Africa's Agricultural Processing Equipment Platform
Africa's Agricultural Processing Equipment Platform
Nigeria’s agricultural processing sector is witnessing a surge in investment as global demand for value-added commodities rises. The latest entrant to this space is Sunbeth, a major player in the country’s agribusiness landscape, which has unveiled plans to establish large-scale processing facilities for two of Nigeria’s key export crops.
The company announced it will bring two new plants online in March 2027—a cocoa processing facility with an annual capacity of 70,000 metric tonnes and a cashew processing plant capable of handling 80,000 metric tonnes. The move represents one of the largest simultaneous investments in Nigeria’s cocoa and cashew value chains.
The cashew plant, in particular, will require an array of machinery, from Cashew Nut Shelling Machines to Cashew Nut Shelling Processing Lines, to achieve such throughput. Before shelling, nuts are typically graded using a Raw Cashew Nut Grading Machine to ensure uniform processing. Efficient shelling technology is critical to maintaining kernel quality and reducing breakage, a key factor for export markets.
By integrating these facilities, Sunbeth aims to reduce Nigeria’s reliance on raw commodity exports and instead export finished or semi-finished products. The cocoa plant will likely produce cocoa liquor, butter, and powder, while the cashew plant will focus on graded kernels for snacking and ingredients.
The launch is expected to create thousands of direct and indirect jobs across the supply chain, from farming communities to logistics and export. It also aligns with the government’s backward integration policies and the African Continental Free Trade Area’s goals to boost intra-African trade in processed goods.
However, the success of such mega-projects depends on consistent raw material supply, reliable energy, and export logistics. With Nigeria producing over 250,000 metric tonnes of cashew nuts annually, a dedicated processing plant could dramatically shift the value capture away from Asian processors.
One question remains: will the facility be completed on schedule amidst the country’s infrastructure challenges and fluctuating global commodity prices?
This move aligns with Nigeria's push to transition from raw commodity exports to processed goods, which can capture more value domestically. The large capacities aim to meet rising global demand for traceable and sustainably processed cocoa and cashew, while potentially creating thousands of jobs and reducing post-harvest losses.
Source: "cashew shelling" – Google News