Ghana's Cacao Farms

Ghana as the world's #2 cacao producer — farming communities, the Cocobod system, how juice companies source from Ghanaian farmers, and the path forward.

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The World's Second-Largest Producer

Ghana produces approximately 800,000 tonnes of cacao annually, making it the world's second-largest producer behind Ivory Coast. Cacao is Ghana's most important export crop, supporting an estimated 800,000 farming families — roughly 6 million people when extended families are included.

The Cocobod System

Ghana's cacao industry is uniquely structured through COCOBOD (Ghana Cocoa Board), a government body that:

  • Sets a guaranteed minimum price for cacao beans each season
  • Provides quality control — Ghana's cacao has a reputation for consistent quality
  • Manages input subsidies — fertilizers and pesticides at reduced cost
  • Operates a licensed buying system — authorized companies purchase beans from farmers

This system provides more price stability than most cacao-producing countries, though critics argue it limits farmers' ability to capture premiums for specialty cacao.

Farming Communities

Ghanaian cacao farming is predominantly smallholder-based:

CharacteristicTypical Value
Average farm size2-4 hectares
Trees per hectare800-1,200
Yield per hectare300-500 kg beans
Farmer age50+ (aging workforce)
Primary varietyForastero (Amelonado)

Most farms are in the Western, Ashanti, and Eastern regions, where forest-adjacent land provides the shade and humidity cacao requires.

Cacao Juice from Ghana

Ghana has become a key sourcing region for cacao juice companies, particularly:

  • Koa — the Cologne-based startup works with 3,000+ Ghanaian farmers, processing pulp at origin and exporting juice, concentrate, and powder. Koa's model pays farmers nearly twice the Fairtrade premium for their pulp.
  • bevCacao — sources from 400+ Ghanaian farmers, producing both still and sparkling cacao juice varieties.

These companies have demonstrated that cacao juice production can create meaningful additional income for Ghanaian farmers without disrupting existing bean supply chains. The pulp — previously discarded — becomes a second revenue stream from the same harvest.

Challenges

  • Aging farmer population — young Ghanaians increasingly migrate to cities
  • Swollen Shoot Virus Disease — devastating to cacao trees, requires replanting
  • Climate change — shifting rainfall patterns threaten traditional growing areas
  • Price volatility — despite Cocobod's stabilization, global prices still impact farmer welfare

The Future

Ghana's cacao sector is at a crossroads. The country's stability, quality reputation, and established infrastructure make it an attractive partner for cacao juice companies. The additional income from pulp sales could help address the economic pressures driving young people away from farming — but only if the benefits reach farm-level households rather than being captured by intermediaries.