Business World

Ivory Coast gives cocoa farmers electronic cards to track beans

- Reuters

ABIDJAN — Ivory Coast’s cocoa regulator started distributi­ng electronic cards to cocoa farmers to help track beans from plantation­s to their export ports and ensure the growers are paid a guaranteed price for their produce.

The countrywid­e exercise is part of a response to plans by the European Union to ban imports of commoditie­s and products linked to deforestat­ion and rights abuses by 2024.

Ivory Coast, the world’s top cocoa producer, has been criticized over the years for using thousands of child laborers in farms, and destroying large areas of forests and national parks to expand production.

Authoritie­s have said they are tackling the issue of child labor and acknowledg­ed that farming is encroachin­g on forests. In 2019, the Coffee and Cocoa Council (CCC) commission­ed a study to establish the number of cocoa farmers and where they operate. It registered 995,000 farmers and found that 15% of plantation­s were in protected forest areas.

The new card system, which will start operating at the start of the next cocoa season on Oct.1, will enable the CCC to reject beans grown illegally and trace them from plantation­s to the ports of Abidjan and San Pedro.

“The European Union voted a new law that will be implemente­d soon, and this pushes us to develop a traceabili­ty and certificat­ion system,” CCC head Yves Brahima Kone told hundreds of cocoa farmers collecting their cards in the northern city of Agboville.

The cards are also integrated with an electronic payment and wallet system that will allow farmers to get the guaranteed farmgate price of 900 CFA francs ($1.52) per kg of beans, which many buyers do not respect.

“It is the first time I have a bank card that I can use to withdraw cash. I have never had a bank account and I am happy because now I can sell my cocoa for the guaranteed price,” said Jean Dominique Boua, who farms outside Agboville.

The CCC has already given out 100,000 cards since a pilot project in April last year. It aims to distribute around 50,000 cards per month until the end of the current season. —

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