Coast and Ghana as prices are regulated in those countries.

Cocoa futures contracts in New York have fallen from their December record but they remain high at more than $8,000 per tonne. Cocoa prices typically ranged between $2,000 and $3,000 before the recent surge.

"Individuals are going into cocoa production at every level... to make sure they also enjoy the current price," said Comrade Adeola Adegoke, president of the Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria.

- 'Full-sun' monocrop -

Ivory Coast is by far the world's top grower, producing more than two million tonnes of cocoa beans in 2023, followed by Ghana at 650,000 tonnes.

But the two countries had poor harvests last year as crops were hit by bad weather and disease, causing a supply shortage that sent global prices to all-time highs.

Nigeria's cocoa has largely been spared so far from the worst effects of climate change, but expanding the crop could carry environmental risks.

The government has stepped up efforts to promote the long-unregulated sector via the National Cocoa Management Committee, which was established in 2022 to regulate the industry and support farmers.

But agriculture modernisation efforts have encouraged the development of "full-sun" monocrop plantations that only focus on growing cocoa beans, without the use of companion plants or trees.

A recent study in the journal Agroforestry Systems has raised concerns about this approach, saying monocrop farming can be less sustainable compared growing the bean alongside shade trees, promoting biodiversity and improving environmental health.

- Land and money? -

Scaling up the sector could also prove challenging because much of Nigeria's cocoa is grown by small-scale farmers.

Peter Okunde, a farmer in Ogun state, told AFP he lacks both the capital and land to expand his four-hectare (10-acre) cocoa plantation.

Land "is the major instrument farmers need... and the money to develop it", said Okunde, 49.

But John Alamu, group managing director of Johnvents, told CNBC Africa this week that "the problem is not land area".

Noting that Nigeria has 1.4 million hectares dedicated to cocoa production -- more than Ghana's 1.1 million, he told the broadcaster a more holistic approach was needed.

"These are things (other) governments have used to support farmers: provision of seedlings, training on good agronomic practices, a real focus on sustainable agriculture," he said.

"These are key things that will be responsible to take Nigeria back to its leadership position."

Y.Sharma--DT