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马哈马总统宣布 7 月 1 日启动 24 小时经济 / Mahama Declares: July 1 24H Economy
来源:B & Ft Online | 作者:迦纳术略 | 发布时间 :2025-06-30 | 45 次浏览: | 分享到:
加纳总统 John Dramani Mahama 先生宣布,备受期待的 24 小时经济计划将于 7 月 1 日正式启动


加纳总统 John Dramani Mahama 先生宣布,备受期待的 24 小时经济计划将于 7 月 1 日正式启动,特马港和塔科拉迪港将率先实行全天候运营。这项国家战略旨在全面提升园艺出口能力,释放农业工业化潜能。


Mahama 总统在首都阿克拉举行的 2025 加纳园艺博览会开幕式上宣布了这一决定。本届博览会以 "创新、转型、可持续:驱动加纳园艺业增长" 为主题,汇聚了行业领袖、政府官员、青年农业企业家和国际贸易伙伴。

"7 月 1 日起,24 小时经济政策将正式实施,特马港和塔科拉迪港将成为全天候港口,为农业工业化物流、加工和出口提供支持。这不仅是延长运营时间,更需要配套的基础设施、能源保障、安防体系和数字平台建设,以实现持续的高附加值生产。" Mahama 总统强调。

该战略将重点加速菠萝、芒果、辣椒等易腐农产品的出口流程,实现从田间到港口再到国际市场的快速流转,在减少采后损耗的同时提升外汇收入。



Mahama 总统呼吁全国从传统农业转向现代化、竞争性、青年主导的农业经济模式。


"我们必须从小农生存模式转向附加值创造、国际竞争力培育和青年创业引领。农业不应再被视为退路选择,而是国家振兴的支柱,更是通过出口稳定货币的关键。" Mahama 总统阐释道。他同时描绘了当前农民缺乏冷链支持、难觅公平市场的困境,称这是亟待系统性改革的 "道义使命"。

在重申政府 2025-2028 年 "滋养加纳" 计划承诺时,总统提出四大支柱战略:

  • 蔬菜发展项目推广温室种植

  • 智慧农业服务中心提供机械化支持

  • 农业工业园与冷链基建保障出口品质

  • 青年农业诊所开展创业孵化


"这些不是空头承诺,而是已经启动的政策现实。" Mahama 总统强调。

数据显示,2024 年加纳非传统出口额突破 35 亿美元,其中园艺产品增长显著。政府目标是在 2030 年前实现 100 亿美元出口额,将通过产能扩张、物流升级和贸易联盟实现。

Mahama 总统指出:"稳定加纳塞地汇率必须依靠外汇增收,高附加值农产品出口是最可靠途径。我们的战略既果敢又务实。"

总统特别呼吁加纳进出口银行等金融机构为农业初创企业提供实质资本,并邀请国际伙伴以 "发展合伙人" 身份投资农业科技、技能培训和基础设施建设。

谈及非洲大陆自贸区愿景时,Mahama 总统构想了一幅区域协作图景:"想象利比里亚种植鲜姜、加纳负责加工、肯尼亚完成包装,最终以统一非洲品牌出口迪拜。这正是我们要构建的经济生态。"

加纳农业与绿色企业联合会主席 Davies Korboe 先生在发言中指出,加纳具备成为全球优质果蔬供应商的天然优势——肥沃土壤、充沛雨量和庞大农民群体,但关键作物如芒果椰子单产过低,近三分之一农产品因采后处理不当损耗。

"全球 320 亿美元热带农产品市场渴求优质可溯源商品,加纳没有理由缺席。" Korboe 先生疾呼。

Korboe 先生同时呼吁银行业变革:"金融应该着眼发展愿景而非抵押品,需要支持创新理念而非仅看重资产。祖先的学历证明不该成为贷款障碍。"

Mahama Declares July 1 Start for 24-Hour Economy


President John Dramani Mahama has announced that the long-awaited 24-hour economy initiative will officially commence on July 1, with Tema and Takoradi Ports set to operate 24 hours a day as part of a sweeping national plan to transform the country’s horticultural export capacity and unlock full agro-industrial productivity.


The president made this declaration during the Ghana Horticulture Expo 2025 opening in Accra.


The event, themed ‘Innovate, Transform, Sustain: Driving Growth in Ghana’s Horticultural Sector’, brought together industry players, government officials, youth-led agribusinesses and global trade partners.


“On July 1st, the 24-hour initiative policy will be ready to go into operation and our ports – Tema and Takoradi – will be declared 24-hour ports to support agro-industrial logistics, processing and exports. This is not just about longer hours; it is about building the infrastructure, energy, security and digital platforms to enable continuous, high-value production,” he said.


According to the president, this strategy is designed to fast-track the movement of perishable exports such as pineapples, mangoes, chillies and herbs – moving them swiftly from the field to the ports to international sheds, thus reducing post-harvest losses while boosting foreign exchange earnings.


Calling on the nation to shift from traditional farming to a modernised, competitive and youth-driven agro-economy, Mahama stressed the urgent need to go beyond smallholder survival.


“We must move from smallholder survival to value addition, international competitiveness and youth-driven enterprise. Agriculture must no longer be seen as a fallback option. It is the backbone of our national renewal and a key to stabilising our currency through exports,” he elaborated.


Also, he  painted a vivid picture of farmers across the country working with limited support, often unable to access cold storage or find fair markets. He described this reality as not just a technical challenge but also a “moral imperative” demanding bold, systemic reform.


Reiterating his government’s commitment to the Feed Ghana programme for 2025–2028, Mahama outlined a four-pillar strategy to make the nation’s agriculture investment-ready, inclusive and globally competitive:


  • Vegetable Development Project to scale greenhouse farming and institutional cultivation.

  • Smart Agriculture and Farmer Support Centres for mechanisation, irrigation, climate advisory and digital extension.

  • Agri-Industrial Zones and Cold Chain Infrastructure to reduce post-harvest losses and ensure export quality.

  • Agribusiness Youth Clinics to build youth capacity through skills training, mentorship and startup support.


“These interventions are not promises. They are policy realities already in motion,” he stated.


The president further noted that national non-traditional exports exceeded US$3.5billion in 2024, with horticulture leading the surge. The goal, he said, is to cross US$10billion by 2030, powered by expanded production, robust logistics and strong trade alliances.


“To stabilise our cedi, we must earn more forex – and one of the surest ways is through high-value agricultural exports. Our strategy is bold, deliberate and backed by action,” he said.


He urged financial institutions, especially Ghana Exim Bank, to support agribusiness startups with real capital and called on international partners to invest in the country’s agri-tech, skills development and infrastructure – not as donors, but as true development partners.


Speaking to broader regional ambitions under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), President Mahama imagined a future when African countries collaborate across the agricultural value chain.


“Imagine Liberia growing fresh ginger, Ghana processing it, Kenya packaging it – and we export that as one African brand to Dubai. This is the economic ecosystem we must build,” he explained.


Meanwhile, Davies Korboe, President-Federation of Agricultural and Green Enterprises (FAGE), in an address at the event noted that the country must turn its farming potential into real action to become a top global supplier of high-quality fruit and vegetables.


He highlighted its rich natural resources – fertile soil, good rainfall and many farmers – but pointed out a major problem: “Crop yields for key products like mangoes and coconuts remain too low and nearly one-third of produce is lost after harvest due to poor handling”.


He added that: “The global market, worth over US$320billion, is asking for top-quality, traceable tropical goods. Why should not Ghana supply it? Why not Ghana?”


He also called for a revolution in banking: “Banking must be about vision and growing businesses, not demanding impossible collateral or ancestors’ school records. We need to fund ideas, not just assets,” he said.


来源:财经在线

文:By Buertey Francis BORYOR

翻译:无尽夏


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