CashewInformation
News

Home   >   NEWS & VIEWS   >   News

  • Cashew export ban will trigger massive job losses – Kogi stakeholders

    Dec 5th, 2025

    Stakeholders in the cashew value chain have warned that Nigeria may face massive unemployment, collapsed farms and a crippled agro-export economy if the Federal Government heeds recent calls by the Cashew Processors and Packers Association of Nigeria to ban the export of raw cashew nuts. CAPPAN, in a recent advert signed by Air Vice Marshal Tunde Awoyoola (rtd.), Managing Director of Nutslink Limited, had claimed that foreign buyers were dominating the farm gates and starving local processors of raw materials, thereby justifying a proposed ban. However, the Chairman of, Kogi Cashew Dealers and Stakeholders Association, Alhaji Makama Ademu warned that the country lacked the processing capacity to handle more than five per cent of its annual production. He said, “If the government bans raw cashew export, 95 per cent of what we produce will be left to rot. We don’t have the processing capacity to handle even a fraction of Nigeria’s output. This will destroy the farmers, destroy the value chain, and eliminate three major segments — sub-buyers, licensed buying agents, and merchants.” Lagos Mother Seeks Answers After Only Child G Ademu added that such a ban would immediately trigger massive unemployment, especially in rural communities. “This value chain employs farmers, women, rural youth, and thousands of workers who dry, bag, and prepare cashew. “Once exports stop, these jobs disappear overnight. A lot of businesses will be destroyed, and many farms will fold up because it will no longer be economical to farm cashew.” He accused processors of pushing a self-serving agenda, stressing, “They want prices to crash so that they can buy cheaply. How does a farmer survive on prices that do not even cover the cost of production? Their agitation is selfish, short-term, and myopic.” The Vice Chairman of the Kogi Cashew Dealers and Stakeholders Association, Dr Idrisu Yakubu, said the implications of the proposed ban are “enormous and dangerous.” He pointed out, “All the cashew processing factories in Nigeria combined can not process what Kogi State produces in just one day of cashew season. If they can not handle one day’s output in a whole year, what happens to the remaining 364 days? Should farmers burn their harvest?” Yakubu also dismissed the claim that processors were ready to absorb local production. “Some of the people calling themselves processors don’t even have factories. They are just politicians within the industry being sponsored to bring the business down. They want the federal government to peg prices so that farmers can be shortchanged. We will not accept that.” He warned that the policy could aggravate insecurity, insisting that “In the current security situation, discouraging farmers from going to their farms can trigger new unrest. A ban on export will have serious social and economic consequences.”


    Source: https://punchng.com/
Top