The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hershey to spend $500M in more sustainabl­e Kisses

- By Marvin G. Perez and Emily Chasan

Hershey is spending $500 million in the hopes of producing its iconic chocolate Kisses from more sustainabl­e cocoa.

Through its so-called Cocoa for Good program, the company will invest the funds through 2030 to support four key areas: nourishing children, empowering youth, building prosperous communitie­s and preserving natural ecosystems. The initiative’s goals include eliminatin­g child labor and increasing shade-grown cocoa, which can be productive for as much as 15 years longer than plants grown in full sun.

World cocoa supplies are tightening following a price plunge that hurt global farmers and forced lower production, eroding a global surplus. The shifting supply outlook caused a whipsaw in the market. Through Monday, futures in New York had surged 39 percent this year after tumbling 41 percent over the prior two.

On Tuesday, a measure of 60-day historical volatility jumped to the highest since September as futures tumbled 5.2 percent to $2,498 a metric ton, the biggest loss for a most-active contract since May 24.

While recent “extreme” price volatility is typical of agricultur­al commodity markets, “we fully appreciate the complexity of addressing some of the challenges” for grower communitie­s, Susanna Zhu, the company’s chief procuremen­t officer, said in a telephone interview from Abidjan, the commercial capital of Ivory Coast. “That’s why we are committing significan­t resources

for the next decade.”

Consumer-focused companies from Unilever to McDonald’s Corp. have invested more in sustainabl­e sourcing as customers increasing­ly look for those credential­s before spending their dollars. Starbucks has raised about $1.3 billion from the public markets over the last two years to fund its ethical coffee farming initiative­s through sustainabi­lity bonds.

The Hershey, Pennsylvan­ia-based chocolate giant has increased its buying of certified and sustainabl­e cocoa, which accounted for more than 75 percent of its total cocoa purchases last year. The company has said it remains on track to reach 100 percent by 2020.

The company’s new program will start with a focus on Ivory Coast and Ghana, the world’s top cocoa producers. Hershey is seeking “a holistic” approach to sustainabi­lity and has plans to

reach other producing areas in the future, including in South America, Zhu said. She and other company executives have met with Ivorian government officials, private sector executives and small farmers to discuss the project.

About 95 percent of world cocoa output is produced by small farmers, many of whom still use traditiona­l growing methods. Because global yields have stayed stagnant, supply increases have come primarily through expansion of cultivated areas. Ivory Coast, the No. 1 grower, lost 64 percent of its forest cover from 1990 to 2015 largely because of cocoa farming, according to IDH, a sustainabl­e trade initiative.

At the same time, chocolate demand continues to grow. Global retail sales reached $102.3 billion in 2017 and are expected to climb 8.2 percent by 2022, according to researcher Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

 ?? LUKE SHARRETT / BLOOMBERG 2017 ?? Chocolate giant Hershey has increased its buying of certified and sustainabl­e cocoa, which accounted for more than 75 percent of its total cocoa purchases last year.
LUKE SHARRETT / BLOOMBERG 2017 Chocolate giant Hershey has increased its buying of certified and sustainabl­e cocoa, which accounted for more than 75 percent of its total cocoa purchases last year.

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