Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report

The reclamation of post-mined land commissioned under the Inclusive Landscape Management Plan (ILMP) by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is a strategically important initiative to convert degraded mining landscapes into productive agricultural land. The approach combines oil palm...

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Main Authors: Atampugre, Gerald, Ametefe, D. L., Tilahun, Seifu A.
Format: Informe técnico
Language:Inglés
Published: International Water Management Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179760
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author Atampugre, Gerald
Ametefe, D. L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
author_browse Ametefe, D. L.
Atampugre, Gerald
Tilahun, Seifu A.
author_facet Atampugre, Gerald
Ametefe, D. L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
author_sort Atampugre, Gerald
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The reclamation of post-mined land commissioned under the Inclusive Landscape Management Plan (ILMP) by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is a strategically important initiative to convert degraded mining landscapes into productive agricultural land. The approach combines oil palm cultivation with carefully selected leguminous crops to restore soil fertility and deliver sustainable socio-economic and environmental outcomes—the triple bottom line. Building on a successful pilot in the Ahafo Ano Southwest District, the initiative was initially framed through an Investment Memorandum (IM) as a scalable, investor-ready opportunity. The original model proposed private investment to finance the high-risk reclamation phase in return for long-term land access, supported by a 70:30 profit-sharing arrangement favoring investors while ensuring meaningful benefits for local communities. Subsequent expert analysis and stakeholder validation, however, reveal a critical structural constraint requiring a fundamental strategic shift. Updated estimates indicate that reclaiming the full 13,391 hectares would cost approximately US$441.92 million—far exceeding the projected US$40.44 million required for downstream agro-industrial operations. This imbalance fundamentally alters the project’s investment profile, rendering it unsuitable for conventional private financing. As a result, the original incentive structure is no longer viable. To unlock future investment, the initiative must be reframed as a blended development model, with the non-commercial reclamation costs financed by public or donor sources. This approach would de-risk the agro-industrial phase and restore the project’s attractiveness to private investors.
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spelling CGSpace1797602026-01-14T02:00:30Z Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report Atampugre, Gerald Ametefe, D. L. Tilahun, Seifu A. palm oil industries reclamation commercialization financing financing The reclamation of post-mined land commissioned under the Inclusive Landscape Management Plan (ILMP) by the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is a strategically important initiative to convert degraded mining landscapes into productive agricultural land. The approach combines oil palm cultivation with carefully selected leguminous crops to restore soil fertility and deliver sustainable socio-economic and environmental outcomes—the triple bottom line. Building on a successful pilot in the Ahafo Ano Southwest District, the initiative was initially framed through an Investment Memorandum (IM) as a scalable, investor-ready opportunity. The original model proposed private investment to finance the high-risk reclamation phase in return for long-term land access, supported by a 70:30 profit-sharing arrangement favoring investors while ensuring meaningful benefits for local communities. Subsequent expert analysis and stakeholder validation, however, reveal a critical structural constraint requiring a fundamental strategic shift. Updated estimates indicate that reclaiming the full 13,391 hectares would cost approximately US$441.92 million—far exceeding the projected US$40.44 million required for downstream agro-industrial operations. This imbalance fundamentally alters the project’s investment profile, rendering it unsuitable for conventional private financing. As a result, the original incentive structure is no longer viable. To unlock future investment, the initiative must be reframed as a blended development model, with the non-commercial reclamation costs financed by public or donor sources. This approach would de-risk the agro-industrial phase and restore the project’s attractiveness to private investors. 2025-12-18 2026-01-13T14:31:52Z 2026-01-13T14:31:52Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179760 en Open Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute CGIAR Scaling for Impact Program Atampugre, G.; Ametefe, D. L.; Tilahun, S. 2025. Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Scaling for Impact Program. 20p.
spellingShingle palm oil industries
reclamation
commercialization
financing
financing
Atampugre, Gerald
Ametefe, D. L.
Tilahun, Seifu A.
Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title_full Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title_fullStr Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title_full_unstemmed Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title_short Reclamation and commercialization of post-mined sites through palm oil plantations in Ghana: a financial feasibility assessment report
title_sort reclamation and commercialization of post mined sites through palm oil plantations in ghana a financial feasibility assessment report
topic palm oil industries
reclamation
commercialization
financing
financing
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179760
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AT tilahunseifua reclamationandcommercializationofpostminedsitesthroughpalmoilplantationsinghanaafinancialfeasibilityassessmentreport