As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (2024)

  • It’s been reported that climate change is the reason for record high chocolate prices, but what’s received less attention is the root cause of the problem.
  • Chocolate costs more now due to decades of deforestation by the cocoa industry in West Africa, where much of the world’s supply is grown, earning it the moniker of “cannibal commodity.”
  • “The good news is that chocolate companies and producer governments still can address the problem. To contain the impacts of past deforestation and promote predictability in production, they must transform all existing monoculture cocoa to shade-grown or agroforestry cocoa,” a new op-ed argues.
  • This post is a commentary. The views expressed are those of the author, not necessarily of Mongabay.

If you’re a chocoholic, you may have noticed that the price of cocoa recently went through the roof. Cocoa prices on the world market—which averaged around $2,500 over the past decade—reached $10,000 per ton. It’s the highest in history. Experts think it’s likely to remain above $5,000/ton for the next 16 months at least.

You may have also read that globalwarming is to blame for recent sky-high prices, with wild weather anomalies hitting cocoa farms hard.

What’s received less attention is the root cause of the problem.

While the weather anomalies are worsened byglobalwarming, what’s actually causing them is largely localdeforestation—more specifically, the clearing of forests to make way for cocoa plantations.

As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (1)

Cocoa is a “cannibal commodity.” Its production has killed the forests that have helped it thrive. Now, standing in the wreckage of once-spectacular tropical jungles, cocoa farms struggle.

While working for the NGO Mighty Earth, I broke open a shocking scandal: the Ivory Coast—the world’s top cocoa-producing country—lost 94% of its forests since 1990. The Ivory Coast is not a rinky-dink footnote for the chocolate industry: it’s the top global cocoa producing country in the world. In Ghana, the world’s second largest cocoa producer, 80% to 90% of forests were destroyed in that same time. Roughly a third of the deforestation in both countries was for cocoa.

As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (2)

Forests are essentially rain machines: kill forests, and the rains go haywire. Without forests, you lose the rainfall they make possible. You lose forests’ ability to buffer agricultural systems like cocoa from droughts by keeping soils moist. Air moisture that forests generate also vanishes.

Additionally, you lose forests’ air-conditioning effect, which keeps air cool and moist, thereby protecting nearby agricultural systems (like cocoa) from heat domes. Have you ever walked into a forest and felt a delicious moist coolness caressing your skin? Imagine losing that at an epic scale. Imagine losing 94% of a country’s forests.

Forests don’t only save us when it’s hot or dry. They also help when it’s overly wet. Acting like giant sponges, they suck up vast quantities of water, thus protecting agricultural systems like cocoa from storms, floods, or unseasonably intense rainy seasons.

View all of Mongabay’s agroforestry coverage here.

As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (3)

Largely driven by cocoa, deforestation in West Africa ravaged rain cycles, and we now reap the whirlwind with crop failures. The result is a shrinking cocoa supply, which triggered panic and speculation including by “non-commercial traders” in futures markets, and then skyrocketing prices. A 10% cocoa shortage resulted in a multiplication of world cocoa prices by a factor of more than four (+300%) since speculation is a common factor in commodity markets in periods where prices shoot up.

But the bottom line is that chocolate costs more now because for decades, the cocoa industry obliterated West African forests. Unless we change course, shortages will only get worse, and chocolate prices will only increase.

The good news is that chocolate companies and producer governments still can address the problem. To do so, they must halt all future cocoa-driven deforestation—an especially critical task now that high prices risk triggering a production boom, with impoverished farmers rushing to benefit from high prices by replacing the last remaining forests with cocoa.

As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (4)

To contain impacts of past deforestation and promote predictability in production, they must transform all existing monoculture cocoa to shade-grown or agroforestry cocoa. Agroforestry systems weave trees in and around cocoa, instead of mono-cropping where farms consist of a sea of unbroken cocoa. Although agroforestry cocoa will never stabilize rainfall as well as forests, it functions substantially better than a monoculture.

If that sounds like a pie-in-the-sky-tree-hugger fantasy to you, think again. Almost every major chocolate company has begun moving towards agroforestry pilot projects because of recent civil society campaigns. Experts at the Smithsonian, who are hardly frothing-at-the-mouth activists, created a mammoth e-library of all peer-reviewed science on agroforestry cocoa. From that library and from industry pilots, we know how to shift from mono-cropping to agroforestry.

What industry lacks so far is the will to shift, which can help save our chocolate and our planet. It’s the only one we’ve got! (Sorry Elon.)

Etelle Higonnet previously served as Senior Advisor at the National Wildlife Federation with a focus on curbing deforestation, and before that as campaign director at Mighty Earth, focusing on advocacy for zero deforestation with an emphasis on cocoa, palm oil, rubber, cattle, and soy industries.

Banner image: Chocolate pastries. Image by Chris Hardy via Unsplash.

See related:

To save chocolate’s future, ‘start now and go big’ on agroforestry

Can agroforestry chocolate help save the world’s most endangered rainforest?

Article published by Erik Hoffner

agribusiness, Agriculture, Agroecology, Agroforestry, Business, Cacao, Cocoa, Commentary, Deforestation, Food, Forests, Trade, Tropical Forests

Africa, Ghana, Global, Ivory Coast, West Africa

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As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary) (2024)

FAQs

As chocolate prices skyrocket from decades of deforestation, adopting agroforestry is key (commentary)? ›

“The good news is that chocolate companies and producer governments still can address the problem. To contain the impacts of past deforestation and promote predictability in production, they must transform all existing monoculture cocoa to shade-grown or agroforestry cocoa,” a new op-ed argues.

Is chocolate causing deforestation? ›

Cocoa farmers usually clear tropical forests to plant new cocoa trees rather than reusing the same land. That practice has spurred massive deforestation in West Africa, particularly in Ivory Coast.

Why does deforestation increase when the value of crops and cattle go up? ›

Increasingly, the world's agriculture system is expanding its terrestrial footprint to produce livestock feed that meets the growing demand for meat and dairy products or crop-based biofuels. This type of growth is only putting more pressure on forests and increasing the destruction of critical ecosystems.

What has caused chocolate costs to skyrocket? ›

Factors such as crop disease, El Niño, farm gate prices and market speculation all played big roles in cocoa's historic price runup.

Why is chocolate not environmentally friendly? ›

Monoculture cacao crops are susceptible to pests and disease. To combat this, it is common practice for farmers to use pesticides in growing cacao beans for chocolate. However, Pesticides and Insecticides pose an environmental hazard through runoff contamination of water, soil and air.

Who is to blame for deforestation? ›

Large-scale agriculture is responsible for more than 70% of deforestation globally. The growing population fuels the demand for agricultural land, leading to the clearing of forests to create space for food production.

What is the single leading cause of deforestation in the world today? ›

Agriculture accounts for 70-80% of tropical deforestation – the permanent conversion of forested land to another land use.

Who benefits from deforestation? ›

The study said that deforestation to clear land for cattle ranching or agriculture often provides a short-term jolt to the local economy as new resources lure investment dollars and development, including new roads.

What food causes the most deforestation? ›

Beef, soy, and palm oil are responsible for 60% of tropical deforestation. If we want to tackle deforestation, we also need to know what causes it. That allows us to avoid the foods that drive deforestation or innovate the ways we produce them.

Is chocolate in danger of extinction? ›

According to scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), cacao plants will most likely be extinct by 2050. *gasp* How does this affect chocolate? Cacao (Theobroma cacao) trees grow large cacao pods with cacao beans inside.

Is chocolate bad for climate change? ›

The carbon footprint of chocolate. A 2019 study from the University of Edinburgh in the UK estimated that a milk chocolate bar causes 200g of carbon dioxide (the most common of the so-called 'greenhouse gases' that cause the planet to overheat), while a dark chocolate bar causes 300g.

Is chocolate bad for the wildlife? ›

In addition, many of the foods that humans enjoy, such as chocolate, are toxic to wildlife and can cause serious health problems or even death.

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