Usibras Ghana Limited, the country’s largest cashew processing company, has announced that it is considering relocating its operations to the Ivory Coast due to severe challenges threatening its survival.
Usibras Ghana Limited, the country’s largest cashew processing company, has announced that it is considering relocating its operations to the Ivory Coast due to severe challenges threatening its survival.
The company, which has operated a 24-hour production cycle in Ghana for the past decade, says its decision is driven by four main factors: lack of raw materials, high utility costs, unfavorable export tariffs, and the difficulty of sustaining continuous operations.
With an installed capacity to process 35,000 metric tonnes of cashew annually, Usibras was only able to secure 7,000 metric tonnes of raw cashew nuts this year. “Ghana’s cashew supply cannot sustain industrial-scale processing,” the company noted, warning that the shortage has crippled its ability to remain competitive.
The challenges are compounded by rising electricity and operational costs, as well as a 15% tariff imposed on exports to the United States — the company’s biggest market. According to management, the combination of limited raw materials and heavy tariff burdens has made it increasingly unviable to process in Ghana.
The possible relocation poses significant economic and social risks. Usibras currently employs 700 people, but with reduced processing volumes, the company has already begun cutting staff. A complete shutdown would leave hundreds of households without income.
Below is the full statement
Usibras Ghana Limited Set to Relocate Operations to Ivory Coast Due to Persistent Challenges
Usibras Ghana Limited, the largest cashew processing company in Ghana, is considering moving its investment and operations from Ghana to Ivory Coast, where raw materials are more readily available to sustain year-round processing.
The company, which has been operating a 24-hour production cycle for the past ten years, cites the following key challenges as the reasons behind this potential relocation:
Economic and Social Implications
The relocation of Usibras Ghana Limited will have significant ripple effects across Ghana’s economy and social structure:
A Looming Disaster
The potential relocation of Usibras Ghana Limited poses a major threat to Ghana’s cashew processing sector and industrialization agenda. The move represents not just the loss of an employer but also a weakening of the entire cashew value chain from farmers to exporters to service providers.
Unless urgent interventions are made to address the critical issues of raw material availability and utility costs, Ghana risks losing one of its most consistent and reliable cashew processing firms. The inability of a factory with a capacity to process 35,000 MT to secure more than 7,000 MT this year is a clear signal of systemic challenges in the sector. If left unresolved, this crisis will cost Ghana hundreds of jobs, millions in foreign exchange, and a setback in the country’s agribusiness development efforts.
Government’s Role in Safeguarding the Sector
The government needs to urgently safeguard the future of Usibras and other processors and future investors by:
Without swift intervention, Ghana risks losing not only Usibras but also investor confidence in the cashew sector and beyond.