Hannane Ferdjani
It’s 11am in Aboude, a village in southern Ivory Coast, and Magne Akoua has already been working on his cacao farm for several hours. The 65-year-old moves slowly and methodically from one tree to the next, scrupulously shunning the scorching sun.
“We have to check on our fruit daily. Every three months, it
becomes ripe and we can harvest it. But harvest hasn’t been good at all
lately,” he says.
Akoua has been a farmer for more than 40 years since he
decided to leave a low-level administrative job in Abidjan, the country’s
economic capital, to run a small piece of family land on the outskirts of his
native Aboude.
Cacao – the plant whose pods are harvested into cocoa,
eventually becoming chocolate – is an intricate agricultural product that is
particularly vulnerable to its natural environment.
“I love cacao. It’s what I know best. But it’s very
difficult to work with,” Akoua explains. “It gets contaminated by pests. It
needs a perfect balance between rainfall and heat to thrive, otherwise, its
roots get flooded and rot or they simply dry up. This means that we get fewer
pods and fewer pods means fewer cacao beans.”
This is what has happened in recent years in the country,
and increasingly so during the latest harvest season that began in October
2023.
The top cacao producers in the world – Ivory Coast followed
by its neighbour, Ghana – have been severely affected by the El Nino weather
pattern.
The climate phenomenon, characterised by warmer than average
sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, has been bringing
drier conditions to the West Africa region.
Additionally, climate change-induced hotter temperatures and
altered rainfall patterns have further affected cocoa harvests.
“A few seasons ago, one hectare [2.5 acres] would yield
about 600 kilos of cacao. Nowadays, it barely produces 300 kilos,” Akoua says.
‘We barely survive’
The struggle to make ends meet is not new.
“Cacao farming requires a lot of physical work and time. We
can’t afford more manpower, so we [with the boys in the family] do everything
ourselves,” Akoua says. “We barely survive doing all of this.”
But the everyday challenges are made more acute in a hugely
unequal market where production shortfalls mean farmers struggle to make ends
meet while surging chocolate prices help international companies’ profits to
soar.
Also in Aboude village, farmer Christian Kouassi describes
such hardships.
As a member of the agriculture union in the locality, he is
concerned about cacao farmers getting a fair deal for the work they put in to
harvesting.
Kouassi has been advocating for farmers to become a more
proactive part of the sector’s value chain.
“We have absolutely no say in the price of the fruit that we
produce. This has to change somehow. As a union, we’re concerned with making
cacao more sustainable and producing it in a way that benefits the community,”
he says.
“The government recently raised the price for a kilogramme
of cacao, it’s a good step. But more needs to be done to help us and our
livelihoods,” he adds.
On April 2, Ivory Coast unveiled the new price for the
mid-crop season spanning from April to September 2024. The price per kilogramme
of cocoa beans is now set at 1500 CFA francs ($2.48), marking a 50 percent
increase.
This record-high price followed the surge in prices on the
New York Stock Exchange in February. Cacao prices hit a record high of $5,874
per tonne on the New York commodities market.
Price stabilisation
In 2021, Ivory Coast and Ghana introduced a premium of $400
per tonne known as the “decent income differential”. The purpose was to
guarantee farmers a minimum income irrespective of fluctuations in the price of
exported cocoa beans.
However, Ivorian cacao producers are still hopeful for
further increases in the upcoming season.
In the West African country, government authorities, along
with several regulatory bodies and institutions, play a pivotal role in
determining the price of cocoa.
The Coffee-Cocoa Council (Conseil du Cafe Cacao) is the key
entity tasked with regulating cocoa prices and supervising the cocoa industry
in the nation.
Typically, at the outset of each cocoa season, the
government makes public announcements regarding cocoa prices, considering a
range of factors including global market rates, production expenses, and
feedback from cacao farmers and other stakeholders. The adoption of a
stabilisation system effectively means that producers earn a set income per
kilogramme sold, despite all of these external factors.
“There is a guaranteed threshold for cacao producers.
Traders that deal with multinationals see their profit margins vary, which is
not the case for farmers. It’s a system that makes sense when you consider the
instability of commodity prices – including cacao – on the international
market,” Souleymane Fofana explains.
Fofana started exporting cacao in 2017 when he created his
company, Cote d’Ivoire Commodities. As an exporter and mill operator, he has a
bird’s eye view of the sector and understands its complexities.
“There are a lot of moving parts. For example, the
environment’s evolution … Over time cocoa orchards age and become less
productive, which makes it hard for farmers to sustain their production. Not to
mention, cacao is not a part of the average Ivorian person’s diet. Chocolate is
a luxury delicacy that most people don’t purchase. Our market remains the
Western market at the end of the day,” he tells Al Jazeera.
International companies vs local economies
According to a Grand View Research market analysis report,
the global chocolate market value was estimated at $119.39bn in 2023 and is
anticipated to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.1 percent from
2024 to 2030.
In 2023, United States-based Mars Wrigley Confectionery was
the leading chocolate and cocoa manufacturer worldwide, with net sales of
$22bn. Ferrero Group and Mondelez rounded out the top three companies, both
exceeding $10bn in net sales.
Meanwhile, according to a new Oxfam analysis, the collective
fortunes of the Ferrero and Mars families surged to $160.9bn in 2023. This is
more than the combined gross domestic products (GDPs) of top cocoa producers
Ivory Coast and Ghana. Ivory Coast specifically accounts for 45 percent of the
global production of the “brown gold”.
“It’s a huge anomaly. And there needs to be a thorough
reflection on the national level to fix these gaps and to increase profit for
our country and all of the sector’s stakeholders,” Fofana says.
“We have a handful of local chocolatiers that make chocolate
from our Ivorian cacao beans. It’s great and all, but we have to be realistic.
We don’t have the capacities and industrial capabilities to compete with giant
multinationals that have grown their brand through decades of efficient
advertising and a lot of capital,” he tells Al Jazeera.
“What we can do, however, is expand our list of clients,
open up to other markets that also want to process and transform cacao beans,
like countries in the MENA region for instance,” he adds.
‘Who does cacao belong to?’
Fofana specifically questions the pertinence of the
Federation of Commerce of Cacao, an entity that was created in 2002 to – as it
describes its mission – “develop a unique and robust commercial framework for
the cocoa market, enabling harmonisation of contracts and providing education
services and programs”.
The cacao exporter believes that the FCC gatekeeps business
opportunities from countries like Ivory Coast through its registration system.
“Companies have to register with the FCC which is
headquartered in London. It makes you wonder ‘Who does the cacao actually
belong to?’
“Most of our client companies are American and European. But
the world is changing, and partnership horizons should expand with it. We
should sell our cacao to any country that is keen on chocolate,” he concludes.
Back in Aboude, Akoua and his family rise faithfully every
morning to farm the precious cacao, but they do not consume any chocolate.
The farmer cannot fathom going to a shop to spend his
hard-earned income on a chocolate bar – which sells for about 1,500 CFA francs
($2.48) each, the same amount he would earn for a full kilogramme of cocoa
beans.
“In the end, we can try and diversify our use of our land
and produce other crops. We already try. But our leaders have to make sure that
we – at the source – benefit from all the money these big multinationals make,”
he says.
“Our cacao is clearly important to them and their consumers.
We should be able to reap the benefits of that.” AL JAZEERA
