Exclusive: Pact to aid poor cocoa farmers in peril as COVID-19 hits
demand
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[July 17, 2020]
By Maytaal Angel and Ange Aboa
LONDON/ABIDJAN (Reuters) - The steepest
dive in cocoa demand in a decade has thrown into jeopardy a plan by top
producers Ivory Coast and Ghana to guarantee some two million farmers a
living wage, sources within the countries' regulators said.
Leading chocolate-makers agreed to a proposal from the African nations
last year to charge the industry a premium for cocoa beans and guarantee
a minimum income to farmers who earn just $1 a day.
But the scheme, set to come into effect this October, was based on
expectations that international cocoa prices would stay within average
ranges. Instead, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on demand has
driven them to their lowest in nearly two years and they are expected to
stay weak for at least a year, the industry says.
"It is not certain we will be able to guarantee farmers the amount
originally expected," a source at Ivory Coast's cocoa regulator the
Coffee and Cocoa Council (CCC), which sets the official farmer price
each season, told Reuters.
The source, who declined to be named because he is not authorised to
speak to the press, said the country's cocoa sales for next season were
some 30% below average levels for the time of year.
The CCC did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment.
A spokesman for the Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) said in a statement sent
via WhatsApp the process of determining the price cocoa farmers will get
was ongoing. He added, however, farmers would still get a better price
than without any premium.
MINIMUM WAGE ERODED
Market weakness could appear a good thing for chocolate consumers
offered discounts on the high street, but for farmers it could mean
hunger.
Already the closure of retail outlets during lockdowns to try to contain
the novel coronavirus stifled impulse-buying of chocolate, significantly
denting demand.
Now widespread economic hardship is expected to limit sales just as the
industry anticipates production will rebound when the new cocoa season
starts, generating a large global surplus.
A series of meetings between representatives of the cocoa industry,
Ivory Coast and Ghana last year agreed a premium of $400 a tonne for all
sales for the upcoming 2020-21 season, including any production sold
ahead of the season's start in October.
Because the market has suffered a sustained fall with prices now below
$2,000 a tonne, even with the premium added, the earnings of Ivory Coast
and Ghanaian farmers will fall below the guaranteed minimum wage.
Four sources in total at Ivory Coast and Ghana's cocoa regulators, all
asking not to be named, predicted the income guarantee would be missed
by around $120 a tonne. That would mean farmers get some increase in
revenue, but far short of expectations.
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Cocoa beans are pictured next to a warehouse at the village of
Atroni, near Sunyani, Ghana April 11, 2019. Picture taken April 11,
2019. REUTERS/Ange Aboa/File Photo
Calculations made by Ivory Coast and Ghana when the new pricing plan
was agreed a year ago showed a $400 premium would allow them to
guarantee farmers 70% of a minimum $2,600 a tonne target price from
2020/21 onwards, or about 20% more than they currently receive.
Farmers in Ivory Coast and Ghana said they had yet to be told they
would receive any less and were counting on an increase for the
upcoming season.
"Life is hard for us cocoa farmers and if the price is not good, we
cannot live well. Everything is expensive and you don't earn enough
to live like men. Here in the village we survive," Alidou Konate, a
farmer with 7 hectares in Duekoue, in western Ivory Coast told
Reuters.
Francis Yeboah, who has 3 acres in the Ashanti region of Ghana said
all farmers had "put a lot of hope in this new pricing system" and
it was up to industry and the government to make up the difference
in the event of any shortfall.
"Even if the coronavirus has an impact on the market and it lowers
the price, it is up to the government to find a way to maintain a
high price for the poor cocoa farmers that we are. It's not up to us
to make a sacrifice but to the chocolate-makers and the government,"
he said.
TRADE ALSO ANXIOUS
Figures from the industry offer little comfort.
An internal report from Barry Callebaut, seen by Reuters, shows the
world's biggest chocolate maker expects a global surplus of 317,000
tonnes in 2020/21, the biggest since 2016/17, when excess supplies
kept world prices below $2,000 a tonne for more than a year.
Barry Callebaut also adjusted a previously expected 85,000 tonne
deficit for 2019/20 to a 6,000 tonne surplus.
The company's sales dropped 14.3% in the April to June quarter. It
expects a gradual rebound over the next three years, but it will not
be enough to balance the market in 2020/21.
It is not just farmers who will suffer. Some traders fear for their
livelihoods.
"I'm concentrating my efforts on saving my job. Our business is
getting impacted. Small trade houses will probably go bankrupt this
year," the head of cocoa trading at a global commodities house said,
also asking not to be named.
(Additional reporting by Silke Koltrowitz in Zurich; Editing by
Veronica Brown, Nigel Hunt and Barbara Lewis)
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