Tag: vegetable

  • 3 trucks smuggling vegetable oil in Accra confiscated by TCDA

    3 trucks smuggling vegetable oil in Accra confiscated by TCDA

    A joint taskforce led by the Tree Crop Development Authority (TCDA) has seized three Man Diesel cargo trucks containing smuggled cooking oil at the Tetteh Quarshie roundabout in Accra.

    Dr. Paul Amaning, the taskforce leader, disclosed that National Security operatives had received intelligence regarding vegetable oil being smuggled into the country from Togo.

    The intercepted oil had been brought in through unapproved routes to avoid taxes and import duties.

    Dr. Amaning stressed that these smuggling activities result in substantial losses to criminal syndicates attempting to bypass legal channels.

    He stated that the taskforce’s goal is to ensure the sale of locally manufactured cooking oils to boost the economy and create jobs within the value chain.

    He also cautioned the public, especially market women, against smuggling vegetable oil through land borders into the country.

    The taskforce, along with personnel from the Customs Preventive Division, escorted the three trucks to the Airport branch for an official examination.

    The owners of the seized cooking oil have been asked to provide all necessary documentation for a thorough review by the Ghana Revenue Authority—Customs Division.

    The joint taskforce includes members from the TCDA, the Oil Palm Development Association of Ghana (OPDAG), the Ghana Revenue Authority—Customs Division, and National Security.

  • Crackdown on smuggled vegetable oil by taskforce impressive – AGI

    Crackdown on smuggled vegetable oil by taskforce impressive – AGI

    The Association of Ghana Industries (AGI) supports the crackdown on smuggled vegetable oil in the Ghanaian market led by the Tree Crop Development Authority, Oil Palm Development Association of Ghana, Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority, and National Security.

    On Tuesday, February 26, 2024, several suspected shops selling smuggled vegetable oil were closed down, and eight shops were ordered to cease operations, with some attendants taken in for investigation.

    Tsonam Akpeloo, the Greater Accra Regional Chairman of AGI, commended the taskforce’s action, stating that it is a positive step.

    He emphasized AGI’s longstanding advocacy for such initiatives and dismissed claims of scarcity of locally made vegetable oil, asserting that local products are readily available in the market.

    “This is extremely welcoming news and AGI is in total support of this initiative. In fact, this is one of the initiatives that we have been asking the government to undertake for several years now. It appears too late, but it is always better late than never,” he said.

    “That is not accurate. It is not accurate because our local manufacturers of cooking oil are all over the market. In fact, even the Association of Distributors acknowledges how our products are readily available in the market.

    Akpeloo emphasized AGI’s commitment to expanding markets for locally produced goods while condemning the act of importing smuggled products into the country.

    The anti-smuggling oil exercise initiated in the Greater Accra Region targeted shops in Kasoa, Mallam Market, McCarthy Hill, and Adabraka.

  • Here are 4 health benefits of drinking bitter leaf juice

    Here are 4 health benefits of drinking bitter leaf juice

    Bitter leaf greens are used in the form of vegetable eaten to promote and enhance the digestive tract.

    Aside from it being used as food, the leaf has loads of health benefit when prepared as juice, especially for women.

    Here are some of the health benefits this miraculous plant has for women.

    • Treats stomach and abdominal pains

    Bitter leaf helps in the treatment of abdominal issues like stomach upset, diarrhoea, dysentery, and other gastrointestinal tract diseases. Drinking a cup of bitter leaf juice twice daily helps bring relief from stomach problems.

    • Cures Insomnia

    Bitter leaf juice helps in curing those suffering from insomnia. Take two glasses of bitter leaf juice every night, and your body system would be so calm you would sleep easily.

    • Lowers High Blood Pressure

    The bitterness of bitter leaf juice helps to lower your sugar level and controls blood pressure. Doctors advise hypertensive and diabetic patients to consume bitter leaf as the potassium it contains is a good remedy for hypertension as it prevents sodium from spiking up in the bloodstream by flushing out the accumulation of salt.

    • Enhances fertility

    Study have shown that bitter leaf boosts the chances of pregnancy among women. This is due to that detoxification power of bitter leaf which helps prevent the pollution of the antibodies that fight diseases, initiate tissue repair and regeneration.

    This is known to boost the fertility of the ovaries, significantly; as well as eliminating ovarian cyst and premature ovarian failure.

  • Wild bee decline threatens major US crops: study

    Wild bees are worth some $1.5 billion to key fruit and vegetable crops in North America, according to new research that warned declines in these pollinators threatens the productivity of economically important agriculture.
    The study, which had funding from the United States Department of Agriculture, comes as evidence of steep drops in insect populations worldwide prompts fears of dire consequences for crop pollination and natural food chains.

    Researchers from several US and Canadian universities looked at seven major fruit, vegetable and nut crops that are dependent on pollination — by wild bees and managed honeybees, which are often transported around farms as hired crop pollinators.

    While honeybees have traditionally been seen as the most economically valuable pollinators in the US, the study found wild bees play a much greater role than has been previously acknowledged, “even in agriculturally intensive regions”.

    “Our findings show that pollinator declines could translate directly into decreased yields or production for most of the crops studied, and that wild species contribute substantially to pollination of most study crops in major crop-producing regions,” the authors said.

    Researchers collected data from 131 farms in the US and parts of Canada on the prevalence of different types of bees, the amount of pollen distributed per flower visit and crop yield.

    This allowed them to estimate that the nationwide annual production value of wild pollinators to the crops studied was over $1.5 billion, compared with $6.4 billion for honeybees — a figure dominated by their $4.2 billion value to almond production.

    Researchers found that in six crops – pumpkin, apple, sweet cherry, tart cherry, blueberry and watermelon – wild bee species deposited on average more pollen per flower visit than honeybees.

    The exception was in California’s vast almond fields, where there were often no sign of any wild bees at all.

    Conservation value
    The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, found that five out of the seven crops showed evidence that a lack of pollinators was limiting production.

    They concluded that agricultural firms would see little benefit in investing in pesticides and fertilisers without tackling wild pollinator declines.

    Insects are the world’s top pollinators — 75 percent of 115 top global food crops depend on animal pollination, including cocoa, coffee, almonds and cherries, according to the UN.

    In a landmark study last year scientists concluded that nearly half of all insect species worldwide are in decline and a third could disappear altogether by century’s end.

    One-in-six species of bees have gone regionally extinct somewhere in the world.

    The main drivers of extinction are thought to be habitat loss and pesticide use.

    Source: Pulse Ghana

  • Vegetable farmers asked to form groups to gain market price control

    The Executive Director of Abibiman Sankofa Cultural Movement (ASCUM) has stressed the need for farmers to see the advantage and potential in forming groups, to help market their produce and gain control over market prices.

    He stated that vegetable farmers whose produce perish early, have to form groups in their communities to help solve such problems facing them.

    Mr. Freeman Madji explained that the formation of the groups would go a long way towards enhancing productivity.

    The Director was addressing a meeting of 15 vegetable growers who are members of ASCUM at Akim Oda in the Eastern Region, on how to get market for the produce of member-farmers.

    The Movement has more than 250 members operating from three districts in the Eastern Region and has about 70 percent of women being members.

    He said plans were far advanced to establish a training centre for the members and that, “strengthening farmers’ groupings in urban vegetable production system”, was one of the ways of solving the Movement’s marketing problems.

    Source: GNA