Some women shea nut processors in the North East Region have received training on modern nut processing practices from the Global Shea Alliance and its partners at Gbimsi near Walewale.
The training is part of an investment package to ensure that processors meet international standards in the processing of the nuts.
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The women, numbering about 1,000, were drawn from 26 cooperatives and taken through recommended methods of par-boiling the nuts, de-husking, and drying, as well as sorting.
According to the trainers, the majority of the women processors use very outdated methods in the processing of the nuts, which often compromise the quality.
But as buyers prefer high-quality nuts, building the capacity of the nut processors became necessary in order to meet global standards and specifications.
Isaac Dakurah, the Shea Quality Trainer from the Shea Network Ghana, said the majority of the women have been doing things the wrong way in the past.
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“In the aspect of par-boiling, the women have been doing the wrong thing. Some of them can boil the nuts the whole day, which is wrong. You only need 20 to 40 minutes of boiling time. They waste man-hours for nothing. It is just 20 to 40 minutes, and it is done, and then you can dry. So, we demonstrated to them the best method.”
The shea sector is a primary source of livelihood for many women in Northern Ghana.
With the processing of shea, the women have some control of their revenues.
But over the years, lack of technical know-how in processing has hindered many of them from benefitting fully from their trade.
The women were glad to participate in the training. Comfort Bugri, leader of the Gbinsi Women Cooperatives, spoke “In the past years, when we want to par-boil it, we will measure and fill the big pot. Sometimes we can leave it on fire until the next day. In fact, we can leave it on fire and go to sleep, and then when day breaks, we bring it down and put another batch on fire again and go to the farm; and when you come back in the evening, you can then remove it. So, what we’ve learned today is far different from what we have been doing.”