The African
Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) and the Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM)
are to implement an intervention programme in the Nigerian cocoa sector to
revive and help it reemerge as the country’s top non-oil export foreign
exchange earner, the two institutions have announced in Cairo.
Afreximbank
will also work with other Nigeria development finance institutions and
commercial banks to support the country’s cocoa sector.
To ensure
sustainable production in the entire cocoa value chain, Afreximbank and NEXIM
would collaborate with relevant institutions and key stakeholders to facilitate
issuance of cocoa bonds to help improve yields by supporting import of agro
inputs and replanting with high yielding varieties in order to make the sector
more competitive, they said.
Afreximbank would, in addition, structure its Africa Cocoa Initiative
(AFRICOIN) to redress the current challenges impacting the Nigerian the cocoa
sector, they added.
Nigeria, which used to be among the world’s top cocoa producers, has
seen its percentage production share go down, with a corresponding slump in
earning from exports of the commodity, due to a number of factors affecting the
ability of the country’s cocoa firms to maintain production levels and
value-added exports.
“This
intervention will help the Nigerian cocoa sector to regain its place as a
leading foreign exchange earner for the country, revamp value-adding activities
in the sector and contribute to Nigeria’s economic stability, particularly in
the current difficult economic environment occasioned by foreign exchange
liquidity challenges,” said Dr. Benedict Oramah, President of Afreximbank.
Roberts
Orya, Managing Director of NEXIM, said that his bank was concerned about the
declining value of Nigeria’s non-oil exports, particularly the low cocoa
processing capacity, at about 25 per cent despite a combined annual installed
capacity of over 250,000 tonnes, and the inability of processors to avail
working capital needs. He expressed optimism that the intervention programme
would enhance value-added exports and improve foreign exchange receipts from
the sector in the short term, with potential for high end value-chain
production in the long run.
Afreximbank and NEXIM also announced plans to support the pilot scheme
of the regional Sealink project aimed at fostering intra-regional trade in West
Africa as well as the Nigerian solid minerals sector through collaboration in
the provision of financial advisory services and funding programmes to support
investments in key logistics and ports infrastructure to encourage the scaling
up of mining operations.
The two institutions will also partner to conduct a diagnostic study
towards designing and developing a mining sector funding intervention
programme, the financing of mining infrastructure and the provision of equity
advisory services, they said.
Manal Mounir Hendy
Associate
External Communications
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