Randy Abbey is CEO of COCOBOD
Google search engine

The Chief Executive Officer of the COCOBOD, Dr Randy Abbey, has apologised to cocoa farmers and other stakeholders for the delay in paying for the produce supplied to his outfit.

He made the apology on the KeyPoints on February 7 in response to concerns raised by various stakeholders including the Minority in Parliament.

“I apologise sincerely to all cocoa farmers, and indeed all those affected by the current situation,” Dr Abbey said.

He also assured the farmers that government is trying very hard to resolve the situation.

“I would like to assure them that COCOBOD and government are having discussions on this issue and we will solve it,” he stressed.

This is the second time Dr Abbey is giving such assurance.

On February 6, he said COCOBOD and the Finance Minister are doing all they can to ensure a funding model to address the current financial challenges.

Addressing the media at a press briefing on Friday, February 6, 2026, Dr. Randy Abbey acknowledged the difficulty faced by struggling cocoa farmers but assured that government will soon resolve the matter.

His comments come amid concerns over rising production costs, climate-related risks and funding constraints that have weighed on farmer incomes and output levels in recent seasons.

The COCOBOD CEO, however, did not give specific timelines as to when cocoa farmers will receive their payment.

“We appreciate the concerns raised by the farmers and what they are going through. We also appreciate the concerns raised by the Licensed Buying Companies in terms of liquidity and all that.

“COCOBOD, the Ministry of Finance and government are working together to find a solution to this issue as quickly as possible,” he stated.

Dr. Randy Abbey also disclosed that buyers on the international market are increasingly turning away from Ghana’s cocoa due to higher prices compared to beans from other producing countries.

He said the price differential has significantly influenced purchasing decisions, with some buyers opting for cheaper alternatives in other markets.

The buyers now find our beans as too expensive, and therefore they have shifted to other markets where they can get the beans far cheaper, because these are business decisions,” Mr Abbey explained.

According to him, the situation has affected the marketing of a portion of Ghana’s cocoa crop under the current financing arrangement. COCOBOD has so far sold more than 530,000 metric tonnes of cocoa, but close to 50,000 metric tonnes remain unsold.

We have sold over 530,000 tonnes of the crop. We have another under 50,000 that we are yet to find buyers for, and that is when the buyers started shifting,” he said.

Mr Abbey noted that the unsold cocoa could be linked to payment delays affecting some farmers, as beans that have not been sold are more likely to be among those for which payments are outstanding.

He assured that COCOBOD is actively engaging stakeholders to address the pricing challenge and secure buyers for the remaining stock, while working to minimise the impact on farmers and the wider cocoa sector.

Meanwhile, Mr Abbey disclosed that COCOBOD is exploring a new funding model for cocoa purchases, with a strong focus on promoting value addition rather than continuing the heavy reliance on the export of raw cocoa beans.

We are looking at a model that does not tie hands with respect to the collateralisation of the raw bean, because we want a funding model that also facilitates or supports value addition,” he said.

Mr Abbey noted that discussions on the new funding approach are ongoing and assured that full details would be made public once a final decision is taken.

The full details will be made known, but obviously, this is on top of the agenda,” he added.