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Ivory Coast farmers state early Harmattan winds could impact cocoa crops

Dry Harmattan winds could start to blow early this season in Ivory Coast and this would cause a lack of cocoa beans from February, farmers said on Monday.

The world's top cocoa manufacturer is in its dry season that runs from mid-November to March, when downpours are scarce.

Recently, rains were mainly below average in the majority of Ivory Coast's main cocoa growing regions but excellent soil wetness content enhanced the October-to-March primary crop, farmers said.

They added that lots of beans were leaving the bush which harvesting would continue up until January.

However, farmers said they anticipated seasonal winds to start blowing early this year. The Harmattan, which normally sweeps in in between December and March from the Sahara desert, can hurt cocoa pods and dry the soil, making beans smaller.

Whatever is fine for the minute, but there are fears that the Harmattan will show up early this year and be strong, stated Ernest Krou, who farms near the west-central area of Daloa, where 0.7 millimetre (mm) of rain fell recently, 8.3 mm listed below the five-year average.

Comparable comments were made in the main areas of Bongouanou and Yamoussoukro, where rains were second-rate.

In the western area of Soubre and in the southern region of Divo, where rains were likewise below par, and in the southern region of Agboville and in the eastern region of Abengourou, where rains were above average, farmers said cocoa shipments from the bush were increasing.

They likewise said that the size and the quality of the crop in February and March would depend upon climate condition that would last up until late December.

If the dry season is not extreme and rains are well dispersed in December, there will suffice harvesting in between February and March, said Salame Kone, who farms near Soubre, where 6.6 mm of rain fell last week, 12.9 mm listed below the five-year average.

Typical temperature levels throughout the West African country last week ranged from 27 to 28.7 degrees Celsius.

(source: Reuters)