Bad news, Shep, looks like the price of chocolate may be going up.

catsrule

Mary Jo
Joined
Jan 14, 2001
Messages
15,649
BOUAFLE, Ivory Coast (AP) - Fighting in Ivory Coast has created hard times for cocoa farmers, threatening the crop upon which they depend for their livelihood and the world's sweet-toothed depend for their chocolate.

The monthlong conflict, which has pitted the government against rebels who have seized half the West African country, is felt as far away as New York and London. There, commodity markets nervously watch for how the uprising is affecting the harvest in Ivory Coast, the world's largest cocoa producer.

This week, the rebels and government agreed to a cease-fire and talks aimed at ending the conflict, Ivory Coast's deadliest. For farmers - and for the country - peace is essential as the cocoa harvest gets underway.

Cocoa prices have soared since the uprising erupted on Sept. 19 with a bloody coup attempt by ex-soldiers dismissed from the army for suspected disloyalty.

This week prices rose when rebels captured a city in Ivory Coast's western cocoa region, but fell when government forces retook the town and after both sides agreed Thursday to a truce.

A 10-hour trip to cover 105 miles along a main road through the cocoa belt this week revealed the threats to this year's harvest.

Young men and boys, brandishing hunting rifles, homemade bows, old pistols and machetes, had improvised roadblocks of trees, tires and barrels. Saying they were protecting their villages from rebels, the self-styled guards searched vehicles and demanded identity papers - slowing traffic to a crawl on the road from Yamoussoukro, the capital, to Issia in the southwest.

Farmers and cocoa traders worry that such chaos will prevent or delay getting beans from plantations to ports. Even if fighting does not resume, some fear that what should have been a lucrative crop this year has already been damaged and that in some regions, the plump yellow pods may just rot unharvested on trees.

Pascal Koffi Konan, who works in a cocoa cooperative in Bouafle, about 50 miles west of Yamoussoukro, said the conflict has affected financing, with exporters unwilling to front money for future crops.

``The market must not be broken. If people can't get their stocks to market, that will cause lots of problems ... Exporters will break off relations with the farmers,'' he said.

Around Duekoue, a town in the west, thousands of people, mainly immigrants from neighboring Burkina Faso and Mali, have fled from ethnic violence unleashed by the fighting. Local Ivorians attacked their homes. Many who fled were cocoa plantation workers and owners.

Many immigrants came to work plantations in boom years after Ivory Coast's independence from France in 1960. But after cocoa prices plunged in the 1980s, tensions mounted between immigrants and Ivorians who accuse them of taking jobs and land.

``We need people on the plantations to tend the crop. It's really a problem,'' said Raphael Zogbo, who heads a cooperative in Daloa, the cocoa city that fell to rebels but was retaken in a government counterattack. ``We are very threatened.''

He escaped the city Tuesday, snaking through the bush to his village before heading to Abidjan, the country's southern commercial center and key port.

Ivory Coast produces 1 million tons of cocoa annually, or about 40 percent of the world's supply. About 300,000 tons annually comes from Daloa and the surrounding region, according to commodity analysts.

Jacques Robert Coffi walked proudly through the cocoa trees on his plantation, pointing out slender shrubs he recently planted to ensure bountiful harvests long after he hands his land to one of his four sons.

But Coffi wonders how he'll manage if more migrant farmhands flee.

``If this continues, we will have lots of problems,'' he added. ``If the rebels take Abidjan, then we will not be able to send produce there. If things go really badly, the port will be closed and we will be left with the cocoa beans.''

This should have been a bumper year. Last year, cocoa fetched the equivalent of about 45 cents a pound in Ivory Coast. This year, exporters were paying around 70 cents a pound. Now should be their busiest time. Ivory Coast ships most cocoa in three months starting October. For Coffi the industry's malaise is just part of the conflict's wider tragedy.

``All this means that Africa will be behind for many years,'' he said as he bumped down a muddy road from his plantation through torrential rain.

:(
 
While I feel more for the people of that country. I am very saddened that my addiction might cost me more. :(
 

Yes it is horrible working conditions in the Ivory Coast... I remember reading an article about this.

The factory/field workers were interviewed, and they stated that they had no idea what even a chocolate bar tasted like!


Working all that time, very very low wages., its very very sad...
 














Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top