fbpx

Cocoa Farmers Want Cocobod to Fight Disease, Lessen Crop Loss

Cocoa Farmers Want Cocobod to Fight Disease, Lessen Crop Loss

From Ghana Web

Cocoa farmers have urged Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) to urgently work out a specific programme to help eradicate the cocoa swollen-shoot viral disease to help improve crop yields.

Between 2006 and 2010, over 28 million trees were removed for being infected or for being in contact with infected trees by the disease.

Currently, the disease is responsible for 15% of total cocoa crop loss in the world. It was first discovered in Ghana in 1936, and is currently endemic in Togo, Ghana and Nigeria. Over 200 million trees have already been claimed by this disease.

In an interaction with some farmers in the Atwima-Mponua District of the Ashanti region, the farmers appealed to the Cocoa Swollen Shoot and Viral Disease (CSSVD) Unit of the Cocobod to come to their aid in fighting the disease to prevent a decline of crop yield.

They complained that black pod and capsid diseases had become widespread in the area, and that there is an urgent need for the right chemicals to help salvage the situation.

They said the present arrangement where they had to travel long distances to buy chemicals and other inputs to maintain their farms, was not helpful.

Read more at Ghana Web