Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /usr/www/users/urnnet/a/story.php on line 43 Bulk Processors, Deforestation Kill Local Shea Butter Business in Pader :: Uganda Radionetwork
In 2019, companies collectively exported about USD 760,000 (2.7 billion) Shillings worth of shea butter to countries such as Rwanda, the Middle East, Kenya, France, Germany and Japan. During the same year, the Uganda Export Promotions Board, the entity in charge of Uganda’s exports set a high target of exporting 200,000 to 500,000 tons of shea butter by 2022, from the current 30,000 to 150,000 tonnes a year.
For 20
years, 41-year-old Evalyn Lanyero and more than 50 other women have been selling hot-pressed
shea butter to travellers and locals in Lacekocot town council in Pader
district, to cater for their family’s financial needs.
Hot-pressed
shea butter has since time immemorial been used by locals in Acholi as a food seasoning and
body moisturiser. But for the
past three years, this source of livelihood has been threatened by bulk
shea butter processors, who produce hot-pressed cosmetic shea butter products
for sale on the local and international markets.
Lanyero says
the bulk processor threaten their business because, unlike the locals who only make
one product at a low level, the bulk processors make many products such as body
jelly, lip balm, hair pomade among others, which has led to a scramble for the
valuable nuts.
Luo//Cue in; “Peko
tye aryo…
Cue out…dong
peke.”//
In the past
Lanyero could collect her own nuts and buy a minimum of 10 sacks of shea nuts from neighbours, who did not feel the urge to process the nuts into butter. She could then process these nuts for months. But
now, she has lost those clients to the large processors, who offer more money to
the shea nut collectors than her.
Luo//Cue in; “Ikare
ma pud…
Cue out…bene
dong peke.”//
Lanyero explains that before the emergence of bulk processors and commercial charcoal
burners, she could raise 3 million Shillings each shea nut season, and use the
money for paying school fees, buying animals for rearing and still save some.
Santina
Adokorac, a 61-year-old woman says that she has been relying on the shea butter business
to pay her children’s school fees because her husband has a disability and cannot
help much. Before the outbreak
of the coronavirus pandemic, her eldest son was already pursuing a diploma in
civil engineering, and her daughter sat Senior Four exams, while another son is set
to join senior one, all because of the shea butter business. However, this
year, she collected only one and a half basins.
Luo//Cue in; “I mwaka
ni yaa obedo peke…
Cue out…alip
pyera aboro.”//
Translation: “This year
my shea nut harvest was very low. I collected only one and a half basins. Before the
bulk buyers and charcoal burners came in, I could collect two sacks of shea
nuts and buy a minimum of 18 sacks from other locals, at shillings 40,000 each
basin. But now, if I’m lucky to get from another person, they will sell it at
shillings 80,000 a basin.”
There are a
number of exporters of shea butter products in Uganda such as Shea House,
Blessed Organic, Livara, Agago District Shea Nut Collectors and Processors,
Gulu Nana, Joy Shea, Moo Yao, Crop Vet, Shea Care and Pelere Group among
others. All these companies get their shea nuts from Acholi, Lango and West Nile sub-regions where the shea nut trees are endemic.
In 2019,
these companies collectively exported about USD 760,000 (2.7 billion) Shillings worth
of shea butter to countries such as Rwanda, the Middle East, Kenya, France, Germany
and Japan. During the same year, the Uganda Export Promotions
Board, which is in charge of Uganda’s exports set a high target of
exporting 200,000 to 500,000 tons of shea butter by 2022, from the current 30,000
to 150,000 tonnes a year.
And because
the shea nut trees are able to grow in great thickness of trunks and wide
branches, charcoal burners and loggers also find it attractive. For this reason, commercial
charcoal burners and timber dealers have over the years descended on the
valuable, yet endangered tree species.
In 2006, the Ugandan government
declared that the shea tree was endangered, and in 2018, the Ministry of Water
and Environment, in line with the National Forestry and
Tree Planting Act 2003, banned the cutting and transportation of the trees
altogether following its rapid destruction. Despite these protections, shea
trees are still cut down on a large scale.
Statistics from Global Forest Watch
indicate that in 2010, Pader district had 380,534 acres of tree cover and it lost 126,021 acres of tree cover in 2020.
Adokorac says
as their business keeps getting threatened, she and more than 50 other women
who used to sell the hot-pressed shea butter in Lacekocot town council are now left
wondering what next line of business to take.