Friday 25 September 2020

Can A new Chapter Of Private-Sector Joint-Venture Relations Between Australia And Ghana Be Opened - Kickstarted By Mirreco?

A female-owned Ghanaian green economy business,  which was showcased by the Australian High  Commissionera,  H. E. Talyor, on his mission's official  Facebook page's wall, is  definity worth supporting.  One thanks the Aussie diplomat for his dedicated and enthusiastic support of local busimesses near the Australian High Commission's offices,  and his official residence. How marvellous. Splendid.


Incidentally, since there isn't any doubt about his  love for Ghana, and it's beautiful people, one hopes that he will follow up on this bit of export-market-intelligence, for the Commonwealth of Australia,  which could lead to a lucrative win-win joint-venture presenc, in Ghana, for the dynamic Richard Evans' Mirreco -  the innovative and cutting--edge Aussie green economy company, leveraging  the  industrial hemp value-chain.

As someone whose family has been a cocoa-farming one, from the early 1920s, from the British colonial era, one is keenly aware of the existential threat posed by the gold mining industry (both  and illegal),  to the longterm future of cocoa, the backbone-cash-crop, which almost single-handedly supports our national economy.

On the ground, across the forest belt, there is no question that a new agricultural sector substitute, for cocoa, which is even more valuable, in terms of its value chain's wealth creation and job creation potential, and export potential, must quickly be found,  if rural Ghana is not to be eventually denuded of its energetic  younger generations.

That  is why one makes bold to invite the current Australian High Commissioner,  to tour the biggest of one's  family's freehold  landholding portfolio, which lies in the Akyem Juaso section, of the Atewa Mountain Range.

It so happens that part of our incredibly beautiful, and biodiversuty-rich, upland evergreen rainforest property, there, totalling 99.6 acres, and referred to,  in Forestry Commission jargon, as an 'admitted-farm', lies within the official government Atewa Forest Reserve. In total, our family owns 14-square miles of freehold land, at Akyem Juaso.

If he is amenable to it,  our family, led by my favourite nephew, Eugene Kofi Boakye-Yiadom, Ghana's foremost green entrepreneur, and CEO, of the  famed Legon Botanical Gardens, will be happy to welcome the Aussie diplomat, to undertake a scoping-inspection-trip, to see for himself,  the egregious damage caused by illegal gold miners and illegal loggers, to what is valuable natural capital with potential as an ecotourism destination, and site for a living laboratory for biodiversity researchers from around the globe.

The Australian High Commission, could help save such valuable natural capital,  by empowering a Mirreco-led creation, of a new intergrated industrial hemp industry, across rural Ghana, to restore mined out sites nationwide,  and make them productive once again. Such a green economy  initiative, could be transformative. 

Above all, it will enable the Aussie diplomat to leave a Ghanaian tour-of-duty legacy, as the most effective Aussie diplimat deployed here, ever, thus far, in the long history of Ghana-Australia relations. Is he Game? Perhaps the question those of us in rural Ghana, must ponder over us: Can a new chapter of private-sector joint-venture relations between Australia and Ghana, be opened soon  - kickstarted by Mirreco venturing here? Cool.





Sent from Samsung tablet.

No comments: