Africa: AU Honours Eric Opoku for Agricultural Transformation

Africa: AU Honours Eric Opoku for Agricultural Transformation


The Minister of Food and Agriculture (MoFA), Eric Opoku, has been honoured with the Honorary Ambassador of Agenda 2063 by the Office of the Special Envoy to the African Union, in recognition of his outstanding leadership in agricultural transformation and commitment to advancing food security in Ghana and Africa.

He was also presented with the Diplomatic Medal of Merit in Agricultural Transformation and Food Security in Accra on Friday, acknowledging his contribution to sustainable development on the continent through agriculture.

The Head of Delegation of the AU Agenda 2063 Ambassador-General Assembly, Dr Stephen Gbatigbi Ben-Joel, commended Mr Opoku for aligning Ghana’s agricultural strategies with Agenda 2063, which envisions a self-sufficient, food-secured Africa that is competitive on the global stage.

According to the envoy, the Minister’s leadership has not only revitalised the country’s food systems but also transformed agriculture into a viable tool for economic empowerment and continental progress.

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He cited the Minister’s initiatives in rice cooperation, seed sovereignty, irrigation, and cooperative farming as exemplary models of African-led solutions. “You have turned fields into engines of economic growth,” he remarked.

Plans were also unveiled to partner with Ghana in setting up rice farmer clusters, industrial rice mills, and storage facilities under a product-for-payment model to enhance food sufficiency.

The Assembly said Mr Opoku’s work reflects the core ideals of African solutions to African challenges and pledged continued collaboration to support Ghana’s agricultural development.

In his acceptance remarks, the minister dedicated the honours to Ghanaian farmers, policymakers, and agricultural stakeholders, describing the award as a testament to their collective effort.

He noted government’s ‘Feed Ghana’ programme, aimed at making agriculture the engine of the country’s economic transformation through deliberate, community-led action, as the anchor around which the agric sector would revolve, disclosing that over 120 secondary schools, several churches, the Ghana Armed Forces, Ghana Prisons Service, and National Service Authority have all signed unto the initiative.

The government, Mr Opoku stressed, wanted to shift from rain-fed agriculture to irrigation-based farming to ensure year-round production, adding that a rehabilitation of non-functional irrigation facilities were underway.