Goat Ranch in Ghana Aims to Start an Industry

[guest name="Henry Adobor" biography="Henry Adobor teaches corporate strategy, ethics and leadership at the School of Business, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, Connecticut. His background is in retail and human resource management. His business interests in Ghana include a small IT center in Accra and a large-scale aquaculture project. He lives in Cheshire, Connecticut."]

The African Diaspora Marketplace contest recently awarded $50,000 to $100,000 to 14 immigrants to the United States from African countries to help them start or expand businesses in Africa. Some of them share how they plan to use the money on the New Enterprise blog.

Henry Adobor

Henry Adobor

You may not believe it, but goat farming is my passion. It connects me to my childhood during which my mother kept a few goats (as do most people throughout Sub-Saharan Africa.)

What I am trying to do with Aceritas Ghana Ltd. – the company I have started – is turning the passion into a commercial enterprise. The company will own and manage Green Acres Goat Ranch. Beginning with 100 goats, this commercial goat farm will use improved breed stock imported from South Africa and modern husbandry methods to produce the animals for meat and breeding. This will be a huge improvement over traditional small-scale livestock farming, which is inefficient and unsustainable in the long run.

But my goal is far from pushing small farmers out of competition. With a small laboratory and education center, the ranch also will work as a platform for sharing knowledge with local farmers to help them upgrade breeding and farming methods and grow. Aceritas is forming an alliance with a local university to promote research on goats, particularly on the new breed. My hope is that this project becomes the nucleus of an emerging industry. I plan to entice others to form a Commercial Goat Breeders Association to lay industry’s foundation.

The Accra Plains where goats soon will roam.

The Accra Plains where goats will roam soon.

My partner in Ghana -Stephen Adrah who owns several companies and farms – will manage Aceritas operations.

Because the market for goat meat is huge in Ghana, the initial focus is on selling the animals to large buyers, brokers and individuals directly from the ranch. Breed stock will be sold to farmers. Thinking ahead, Aceritas also will prepare for farming milk goats and selling goat milk in the future.

The ADM grant has come handy. It will help to defray the cost of importing the breed stock (that is substantial because the animals will be air-freighted, no first class please!) and building housing for goats.