The Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) says buyers of the crop must be prepared to pay a premium for cocoa that is certified as having been grown using the best social, environmental and labour practices.
It said the production
of certified cocoa must be demand-driven and the market must be willing to pay
more for farmers’ efforts in that regard.
“As a producer, we are
very ready to meet the 2015 deadline for global cocoa certification; but we
want this programme to be demand-led. We can’t supply when the demand is not
there,” said Noah Amenyah, Public Relations Manager of Cocobod.
“Certification involves
cost and strict monitoring. We will not subject our farmers to a situation
where at the end of the day they don’t get the cocoa beans purchased, for which
a return will come to them. Hence, our use of the demand-pull approach to
quality.”
Cocoa certification
demands that a farmer’s social, environmental and economic activities fall in
line with best labour practices, in exchange for receiving a premium price on
the produce. The standards also push farmers to develop better drying and
fermentation practices.
“We are ready internally.
We can take every action that comes in from the demand sources as long as the
demand is there. But the industry does
not even appear ready to demand that kind of cocoa and pay for it -- because
you need to pay premium for the cocoa. The farmers are putting in more,
developing the cocoa in a special way to meet your real desire,” said Mr.
Amenyah.
He said the Board has
created proper guidelines to educate farmers to be aware that European Union
(EU) regulations and world standards are changing, and this requires certain
changes in their practices.
A number of
organisations, including Fairtrade and the German Development Cooperation (GTZ),
are also working with Cocobod to effectively train farmers to meet the
certification standards, he said.
Mr. Amenyah encouraged industry
participants to partner Government which is providing the supportive
environment, including enhancing marketing services to ensure that whenever farmers
get their cocoa certified through the marketing chain, the products will be appropriately
marketed to where the demand is.
The global cocoa industry has increasingly been demanding
traceable cocoa that is certified as grown in a sustainable manner. The World
Cocoa Foundation, which was formed in 2000, has been helping to improve cocoa
sustainability in all three cocoa regions of the world. But because of the
importance of West Africa, which produces around 70 percent of the world’s
cocoa, a lot of programmes focus on that region.
The first one is the Cocoa Livelihoods Programme,
which is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and 16 of the company
members as well as the German Development Agency.
The programme aims to reach over 200,000 cocoa farmers over the next few years, with the intent of doubling incomes.
The programme aims to reach over 200,000 cocoa farmers over the next few years, with the intent of doubling incomes.
No comments:
Post a Comment