US initiative to develop Ghana’s poultry, feed market

02 Sep 2015
Financial Nigeria

Summary

The USDA Foreign Agricultural Service's Food for Progress Program helps developing countries and emerging democracies modernize and strengthen their agricultural sectors.

Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has chosen the American Soybean Association's (ASA) World Initiative for Soy in Human Health (WISHH) Programme and key partners to implement a major poultry development project in the West African country of Ghana. U.S. soybean growers, as well as Ghana's poultry and feed industry, and its protein-seeking consumers, will all benefit.

The USDA Foreign Agricultural Service's Food for Progress Program helps developing countries and emerging democracies modernize and strengthen their agricultural sectors. As a result, it improves agricultural productivity and expands trade of agricultural products.

"ASA is pleased to partner with USDA in agricultural development that supports expanded and mutually beneficial trading relationships," said ASA President Wade Cowan. "Nowhere is there greater need or bigger potential return on investment in agricultural development than in Sub-Saharan Africa. WISHH is a trailblazer for trade."

The United States is among Ghana's principal trading partners, with two-way trade between the two countries reaching $1.45 billion in 2014, according to the U.S. State Department. Ghana is home to 26.4 million people, and a West African hub for business growth.

The Ghanaian government seeks to revamp the poultry industry, which has slumped in the last 30 years. "The project will contribute to increasing the supply of both meat and eggs to address ever-growing demand in Ghana", said William Brown, Ph.D., country director of Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA-Ghana), which is a partner on the initiative.

"The project could trigger the growth of poultry, maize and soy industries, which will provide employment and increased income," Brown added. "This will culminate in poverty reduction."

"The USA Poultry and Egg Export Council (USAPEEC) and its members believe that U.S. support of the Ghanaian poultry industry and other agricultural development programs are part of an important relationship between Ghana and the USA, which in turn will allow for a healthy trade environment between the two nations," said USAPEEC Vice President for Marketing Greg Tyler.

Kansas State University is a subcontractor in WISHH's Assisting Management in the Poultry and Layer Industries by Feed Improvement and Efficiency Strategies in Ghana (AMPLIFIES Ghana).

The multi-faceted project will promote the use of improved poultry feeds, and procure feed ingredients, including 15,000 metric tons of U.S. soybean meal. It will train Ghanaian poultry producers, improve feed milling practices and products, enhance storage and handling of feedstuffs, and much more.

In the early 2000s, forward-thinking U.S. soybean leaders in multiple states recognized that the growing protein demand in developing countries was a driver for their soybean sales. Well-researched studies showed that most future growth in food demand would be in developing and middle-income countries where populations and incomes were both on the rise.

Today, the trends are even clearer, proving that WISHH-founding farmers planned well. According to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and other economic analysis, developing countries dominate world demand growth for agricultural products. USDA projects developing countries' demand for agricultural products will increase faster than their production. As a result, these countries will account for 92 percent of the total increase in world oilseed and meat imports in 2013-2022.

WISHH is a trade-development organization. Since U.S. soybean farmers founded WISHH in 2000, it has worked in 24 countries to develop long-term markets for U.S. soybean farmers while fueling economic growth and value chain development. The WISHH program is managed from ASA's world headquarters in St. Louis. For more information, visit the WISHH website, www.wishh.org.


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