Togo to re-launch cotton industry after 43% drop in production

By Bisola Adeyemo

President of the National Federation of Cotton Producers’ Groups (FNGPC) Koussouwè Kourouféi, has announced the re-launch of Togo’s cotton industry.

This is based on the background that  about 40,000 cotton farmers out of 153,000 abandoned their crops during the past season as a result of flood.

The 2020-2021 season was a big blow for Togo, which produced only 67,000 tons of cotton, a considerable drop of 43% compared to the previous year (116,000 tons), AFN reports.

At a press conference held in mid-June, the chairman of the board of directors of the New Cotton Company of Togo (NSCT), Simféitchéou Pré, put forward several factors to explain these poor figures, including “the poor quality of cotton seed” and “floods in the north of the country”.

On the other hand, the drop in the price of seed cotton (from 265 to 225 FCFA/kg) has pushed many producers to turn to other crops such as corn and soybeans.

The “white gold”, as it is nicknamed in the West African region, contributes only 1 to 4.3% of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), and employs – even indirectly – only 500,000 people out of a population of 8 million.

Although Togo reports relatively low numbers of COVID-19 infection cases and deaths, the West African nation has upheld strict emergency sanitary measures since April last year. The move has indirectly dealt a blow to its agriculture-dependent economy which relies heavily on cross-frontier trade.

As the country’s borders still remain closed, business and exports, as usual, are blocked between several of its neighbours in the region — such as states like Ghana, Benin and Ivory Coast.

Burkina Faso, Ghana and Benin were among the top five destinations for Togo’s exports in 2019, according to the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

The World Bank last year said in a report that the combination of closed borders, social distancing measures and restrictions on travel had delivered a heavy blow to Togo’s economic activity.

The bank has approved a $70 million credit to help Togo revive its economy — whose growth activity is forecast to accelerate by 4.8%, as per the Economy and Finance Minister Sani Yaya said in April on public television.

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