Internship\Volunteer Opportunity in Ghana

September 4th, 2009

In its search for development the company SEKAF GHANA is looking for an intern for 3-4 months. The company has built a strong reputation in the shea butter industry in West Africa and has set up a co-op creating jobs for poor women in rural areas. It is looking for a competent graduate school student willing to participate in the development of the company as a support for the business partners of the company. www.sekafghana.com Job Title: Administrative Assistant Responsibilities: 

  • Maintaining and managing Fair Trade and Organic certification process.
  • Email Handling information request (quotations, email enquires)
  • Handling freight quotations for orders Manage company trade lead accounts like alibaba, google etc. Maintaining a list of these accounts
  • Preparing correspondence
  • Documenting customer/product testimonials
  • Receiving visitors and arranging tours to Sekaf Shea Butter village
  • Scheduling staff meetings Train and supervise lower-level clerical staff
  • Answer incoming calls & Screening Calls Making travel arrangements
  • Preparing reports and financial data and report to directors
  • Word processing, filing, and faxing, spreadsheets and presentation software usage Coordinates various office support services, including purchasing and facilities/warehouse management Compiling materials and maintaining employee database records Assisting with trade show and event planning
  • Responsible for the logistical processing of customer orders, includes coordination with warehouse, sales staff, warehouse and shippers.
  • Arranges shipment of requested sample items, goods or merchandise.
  • Greets and directs all visitors, including vendors, clients, job candidates and customers. Ensures completion of paperwork, sign-in and security procedures.
  • Handles special administrative projects, Sorts and routes incoming materials. Proactive communication with customers and client via telephone, e-mail, or regular mail Maintains solid customer relationships by handling their questions and concerns with speed and professionalism.
  • Performs data entry and uses software programs.

Qualifications:

  • Requires strong computer and internet research skills. Also calls for flexibility, excellent interpersonal skills, project coordination experience, and the ability to work well with all levels of internal management and staff, as well as outside clients and vendors. Possesses advanced computer skills along with the ability to train others on system usage. A premium paid for specific industry or market experience. Extensive software skills are required, as well as Internet research abilities and strong communication skills. 

Location: Tamale, Ghana

Food, transportation and accommodation cost is taken care by the company SEKAF GHANA. To apply for this opportunity, please send your resume and contact phone number to: sales [at] sekafghana [dot] com

Shea nut industry to follow cocoa model

August 18th, 2009

By Sarah Hills, 27-Mar-2009

Related topics: Formulation, Ingredients and additives

Government officials in Ghana have announced plans to transform the country’s shea nut production to echo the success of its cocoa industry, according to reports.

Shea nuts are used to make substitutes for cocoa butter in the chocolate and confectionery industry and are a principal raw material of cocoa butter equivalents (CBE).

Ghana’s Vice President John Mahama said that the government wants the shea industry to become a priority sector, according to the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation, and a premium would be placed on developing it into a cash crop, as was done for the cocoa industry in the past.

Mahama was speaking at a conference in Burkina Faso this week, called “Shea 2009: Optimizing the Global Value Chain”, which was organised by the West Africa Trade Hub.

The ‘shea belt’ runs through much of West Africa, particularly Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea and Mali and between 2004 and 2008 the shea industry doubled.

Ghana’s aim is to set up a Shea nut Development Board to help the country tap into the rapidly expanding global shea trade, which is expected to be worth $500m per annum within the next five years.

Mahama said: “The understanding of government with these commitments is to make the shea nut industry the major driving force in the accelerated development of the savannah areas of Ghana”.

The Vice President said the move reflected the government’s “recognition of the crucial role that the shea crop plays in the socio-economic development of the savannah area of the country”.

The aim is to increase production by overcoming challenges such as issues with poor processing and problems associated with domesticating this wild crop.

The hub said that traditional shea butter processing is done by village women, who gather, boil and sun-dry the nuts. Afterward, they pound and ground the dried nuts to a paste, which they knead with water to extract the fat, and stir into creamy butter.

As well as CBEs, the solid fat (butter or stearin) and the liquid oil (olien), are also used in cooking oil, margarine, cosmetics, soap, detergents and candles, according to Sekaf Ghana which is an African producer and exporter of the ingredient.

Securing supply

Scandinavian ingredients group AarhusKarlshamn (AAK) claims to be one of the world’s leading producers of high value-added, speciality vegetable fats and it recently invested in strengthening its shea butter supply chain in West Africa to help secure supply of the core CBE raw material.

In the past AAK has said that shortages in shea nuts harmed volumes of cocoa alternatives at times when market demand was high.

It states that cocoa butter has a unique composition and physical properties. CBEs have similar physical and chemical properties as cocoa butter but “iron out many of the difficulties inherent in chocolate production”.

It said that based on shea and/or illipe butter and palm oil, CBEs are less expensive than cocoa butter but jus as natural.

Shea 2009: Optimizing the Global Value Chain

February 27th, 2009

Between 2004 – 2008 the shea industry has effectively doubled.

How will we continue that growth while addressing key challenges?

USAID’s West Africa Trade Hub invites you to explore investment opportunities and improve efficiencies, at our second international shea conference!

Firms from more than 12 African countries will join experts, international buyers and regional service providers to explore fundamental and cutting edge issues in the shea industry.

Shea 2009: Optimizing the Global Value Chain

Join us to discuss…

  • Environmental and social issues
  • Production scales
  • Product quality and management
  • Impact of cultivation of biofuel crops
  • Consumer trends
  • Quality standards and regulation
  • Value of an industry alliance

Learn more at: http://www.globalshea.org/

The shea tree has economic and environmental values for Ghana

February 20th, 2009

Introduction

The shea tree has many uses, both economic and environmental to the people of the Northern and Upper regions, and Ghana as a whole.

The shea tree, was scientifically known in the past as ‘Butryospermum paradoxum’, but is now called ‘Vitellaria paradoxa’. The oldest specimen of the shea tree, according to existing literature was first collected by Mungo Park on May 26, 1797.

Many vernacular names are used for the shea tree, and this shows how widely it is spread across parts of Africa – nearly 5,000km from Senegal to Uganda across the African Continent.

The shea tree grows very well on a wide range of soils, including highly degraded, arid, semi-arid and rocky soil.

It usually grows to an average height of about 15 meters and girths of about 175 meters with profuse branches and a thick waxy and deeply fissured bark that makes it fire resistant. The shea tree grows naturally in the wild in the dry Savannah belt of West Africa from Senegal in the west to Sudan in the east, and onto the foothills of the Ethiopian highlands.

It occurs in 19 countries across the African continent, namely Benin, Ghana, Chad, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Guinea Bissau, Cote D’Ivoire, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Togo Uganda, Zaire and Guinea. In Ghana (FAO, 1988a), it occurs extensively in the Guinea Savannah and less abundantly in the Sudan Savannah.

The shea tree grows mostly in the wild state. In Ghana, it grows in almost half of the country. It occurs over almost the entire area of Northern Ghana, covering land area of over 77,670 square kilometers in Western Dagomba, Southern Mamprusi, Western Gonja, Lawra, Tumu, Wa and Nanumba with Eastern Gonja having the densest stands. There is sparse shea tree cover found in Brong-Ahafo, Ashanti, and the Eastern and Volta regions in the south of the country.

And according to legend among local people no one owns the shea tree, because it germinates and grows on its own.

The shea tree, when it passes the germination stage in about three to five years becomes fire resistant. It is also not known to have natural enemies such as pests.

Once it survives the first five years of its early stages of germination and growth, it grows slowly and takes about 30 years to reach maturity and from here, it can live for up to three hundred years. In the absence of any hazards, including tree felling, it can bear fruit for two hundred years.

The shea tree has no capacity for vegetative regeneration, and therefore, can only be propagated through its seed.

Economic and cultural importance of the shea tree

The economic importance of the shea tree can not be over emphasized, in the face of the unstable world market price for cocoa and the need to find suitable substitutes for cocoa in the confectionery and cocoa butter industry. This importance became even more significant since the early 1970s.

The shea tree also has a great, untapped capacity for producing copious amounts of sap that can constitute an important source of raw material for the gum and rubber industry.

The mature kernel contains about 61% fat which when extracted is edible, and can serve medicinal as well as industrial purposes.

The trees begin to bear fruits at maturity and start flowering by early November, with picking or gathering lasting for five months from April to August every year. When the shea fruits ripen, they fall under their own weight to the floor and are gathered by hand.

It is estimated that about 9.4 million shea trees are in Ghana, and these can potentially yield one hundred tons of shea nuts worth about 100 million US dollars per year.

Shea butter has been found to have a fat composition similar to cocoa butter, and is used as a substitute for lard or margarine because it makes a highly, pliable dough. Shea butter is also used in making soap and candles, and it is incorporated in margarine formulations.

After the oil is extracted, the residue serves as excellent fuel, and can also be mixed with mud for plastering traditional mud huts.

Wood from the shea tree is suitable for sturdy tools such as, hoe handles for farming, pestles and mortars for food processing, and the carving of talking drums which play important roles in the cultural life of the people.

Researchers have also found out that, the shea tree is the second most important oil crop in Africa after the palm nut tree.

The shea fruit as a source of food

For most people of the northern parts of Ghana, especially women, who have the responsibility to supply the daily food intakes for their families, the shea tree provides a good source of food - the shea fruit, especially so because the ripening of the fruits coincides with the lean season of food production. The pulp around its ripe fruit is sweet and edible.

The shea butter which is extracted from the nuts also constitutes the greatest proportion of oil intake in most homes in the Northern and Upper regions of Ghana.

Medicinal properties of the shea tree

Meanwhile, records available show that, as far back as 1728, shea butter was considered a highly prized medicinal substance in many parts of Africa.

Shea butter is unique because of its high fraction, about 8%, which contains medicinal properties.

It is known to be naturally rich in Vitamins A, E, and F, as well as a number of other vitamins and minerals. Vitamins A and E help to soothe, hydrate, and balance the skin. They also provide skin collagen, which assists with wrinkles and other signs of ageing. Vitamin F contains essential fatty acids, and helps protect and revitalize damaged skin and hair.

Shea butter is an intense moisturizer for dry skin, and is a wonderful product for revitalizing dull or dry skin on the body or scalp. It promotes skin renewal, increases circulation, and accelerates wound healing. It is also beneficial for the treatment of many different conditions.

Shea butter is used for protection against sunburns, and post sun-exposure products. It is very effective in the treatment of ageing or scaly skin, useful in the prevention of chapping, and can also be used against scalp dryness.

In the north of Ghana, it is rubbed on the skin of newly born babies, before they are given warm baths. This gives them smooth supple skins.

Shea butter’s stableness in formulations helps the fast release of active ingredients in medicaments. At room temperature, it remains solid, and it is used as a base for certain traditional ointments for the treatment of fractures and broken bones.

The roots and bark also have numerous medicinal uses. They are boiled or ground into powder for the treatment of dysentery, suppurating wounds and other ailments.

The shea tree can be used to fight desertification

The shea tree has environmental significance for the country, particularly in the fight against desertification.

Ghana’s total land area of 238,539km2 is at risk of desertification. Desertification claims about 20,000 hectares of Ghana’s land annually.

The most severely affected areas are the Northern and Upper regions of the country. Land in these parts of the country is arid, and the climate is hot and dry. The land is covered with sparse vegetation and is mostly grassland, these are conditions, which make land in these regions susceptible to desertification.

In the fight against desertification in these areas, therefore, the shea tree, which has been described as, “cocoa of the north”, can be a suitable ally.

Several efforts though have been made scientifically to propagate the shea tree over the years, but no significant result has yet been achieved. But like all scientific efforts, it is only a matter of time before a solution is found.

Some worrying trends

While the economic, environmental and other benefits of the shea tree is undoubtedly clear, there are some worrying developments taking place in the northern part of the country that need to be checked. Some people are destroying shea trees to produce charcoal. And it has been going on for so long.

About six years ago, the Daily Graphic issues of July 16 and August 29, 2001 both carried reports that said the then Upper West Regional Minister and an official of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) were both complaining about the cutting of and using shea trees for charcoal burning.

What is even more disturbing is the fact that according to the EPA, 80% of every 100 basketfuls of charcoal produced are from shea tree, the other 20% come from ‘dawadawa’ and the neem trees.

This act, which is still going on, if unchecked, has grave consequences for the shea nut industry and will contribute to environmental degradation, deforestation, and loss of vegetative cover, which would eventually lead to water and soil erosion and decrease in soil fertility. The end result of this would be hunger and poverty in the north and following in stride would be rural-urban migration of vulnerable young men and women.

Conclusion

It is obvious from the evidence deduced so far, that when a method is finally found in propagating the shea tree, the northern part of the country can benefit enormously from that, in terms of afforestation projects for the purposes of slowing down desertification and its dire consequences of drought, erratic rainfall and attendant poverty, hunger and starvation.

The economy of the north and certainly the entire country will receive a major boost of unimaginable proportions.

It is a big challenge, and Ghana as a nation can live up to it. It is worth investing in that area, as the country is not short of scientists who are eager and willing to deploy their expertise in that regard. The time is now, and action can only be in the interest of mother Ghana.

The shea tree plantations will invariably check the speeding rate of desertification in the country, make a positive impact on the diets of the people as well as contribute to their standard of living.

It will also open new frontiers for the country in the world export market for shea butter, as a substitute or ancillary to cocoa’s economic value.

Authored by: Emmanuel K. Dogbevi
Email: edogbevi@hotmail.com

welcome to sekaf shea butter blog!

February 20th, 2009

Welcome to shea butter blog. This is a blog for sekaf shea butter, the world’s leading producer of unrefined shea butter. This shea butter blog will provide answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about shea butter production, benefits and many more. Start blogging now!

PBC Ventures into sheanut industry

February 20th, 2009

Produce Buying Company (PBC) is diversifying its operations in the commodities market by venturing into the sheanut industry.
Managing Director, Anthony Osei Boakye, said the venture is aimed at increasing the revenue base of the company.
PBC during the 2007/2008 financial year posted a significant growth of profit before tax by 660.6 percent from GH¢0.388 million to GH¢2.95 million.

Boakye told Business & Financial Times that “If all goes on well, we may have to process the raw nuts to add value in the near future.”

The company’s sheanut operations are currently based in the Brong Ahafo, Ashanti, Upper East, Upper West and the Northern Region.

“We will eventually be in the Volta Region, where there are a lot of prospects for harvesting of the product.”

“PBC has a lot of goodwill from the sheanut farmers, and that positions us to buy more; but the product is seasonal.”

Ghana exports more than 50,000 tonnes of sheanut kernels each year, representing a third of West Africa’s total sheanut exports of 150,000 tonnes.

There are currently few commercial farms dealing in sheanut in the country. The products are used in edible cooking oils and also used around the world as skin-care lotions or moisturising cream and other cosmetics.

Produce Buying Company is a 100% owned subsidiary of Ghana Cocoa Board and the single largest buyer of cocoa for the domestic market. The company operates throughout the cocoa buying districts of the country.

It purchases cocoa beans from farmers and stores them in purpose built sheds at village and society level, then carts these to collection points for inspection, grading and sealing by the Cocoa Board’s Quality Control Department.

Shea-butter, which is medically proven to be an effective skin protector, helps fight wrinkles, promotes cell renewal and enhances blood circulation, is currently in high demand in Europe.

Brazil spends over US$80 million annually on shea-butter imports and hopes to depend largely on the country’s product, which is of high quality.

Source: B&FT

welcome to sekaf shea butter blog!

October 29th, 2007

Welcome to shea butter blog. This is a blog for sekaf shea butter, the world’s leading producer of unrefined shea butter. This shea butter blog will provide answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about shea butter production, benefits and many more. Start blogging now!