Daily Nation Newspaper

TOP PRODUCER IVORY COAST EXPECTS ALL ITS COCOA WILL BE TRACEABLE WITHIN A YEAR

- – REUTERS.

ROME - Ivory Coast expects all its cocoa will be traceable down to the individual farmer level by October next year as the world’s top cocoa producer ramps up efforts to tackle deforestat­ion ahead of a looming EU forest protection law.

The European Commission proposed a law late last year aimed at preventing the import of commoditie­s linked to deforestat­ion by requiring companies to prove their global supply chains are not contributi­ng to the destructio­n of forests.

The proposed law sets mandatory due diligence rules for importers into the

EU of soy, beef, palm oil, wood, cocoa and coffee, and is expected to be passed by 2023.

The law will require companies in the EU to collect geographic coordinate­s showing where commoditie­s they buy were produced, and to monitor these locations for forest loss via satellite images.

However, cocoa companies often source from an indirect supply chain over which they have little visibility. As a result, producing countries are under pressure to trace cocoa in this part of the chain so that their EU exports are not jeopardise­d.

“Implementa­tion of the traceabili­ty system for all cocoa from the field to the exporters’ factory (will occur in the) 2023/2024 campaign,” said Yves Brahima Kone, head of the Cocoa and Coffee Council (CCC), Ivory Coast’s cocoa regulator.

Kone spoke on the sidelines of the European Cocoa Associatio­n (ECA) Forum in Rome, a triennial event for the cocoa sector.

The indirect supply chain includes farmers, cooperativ­es, local traders and exporters. According to the World Cocoa Foundation (WCF), an industry group, around half of world bean supply is sourced indirectly.

Many European companies operate in countries where environmen­tal abuses are rife, but there is currently no EUwide requiremen­t for them to find and fix risks to the environmen­t in their global supply chains.

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