Ghana surpasses $3bn in exports as cocoa processing fuels industrial shift
Credit: www.ghanaweb.com
Ghana has recorded over $3 billion in export earnings, driven by a growing push to process cocoa locally and capture more value within its economy. The milestone, highlighted in recent trade and industry data, reflects a strategic shift from raw commodity exports toward industrialisation through value-added production, as reported by Business Insider Africa.
The cocoa sector remains central to this transformation, with exports of both raw beans and processed products contributing significantly to earnings. Data from the Bank of Ghana shows cocoa export revenues reached about $3.86 billion in 2025, supported by higher volumes and improved pricing conditions, reinforcing the crop’s role as a major foreign exchange earner.
Government policy is now increasingly focused on expanding domestic processing capacity, with plans to ensure that at least 50 percent of cocoa beans are processed locally from the 2026/2027 season. Officials say this shift will help reduce reliance on raw exports, create jobs, and strengthen industrial output across the value chain, from intermediate products like cocoa butter to finished goods.
The development underscores Ghana’s broader economic strategy to move up the global value chain and reduce vulnerability to commodity price swings. As processing capacity expands, the country is positioning itself not just as a leading cocoa producer, but as an emerging hub for agro-industrial manufacturing, with long-term implications for export diversification and sustainable growth.



