Medicine Hat News

World’s top cocoa producers fight to protect forests

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MONT PEKO NATIONAL PARK, Cote d'Ivoire

Park rangers in the world’s top cocoa producer, Ivory Coast, are waging a campaign to protect national forests from the illegal farming of the raw ingredient in chocolate.

Last year the government­s of Ivory Coast and other top cocoa producer Ghana, along with food giants Nestle, Mars and Hershey, pledged to work together to end deforestat­ion in the West African nations.

The president of the World Cocoa Foundation, Rick Scobey, called it a landmark decision and an “important environmen­tal achievemen­t.”

Last year an investigat­ion by environmen­tal group Mighty Earth found that many of Ivory Coast’s national parks and protected areas “have been entirely or almost entirely cleared of forest and replaced with cocoa-growing operations.” One of them, Mont Peko National Park, is home to endangered species such as chimpanzee­s and pygmy hippopotam­uses.

Chocolate producers should “really give customers peace of mind that chocolate eating isn’t contributi­ng to killing chimps or elephants,” said Etelle Higonnet, a campaign director for Mighty Earth. “Let’s have total transparen­cy all the way from the bar in your hand or the Nesquik that you drink or the Nutella that you spread on your bread, down to the farm.”

On a recent patrol in Mont Peko National Park, it didn’t take long for park rangers to find cocoa growing illegally. Using machetes, the team set to work removing it.

There has been limited progress, said Kpolo Ouattara, head of the Mont Peko sector for the Ivorian Office of Parks and Reserves. “Roughly, more than 800 hectares (1,975 acres) of cocoa has been cut. Compared to the park’s total area of 34,000 hectares, that’s very little.”

While mindful of tensions that have lingered in the wake of the country’s deadly political violence in recent years, Ivory Coast has turned to security forces to evict thousands of illegal cocoa farmers from parks.

One farmer, Djaka Issa Ouatara, said he accepts the government’s actions.

“We weren’t surprised because when we entered that area, we were well aware that (the forest) was part of the national heritage,” Ouatara said.

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