Wa, Nov. 16, – Ghana loses about
318,514 tonnes of maize annually to post-harvest losses according to a 2016
study by Dr Bruno Tran, an expert in post-harvest losses management with the
Africa Post-Harvest Losses Information System (APHLIS).
This figure represents 18 per
cent of the country’s annual maize production and Northern Region is the
largest contributor with 20,411 tonnes annually followed by Upper East Region
and Volta Region which also contribute 13,000 tonnes and 8,983 tonnes
respectively.
Upper West, Brong Ahafo and
Central Regions are the least contributors with 778 tonnes, 734 tonnes and 636
tonnes respectively and according to Dr Tran most of the maize was lost because
the farmers failed to dry it thoroughly before storage.
Mr Emmanuel Sasu Yeboah, Upper
West Regional Director of Agriculture revealed this during the Regional
Post-Harvest Losses Forum organised by the Ghana Trades and Livelihood
Coalition (GTLC) in collaboration with SNV under the Voice for Change (V4C)
partnership project.
He said major crops in the region
which suffered post-harvest losses included; maize, sorghum, rice, groundnuts,
cowpea, vegetables (tomato, okro and green leaves) and yam, adding that these
produce are therefore sold immediately after harvest and in the circumstance
farmers earned little.
He said another study on
post-harvest losses of maize along the chain in the Sissala East and Sissala
West Districts in 2015 by a student of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science
and Technology (KNUST) has revealed that more than 50 per cent of maize
produced was lost due to poor post-harvest handling.
“Another research conducted in
2013 by the Urban Association Limited (TUAL) on post-harvest losses of selected
food crops in 11 African countries including; Ghana…..revealed that almost half
of food crops produced in the country do not make it to the consumer”, he said.
He said according to the report
as much as 60 per cent of yam produced in Ghana, for instance, did not make it
to the final consumer, adding that the level of losses occurring in maize
production, ranged between 5-70 per cent.
Between 11-27 per cent and 5-15
per cent of rice and millet/sorghum cultivated never made it to the consumer,
Mr. Yeboah said, noting that sucking buds were the major cause of groundnuts
post-harvest losses.
The Regional Director of
Agriculture mentioned harvesting, shelling, cleaning, sorting and grading,
packaging, storage and transportation as critical areas that affect
post-harvest quality or losses of farm produce.
He said farmers in the region
have still not achieved their maximum potential in spite of several
interventions and attributed it to high post-harvest losses.
Mr Yeboah recommended that
research should provide appropriate scientific know-how on post-harvest
handling and preservations methods of food crops to farmers especially during
harvesting, transportation and storage to reduce mechanical injury.
Again, policy makers and
entrepreneurs should invest in roads, storage and processing infrastructure,
noting that government’s “One-District-One-Factory” policy could become a key
factor in addressing post-harvest losses in agricultural production.
The first Upper West Regional
Post-Harvest Loss Forum was on the theme: “Addressing Post-Harvest Loss;
implication for planting for food and jobs policy in the Upper West Region”.
GNA

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