Mathias Azonnoudo, a 50-year-old farmer in Benin, was taking a break sitting on a large pile of freshly picked cotton, which the Beninese government hopes will feed the country’s nascent textile revolution.
Azonnoudo and other farmers in the west African country have benefited from a recent uptick in demand for cotton, with the government seeking to launch a “Made in Benin” clothing industry.
“I feel like the government has found business leaders that want more, so they are encouraging farmers to produce more,” said Azonnoudo, who has been growing cotton for the past 16 years.
Photo: AFP
Benin has long vied with Mali for the title of Africa’s largest cotton producer, exporting mostly raw fibers for processing abroad to countries such as Bangladesh and China, the world’s largest garment exporters.
However, it now wants to process more of its “white gold” locally, to boost production and exports of 100 percent Beninese clothing.
Benin is expected to produce 669,000 tonnes of cotton during the 2024-2025 season, according to data from the Regional Program for Integrated Cotton Production in Africa.
Mali is set to produce 569,000 tonnes in the season.
Under the initiative of Beninese President Patrice Talon — who made his fortune from cotton in the 1990s and 2000s, earning him the nickname “King of Cotton” — authorities are racing to consolidate the nation’s lead.
Those ambitions came to life in 2020 with the creation of the Glo-Djigbe Industrial Zone (GDIZ), a vast manufacturing district 45km from the economic capital, Cotonou, in the south of the country.
Samples of the clothing made locally are now on display in the zone’s showroom, including shirts, trousers, dresses, and military and police uniforms. The district also produces towels and sheets.
The industrial park, financed as a partnership between the government and Indian businessman Gagan Gupta, offers spinning, weaving, dyeing and knitting facilities.
Last year, the zone exported its first items of clothing to French brand Kiabi.
“We have all the infrastructure we need to process agricultural products,” said Letondji Beheton, managing director of the company running the zone, adding that it worked with about 21,000 farmers throughout the country.
“Today at GDIZ, we transform 40,000 tonnes of cotton a year and produce between seven [million] and 10 million garments a year,” Beheton said.
With three new garment manufacturing units in the pipeline, production in the industrial zone is expected to grow further by the end of this year.
Upon taking office in 2016, Talon took measures to support the cotton industry, in particular by giving more room to the private sector at the expense of state-owned companies.
Benin “now processes a third of its cotton,” said Nestor Adjovi Ahoyo, an agro-economist.
The transformation is mainly taking place at the Glo-Djigbe Industrial Zone, but also to a lesser extent at smaller businesses.
At Couleur Indigo, a clothing and jewelry brand in the coastal town of Ouidah, 50-year-old Nadia Adanle said that she opened her boutique in 2007 to “contribute to the diversification of Beninese craftsmanship” and offer “an authentic, purely Beninese cotton product.”
In the short term, Beninese authorities say they are aiming to process “50 percent of the cotton produced in Benin and export the remaining 50 percent,” Adjovi Ahoyo said.
To achieve this, Benin must increase production capacity and attract investors, especially foreigners, he said.
For his part, Beheton said that within five to six years the country would have “about 30 integrated textile units in the zone to process almost all” of Benin’s cotton.
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