By Wisdom JONNY-NUEKPE
The Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana (CAG) has tasked stakeholders, together with authorities, to adequately put together for the incoming tomato bumper season to be able to fight and scale back the age-old inevitable post-harvest losses.
The CAG and affiliate farmer teams have stated inadequate funding in chilly storage and transportation infrastructure should be addressed to deal with the menace for the upcoming tomato bumper season, which can span late December by April and May 2025.
CAG defined that seeming lack of precedence for the above provisions additional exacerbates the issue, forcing reliance on imports from nations together with Burkina Faso and Morocco.
Every 12 months, Ghana loses some US$600million in general post-harvest losses in keeping with CAG. Losses from tomato every year, in keeping with the Chamber, common US$60million.
But CEO-CAG, Anthony Selorm Morrison, blamed the issue on uncared for rural infrastructure, insufficient chilly chain and storage services and restricted assist for analysis, amongst others.
He argued that authorities has not prioritised the event of important infrastructure in rural areas, as poor highway networks and lack of a dependable transportation system hinders environment friendly motion of tomato from farms to market centres.
The lack of storage services, regardless of the fruit’s identified perishability has resulted in vital losses – a state of affairs that forces farmers to promote their merchandise shortly at decrease costs to keep away from spoilage.
With the height harvest season simply three months away, the Chamber is requesting authorities assist for farmers to place measures in place that guard in opposition to the potential looming losses.
“The agricultural sector’s sad reality in Ghana – exemplified by the tomato industry – underscores the need for comprehensive and strategic interventions,” Mr. Morrision indicated.
He nonetheless stated the nation has potential to rework its tomato trade by addressing challenges of varietal suitability, infrastructure deficits, entry to inputs and financing, and market growth.
While authorities’s neglect and coverage failures have exacerbated these urgent points, stakeholders imagine a concerted efforts from authorities, the personal sector and worldwide companions can enhance the nation’s potential to develop into self-sufficient in tomato manufacturing.
This will allow the nation to emerge as a web exporter, contributing considerably to meals safety and financial progress.
Ghana spends a considerable quantity of international alternate on tomato import. In 2022, the Vegetable Producers Association of Ghana estimated that the nation spends roughly US$400million yearly on importinmg recent tomatoes, primarily from Burkina Faso.
This vital outflow of international alternate, in keeping with the National Food Buffer Company, causes the nation’s dependency on imports and underscores the pressing have to revive and enhance native manufacturing.