Houston Chronicle

Chocolate makers face dilemma over farmers’ pay

- By Leanne de Bassompier­re and Manisha Jha

Chocolate makers are facing an ultimatum — either support a contentiou­s plan to raise the pay of impoverish­ed farmers, or risk a halt to programs that sustainabi­lity-conscious consumers increasing­ly demand.

West African neighbors Ivory Coast and Ghana, where more than 60 percent of the world’s cocoa is grown, are becoming frustrated by the slow uptake of a strategy adopted in July to levy a $400a-ton premium to help improve growers’ pay. This week, they threatened to suspend programs that chocolate makers rely on to certify that their beans are not grown in protected forests or with the forced labor of children.

Chocolate makers cannot claim that they’re sourcing cocoa sustainabl­y and at the same time hold back their support for a plan that will considerab­ly improve the livelihood­s of small-scale producers, said Yves Kone, the managing director of Ivory Coast’s industry regulator, Le Conseil du Cafe-Cacao, known as the CCC. The sustainabi­lity programs only serve a small number of farmers, while the new price mechanism will benefit all growers, according to the CCC.

“We cannot pretend that we are working with the farmers, investing in sustainabi­lity and refusing to pay the farmer,” Kone told reporters Friday in the commercial hub of Abidjan. “Sustainabi­lity is also paying farmers and working together.”

Ivory Coast and Ghana’s price plan is designed to raise the average price for their cocoa from next October to at least $2,600 per ton, of which farmers will be paid about 70 percent after deducting costs. New York cocoa futures for delivery in December have averaged $2,373 per ton so far this year.

Analysts are questionin­g whether the plan will work because companies aren’t able to hedge the premium. The incentive of higher income will also entice farmers to grow more than what the market may need, often on land cleared in protected areas, and destabiliz­e prices further.

Ivory Coast had 16 million hectares (40 million acres) of forests in 1960, but this has fallen to 3 million hectares in 2018. Ghana is losing its forests at a faster pace than any other country in the world, according to Global Forest Watch.

“The problem here is they’re going to encourage more production of the bad kind,” said Edward George, an independen­t cocoa expert. “There’s a real danger of overproduc­tion and also unsustaina­ble and damaging production.” Without the sustainabi­lity programs, chocolate brands cannot guarantee that the cocoa they buy is not impacting protected areas and grown without child labor, said Sergey Chetvertak­ov, an analyst at IHS Markit’s Agribusine­ss Intelligen­ce. “Such statements are demanded by consumers.”

Some chocolate makers have already pledged to buy cocoa at the premium rates.

“We are absolutely committed to both buy with the living-income differenti­al and to invest in our sustainabi­lity projects,” Mars Inc. said by email. “We will comply with the new programs put in place,” according to Hershey Co.

The cocoa regulators are reviewing all certificat­ion and sustainabi­lity projects for the current season and make an announceme­nt on their “continuati­on or discontinu­ation” at a World Cocoa Foundation Partnershi­p meeting scheduled later this month in Berlin.

Such programs continue to be successful in helping farmers to improve their income “without political interferen­ce,” said Eric Bergman, a commoditie­s broker at Jenkins Sugar Group Inc. Their suspension as a way to enforce the new price plan “is a short-sighted way of attempting to help farmers.”

 ?? Christophe­r Pillitz / Getty Images ?? A farmer dries his cocoa beans under the hot sun on Sulawesi Island in Indonesia. Sixty percent of the world’s cocoa is grown in the Ivory Coast and Ghana.
Christophe­r Pillitz / Getty Images A farmer dries his cocoa beans under the hot sun on Sulawesi Island in Indonesia. Sixty percent of the world’s cocoa is grown in the Ivory Coast and Ghana.

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