PREZ. MAHAMA RESURRECTS KOMENDA
SUGAR FACTORY
President
John Mahama has inaugurated the revamped Komenda sugar factory in the Central
region, predicting that the manufacturing plant will create over 7,000 direct
and indirect jobs.
At
a colorful ceremony on the site of the factory, President Mahama said the
factory needs “a lot of labour” to grow, harvest and process the raw material
needed to feed a manufacturing appetite of 1,250 tonnes of sugar.
The
Komenda sugar factory, he said, will pay for transporting of the sugarcane
from the farms and buy it from out growers at ¢60cedis per tone. Mahama wants
to follow Mauritius’s example where sugar production employs 12% of the
island’s population.
The
factory was first established in 1960s by Ghana’s first president, Dr. Kwame
Nkrumah was part of his economic policy for industrialization.
It
was the heady days of considerable optimism among Ghanaians as Dr. Kwame
Nkrumah sought to create a self-reliant economy. But the factory closed down by
the end of the 1980s after years of mismanagement took its full toll.
President
Mahama said the revamping of the factory resurrects Dr. Kwame Nkrumah’s dream
and is expected to cut Ghana’s sugar import bill of about $200 million.
Saving
this money will be “a major dent on perennial forex fluctuations”, the
President said, acknowledging the fact that excessive imports have been
the bane of Ghana’s weak currency.
“Every
single cube of sugar that we eat here in Ghana is imported Komenda is going to
change that” the President shared his joy with the chiefs and people of
Komenda.
The
factory needs at least 120 trucks of sugarcane daily. It will also maximize
by-products such as ethanol, which is a low cost fuel resource used to power
engines.
President
Mahama announced that Ghana will export ethanol to cash in on the ethanol
industry dominated by the United States, which produced at least 14.8m gallons
in 2015.
Ghana
now rejoins a sugar industry predicted to be worth in the regions of $97.2
billion by 2017.
By
2015, the world sugar production amounted to approximately 175.1 million metric
tons. During this period, Asia was the largest sugar-producing region in the
world, yielding approximately 66.12 million metric tons of sugar. India, China
and Thailand were the region's top sugar producers.
The
country is prepared to compete in the sugar industry and government will craft
a national sugar policy to create an enabling environment for private players
in the sector, President Mahama said.
A
Komenda sugar farmers cooperative will also be formed to provide training and
financial assistance to members, the president outlined steps to ensure viable
production base.
President
John Mahama encouraged the chiefs to lease out land to youth interested in
farming. He also charged the chiefs to “keep a watchful eye on the factory so
that it doesn’t go the way it went”.
credit-myjoyonline
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