May 9, 2026

RESEARCHERS TURN CASHEW WASTE INTO NUTRITIONAL AND ECONOMIC VALUE

What was once considered agricultural waste is now becoming a powerful source of income, nutrition, and innovation in Ghana as the MA-CASH Project pioneers a groundbreaking transformation of discarded cashew apples into commercial products including nutritional juices, animal feed, compost, and vegetarian food products.

The initiative, officially known as the Maximising Gains from Cashew Production for Youth Development (MA-CASH) Project, is being spearheaded by the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research with support from Ghana’s Ministry of Environment, Science and Technology and funding from Canada’s International Development Research Centre.

According to researchers involved in the project, Ghana produced over 1.6 million metric tonnes of cashew apples in 2024, yet nearly 90 percent of the fruit went to waste due to limited processing infrastructure and poor commercialization systems. The MA-CASH initiative is now reversing that narrative by creating a circular economy model where every part of the cashew fruit is utilized for economic and environmental value.

The project trains young people and rural farmers to process the fleshy cashew apples into juice, snacks, meat alternatives, compost, poultry feed, and other marketable products. Researchers revealed that scientific techniques were developed to reduce tannin levels in cashew juice, improving its nutritional quality and consumer safety.

The project also introduced innovative preservation technologies, including clay cooling systems capable of extending the fruit’s shelf life from one day to nearly six days. One of the project’s most inspiring success stories is that of Michael Kyereme, a young Ghanaian entrepreneur from the Bono Region, who reportedly paid off a university debt through the sale of processed cashew apple juice. He currently produces dozens of bottles daily and markets them through local shops and social media platforms. Experts say the project could significantly strengthen food security, reduce post-harvest losses, empower youth entrepreneurship, and create new agribusiness opportunities across Ghana’s cashew-producing regions.

The initiative is also being hailed as a major step toward sustainable agriculture, climate resilience, and rural industrialization. Industry observers believe the MA-CASH Project may position Ghana as a future leader in value-added cashew processing in Africa, while transforming agricultural waste into a profitable national resource.

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