July 16, 2013
Ghana opens fish feed mill at Prampram
In order to help boost the aquaculture sector of Ghana, a US$5 million fish feed mill with an installed capacity of 24,000 tonnes has been inaugurated at Prampram, near Tema.
The Israeli mill, Raanan Fish Feed West Africa, is the first in West Africa to apply the technology of producing floating extruded fish feed for tilapia and catfish. It is currently producing between 1,000 and 1,400 tonnes of feed every month for both the local and the export markets.
Raanan sources 70% of its raw materials locally, with the remaining 30%, mainly vitamins and premixes, being imported from Israel.
The company has also set up an Aqua Culture Training Centre outside Kumasi in the Ashanti Region, in collaboration with the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture, to impart knowledge on fish farming to backyard and small farmers. It has also created a research centre for students at the KNUST in Kumasi to enable them to undertake scientific studies into aquaculture.
According to research, as confirmed by the Chief Executive Officer of Raanan Fish Feed West Africa, Raanan Berzak, Ghana was among the top five fish consumers in the world, a situation which called for alternatives to make available sufficient fish to meet the demand.
He was of the view that the private sector was the best to be supported to achieve plans for building the fish sector. He called for support from the government to encourage the private/public partnership to succeed in the aquaculturesector.
Berzak said Ghana could become a paradise for fish farming and commended the Agricultural Development Bank and The Netherlands Government for supporting the project.
The Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture Development, Nayon Bilijo, who inaugurated the mill, said the current annual 420,000 tonnes fish output fell short of the national requirement by 460,000 tonnes. That, he pointed out represented more than 50% of the deficit which the government made up for through imports of over US$200 million annually.
He disclosed that his ministry was working with some regulatory institutions, to clampdown on fish feed dealers who, over time, flooded the market with substandard products that were neither labelled nor had dates of manufacture and expiry indicated on them.
The Israeli Ambassador to Ghana, Sharon Bar-li, was of the view that the project was unique, as it showcased to investors how private sector partnership could work in Ghana. She said the presence of the Raanan mill would reduce the industry''s dependence on imports, while "Ghanaian tilapia will be fed with Ghana-made fish feed".
Sharon Bar-il was optimistic that at full capacity Raanan Fish Feed could make Ghana a regional exporter of quality feed.