HomeNewsOpinionSurging Cocoa Prices: A meltdown in chocolate is coming 

Surging Cocoa Prices: A meltdown in chocolate is coming 

The world needs higher cocoa prices to encourage re-planting millions of old trees. If every farmer applied a little more fertilizer, and had pesticides at hand, production could recover. That, or projected chocolate demand growth needs to slow, if not fall. Market forces will eventually rebalance the market, but everyone must brace for a few years of higher prices

February 19, 2024 / 13:35 IST
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cocoa
Cocoa farming has never been on an industrial scale. (Source: Bloomberg)

The evening I learned the unspoken truth about the cocoa market I was in Yamoussoukro, the colossal capital city of Ivory Coast.

“The problem with cocoa is that’s a poor man’s crop,” explained my dining companion, a government official-turned-businessman. “Do you see any commercial plantation around here? No,” he said. “And do you know why? Because prices aren’t high enough.”

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Only because millions of West African farmers saw cocoa as their only way to escape abject poverty, the world had plentiful supply and low prices. As a result, you and I have been enjoying the pleasures of chocolate on the cheap for decades.

Unlike most other agricultural commodities, cocoa hasn’t developed into a plantation business. At the prevailing prices of the 1990s and 2000s, it simply didn’t make commercial sense. The money was made around trading the beans, and processing them into chocolate — not planting, growing and harvesting cocoa trees.