Adwoa works hard on her 15-acre cocoa farm. With the help of these trees, she’s increased her cocoa harvest by 50%. But her carbon earnings for the whole year? Just $14.72. Meanwhile, big chocolate companies in Europe are making over $120 million by trading carbon credits from trees like hers.
Adwoa is one of 140,000 cocoa farmers in Ghana who joined the REDD+ program. It promised that farmers would get paid for protecting trees and reducing deforestation. But in her region, Western North, nearly 92% of farmers have no formal land documents. Because of this, their trees don’t count in the digital systems used to trade carbon. They are left out.
Trending
- Power Stability or Political Promise? Inside Ghana’s 2,500-Transformer Rollout and the Real State of the Grid
- President Mahama’s “Not Ambulances” Clarification Exposes Deeper Questions About Ghana’s Last-Mile Health Strategy
- Ghana Travel Insurance: Medical Evacuation and Coverage Tips for UK Citizens
- Ghana Business Visa vs. Ghana Work Permit: A Complete Guide for UK Entrepreneurs
- Right of Abode in Ghana for UK Citizens 2026: Requirements, Process, Costs, and Benefits
- Ghana Citizenship by Descent: Complete Guide for UK Citizens
- Ghana Visa for UK Citizens: Complete 2026 Guide – Types, Requirements, Application Steps
- A Landmark Declaration, But No Answers: The Missing Details in Ghana’s Cape Three Points Marine Protected Area
