The Oil Palm Development Association of Ghana (OPDAG) has praised the government for introducing a dedicated $500 million Oil Palm Development Finance Window in the 2026 Budget, describing it as a bold and transformational step for the sector.
It said the initiative demonstrates the government’s strong commitment to accelerating economic growth by supporting all the critical aspects of agriculture.
In a statement signed by its President, Paul Kwabena Amaning, the association said the initiative would also promote rural industrialisation and large-scale job creation through the oil palm value chain.
Catalyst for expansion
During the presentation of the 2026 Budget Statement and Economic Policy in Parliament, the Minister of Finance, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson, announced that the government was setting up a dedicated US$500 million Oil Palm Development Finance Window to support the long-term growth and sustainability of Ghana’s oil palm industry.
He explained that this was to help address the gaps that conventional short-term commercial loans create for financing such projects due to their repayment timelines and high interest rates.
The Finance Minister announced that the government would partner the World Bank, other development finance institutions (DFIs), and the Development Bank Ghana (DBG) to operationalise the new facility.
The initiative will provide long-tenor loans aligned with the crop’s growth cycle, offer a five-year moratorium on principal and interest payments, and apply concessional interest rates to attract private sector investment
It is expected to fund up to 70 per cent of project costs for plantations, processing plants and value-addition facilities.
The national goal includes cultivating 100,000 hectares of new plantations and creating more than 250,000 direct and indirect jobs across the country.
Global competitiveness
The OPDAG President described the intervention as timely and strategic, given the country’s current annual production of 300,000 metric tonnes of palm oil against a national demand exceeding 400,000 metric tonnes.
He said bridging the deficit of over 100,000 tonnes would reduce import dependence, save foreign exchange and improve livelihoods in rural communities.
Mr Amaning emphasised that the oil palm policy, which focused on sustainability, out-grower schemes and value addition, positions Ghana to develop a globally competitive oil palm economy.
As part of efforts to enhance governance and transparency in the sector, he announced its collaboration with Royvia Plus International Limited, promoters of the DJER Traceability System from Japan.
Commitment to partnership
Mr Amaning reaffirmed the association’s readiness to work closely with the government, development partners, financial institutions and private sector stakeholders to ensure the successful rollout of the financing window.
He further urged all players in the oil palm value chain to embrace innovation and adopt sustainable and digital practices to drive the growth of a modern, competitive and globally compliant industry.
