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Cocoa bean

The cocoa bean (technically cocoa seed) or simply cocoa (/ˈk.k/), also called cacao (/kəˈk/),[1] is the dried and fully fermented seed of Theobroma cacao, from which cocoa solids (a mixture of nonfat substances) and cocoa butter (the fat) can be extracted. Cocoa beans native to the Amazon rainforest are the basis of chocolate, and Mesoamerican foods including tejate, an indigenous Mexican drink.

Forms of the cocoa bean during production
Pods at various stages of ripening
Beans in pulp in freshly cut pod
Beans: In pulp, in skin, and naked
Nibs (pieces of kernels) are generally powdered and melted into chocolate liquor, but also inserted into chocolate bars to give additional "crunch"

The cacao tree, native to the Amazon rainforest, was first domesticated 5,300 years ago in South America before being introduced to Central America by the Olmecs. Cacao was consumed by pre-Hispanic cultures in spiritual ceremonies and its beans were a common currency in Mesoamerica. The cacao tree grows in a limited geographical zone, and today, West Africa produces nearly 70% of the world's crop. The three main varieties of cocoa plant are Forastero, Criollo, and Trinitario, with Forastero being the most widely used.

In 2020, global cocoa bean production reached 5.8 million tonnes, with Ivory Coast leading at 38% of the total, followed by Ghana and Indonesia. Cocoa beans, cocoa butter, and cocoa powder are traded on futures markets, with London focusing on West African cocoa and New York on Southeast Asian cocoa. Various international and national initiatives aim to support sustainable cocoa production, including the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa (SWISSCO), the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa (GISCO), and Beyond Chocolate, Belgium. At least 29% of global cocoa production was compliant with voluntary sustainability standards in 2016. Deforestation due to cocoa production remains a concern, especially in West Africa. Sustainable agricultural practices, such as agroforestry, can support cocoa production while conserving biodiversity. Cocoa contributes significantly to economies like Nigeria, and demand for cocoa products continues to grow steadily at over 3% annually since 2008.

To produce 1 kg of chocolate, around 300 to 600 cocoa beans are processed. The beans are roasted, cracked, and deshelled, resulting in pieces called nibs, which are ground into a thick paste known as chocolate liquor or cocoa paste. The liquor is processed into chocolate by adding cocoa butter, sugar, and sometimes vanilla and lecithin. Alternatively, cocoa powder and cocoa butter can be separated using a hydraulic press or the Broma process. Treating cocoa with an alkali produces Dutch process cocoa, which has a different flavor profile than untreated cocoa. Roasting can also be done on the whole bean or nib, affecting the final flavor. Cocoa contains phytochemicals like flavanols, procyanidins, and other flavanoids, and flavanol-rich chocolate and cocoa products may have a small blood pressure lowering effect. The beans also contain theobromine and a small amount of caffeine.

Etymology

 
Aztec sculpture with pod

The word cocoa comes from the Spanish word cacao, which is derived from the Nahuatl word cacahuatl.[2][3] The Nahuatl word, in turn, ultimately derives from the reconstructed Proto-Mixe–Zoquean word kakawa.[4]

Used on its own, the term cocoa may also mean:

Terms derived from cocoa include:

  • Cocoa paste, ground cocoa beans:[6] the mass is melted and separated into:
    • Cocoa butter, a pale, yellow, edible fat
    • Cocoa solids, the dark, bitter mass that contain most of cacao's notable phytochemicals, including caffeine and theobromine
      • Cocoa powder, a powder made by removing most of the cocoa butter from ground cacao seeds, or its derivatives, such as Dutch process cocoa

Cocoa beans are technically not beans or legumes, but seeds.[7]

History

The cacao tree is native to the Amazon rainforest. It was first domesticated 5,300 years ago, in equatorial South America, before being introduced in Central America by the Olmecs (Mexico). More than 4,000 years ago, it was consumed by pre-Hispanic cultures along the Yucatán, including the Maya, and as far back as Olmeca civilization in spiritual ceremonies. It also grows in the foothills of the Andes in the Amazon and Orinoco basins of South America, in Colombia and Venezuela. Wild cacao still grows there. Its range may have been larger in the past; evidence of its wild range may be obscured by cultivation of the tree in these areas since long before the Spanish arrived.

As of November 2018, evidence suggests that cacao was first domesticated in equatorial South America,[8] before being domesticated in Central America roughly 1,500 years later.[9] Artifacts found at Santa-Ana-La Florida, in Ecuador, indicate that the Mayo-Chinchipe people were cultivating cacao as long as 5,300 years ago.[9] Chemical analysis of residue extracted from pottery excavated at an archaeological site at Puerto Escondido, in Honduras, indicates that cocoa products were first consumed there sometime between 1500 and 1400 BC. Evidence also indicates that, long before the flavor of the cacao seed (or bean) became popular, the sweet pulp of the chocolate fruit, used in making a fermented (5.34% alcohol) beverage, first drew attention to the plant in the Americas.[10] The cocoa bean was a common currency throughout Mesoamerica before the Spanish conquest.[11]: 2 

Cacao trees grow in a limited geographical zone, of about 20° to the north and south of the Equator. Nearly 70% of the world crop today is grown in West Africa. The cacao plant was first given its botanical name by Swedish natural scientist Carl Linnaeus in his original classification of the plant kingdom, where he called it Theobroma ("food of the gods") cacao.

Cocoa was an important commodity in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.[12] A Spanish soldier who was on Hernan Cortés' side during the conquest of the Aztec Empire tells that when Moctezuma II, emperor of the Aztecs, dined, he took no other beverage than chocolate, served in a golden goblet. Flavored with vanilla or other spices, his chocolate was whipped into a froth that dissolved in the mouth. No fewer than 60 portions each day reportedly may have been consumed by Moctezuma II, and 2,000 more by the nobles of his court.[13]

Chocolate was introduced to Europe by the Spaniards, and became a popular beverage by the mid-17th century.[14] Spaniards also introduced the cacao tree into the West Indies and the Philippines.[15] It was also introduced into the rest of Asia, South Asia and into West Africa by Europeans. In the Gold Coast, modern Ghana, cacao was introduced by a Ghanaian, Tetteh Quarshie.

Varieties

 
The three main varieties: Forastero, Trinitario, and Criollo

The three main varieties of cocoa plant are Forastero, Criollo, and Trinitario. The first is the most widely used, comprising 80–90% of the world production of cocoa. Cocoa beans of the Criollo variety are rarer and considered a delicacy.[16][17] Criollo also tends to be less resistant to several diseases that attack the cocoa plant, hence very few countries still produce it. One of the largest producers of Criollo beans is Venezuela (Chuao and Porcelana). Trinitario (from Trinidad) is a hybrid between Criollo and Forastero varieties. It is considered to be of much higher quality than Forastero, has higher yields, and is more resistant to disease than Criollo.[17]

Criollo

Representing only 5% of all cocoa beans grown as of 2008,[18] Criollo is the rarest and most expensive cocoa on the market, and is native to Central America, the Caribbean islands and the northern tier of South American states.[19] The genetic purity of cocoas sold today as Criollo is disputed, as most populations have been exposed to the genetic influence of other varieties.

Criollo is particularly difficult to grow, as they are vulnerable to a variety of environmental threats and produce low yields of cocoa per tree. The flavor of Criollo is described as delicate yet complex, low in classic chocolate flavor, but rich in "secondary" notes of long duration.[20]

Forastero

The most commonly grown bean is Forastero,[18] a large group of wild and cultivated cocoas, most likely native to the Amazon Basin. The African cocoa crop is entirely made up of Forastero. They are significantly hardier and of higher yield than Criollo. The source of most chocolate marketed,[18] Forastero cocoas are typically strong in classic "chocolate" flavor, but have a short duration and are unsupported by secondary flavors, producing "quite bland" chocolate.[18] Forastero is particularly tannic and is therefore more astringent and bitter than the other varieties of cocoa.[21]

Nacional

The Nacional is a rare variety of cocoa bean found in areas of South America such as Ecuador and Peru.[22][23] Some experts in the 21st century had formerly considered the Nacional bean to be extinct after an abrupt end in 1916, when an outbreak of witch's broom disease devastated the Nacional variety throughout this countries.[23] Pure genotypes of the bean are rare because most Nacional varieties have been interbred with other cocoa bean varieties.[24] Ecuadorian Nacional traces its genetic lineage as far back as 5,300 years, to the earliest-known cacao trees domesticated by humanity. In the 18th and 19th centuries, Nacional was considered by many European chocolatiers to be the most coveted source of cacao in the world due to its floral aroma and complex flavor profile.

Trinitario

Trinitario is a natural hybrid of Criollo and Forastero. Trinitario originated in Trinidad after an introduction of Forastero to the local Criollo crop. Nearly all cocoa produced over the past five decades is of the Forastero or lower-grade Trinitario varieties.[25]

Cultivation

A cocoa pod (fruit) is about 17 to 20 cm (6.7 to 7.9 in) long and has a rough, leathery rind about 2 to 3 cm (0.79 to 1.18 in) thick (this varies with the origin and variety of pod) filled with sweet, mucilaginous pulp (called baba de cacao in South America) with a lemonade-like taste enclosing 30 to 50 large seeds that are fairly soft and a pale lavender to dark brownish purple color.

During harvest, the pods are opened, the seeds are kept, and the empty pods are discarded and the pulp made into juice. The seeds are placed where they can ferment. Due to heat buildup in the fermentation process, cacao beans lose most of the purplish hue and become mostly brown in color, with an adhered skin which includes the dried remains of the fruity pulp. This skin is released easily by winnowing after roasting. White seeds are found in some rare varieties, usually mixed with purples, and are considered of higher value.[26][27]

Harvesting

 
Harvesting in Cameroon

Cocoa trees grow in hot, rainy tropical areas within 20° of latitude from the Equator. Cocoa harvest is not restricted to one period per year and a harvest typically occurs over several months. In fact, in many countries, cocoa can be harvested at any time of the year.[11] Pesticides are often applied to the trees to combat capsid bugs, and fungicides to fight black pod disease.[28]

Immature cocoa pods have a variety of colours, but most often are green, red, or purple, and as they mature, their colour tends towards yellow or orange, particularly in the creases.[11][29] Unlike most fruiting trees, the cacao pod grows directly from the trunk or large branch of a tree rather than from the end of a branch, similar to jackfruit. This makes harvesting by hand easier as most of the pods will not be up in the higher branches. The pods on a tree do not ripen together; harvesting needs to be done periodically through the year.[11] Harvesting occurs between three and four times weekly during the harvest season.[11] The ripe and near-ripe pods, as judged by their colour, are harvested from the trunk and branches of the cocoa tree with a curved knife on a long pole. Care must be used when cutting the stem of the pod to avoid damaging the junction of the stem with the tree, as this is where future flowers and pods will emerge.[11][30] One person can harvest an estimated 650 pods per day.[28][31]

Harvest processing

 
Beans drying

The harvested pods are opened, typically with a machete, to expose the beans.[11][28] The pulp and cocoa seeds are removed and the rind is discarded. The pulp and seeds are then piled in heaps, placed in bins, or laid out on grates for several days. During this time, the seeds and pulp undergo "sweating", where the thick pulp liquefies as it ferments. The fermented pulp trickles away, leaving cocoa seeds behind to be collected. Sweating is important for the quality of the beans,[32] which originally have a strong, bitter taste. If sweating is interrupted, the resulting cocoa may be ruined; if underdone, the cocoa seed maintains a flavor similar to raw potatoes and becomes susceptible to mildew. Some cocoa-producing countries distill alcoholic spirits using the liquefied pulp.[33]

A typical pod contains 30 to 40 beans and about 400 dried beans are required to make 1 pound (450 g) of chocolate. Cocoa pods weigh an average of 400 g (14 oz) and each one yields 35 to 40 g (1.2 to 1.4 oz) dried beans; this yield is 9–10% of the total weight in the pod.[28] One person can separate the beans from about 2000 pods per day.[28][31]

 

The wet beans are then transported to a facility so they can be fermented and dried.[28][31] The farmer removes the beans from the pods, packs them into boxes or heaps them into piles, then covers them with mats or banana leaves for three to seven days.[34] Finally, the beans are trodden and shuffled about (often using bare human feet) and sometimes, during this process, red clay mixed with water is sprinkled over the beans to obtain a finer color, polish, and protection against molds during shipment to factories in other countries. Drying in the sun is preferable to drying by artificial means, as no extraneous flavors such as smoke or oil are introduced which might otherwise taint the flavor.

The beans should be dry for shipment, which is usually by sea. Traditionally exported in jute bags, over the last decade, beans are increasingly shipped in "mega-bulk" parcels of several thousand tonnes at a time on ships, or standardized to 62.5 kilograms (138 lb) per bag and 200 (12.5 metric tons (12.3 long tons; 13.8 short tons)) or 240 (15 metric tons (15 long tons; 17 short tons)) bags per 20 feet (6.1 m) container. Shipping in bulk significantly reduces handling costs. Shipment in bags, either in a ship's hold or in containers, is still common.

Throughout Mesoamerica where they are native, cocoa beans are used for a variety of foods. The harvested and fermented beans may be ground to order at tiendas de chocolate, or chocolate mills. At these mills, the cocoa can be mixed with a variety of ingredients such as cinnamon, chili peppers, almonds, vanilla, and other spices to create drinking chocolate.[35] The ground cocoa is also an important ingredient in tejate.

Child slavery

 
Collecting beans after drying

The first allegations that child slavery is used in cocoa production appeared in 1998.[36] In late 2000, a BBC documentary reported the use of enslaved children in the production of cocoa in West Africa.[36][37][38] Other media followed by reporting widespread child slavery and child trafficking in the production of cocoa.[39][40]

The cocoa industry was accused of profiting from child slavery and trafficking.[41] The Harkin–Engel Protocol is an effort to end these practices.[42] In 2001, it was signed and witnessed by the heads of eight major chocolate companies, US senators Tom Harkin and Herb Kohl, US Representative Eliot Engel, the ambassador of the Ivory Coast, the director of the International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labor, and others.[42] It has, however, been criticized by some groups including the International Labor Rights Forum as an industry initiative which falls short, as the goal to eliminate the “worst forms of child labor” from cocoa production by 2005 was not reached.[43][44][45][46] The deadline was extended multiple times and the goal changed to a 70% child labor reduction.[47][48]

Child labour was growing in some West African countries in 2008–09 when it was estimated that 819,921 children worked on cocoa farms in Ivory Coast alone; by 2013–14, the number went up to 1,303,009. During the same period in Ghana, the estimated number of children working on cocoa farms was 957,398 children.[49]

The 2010 documentary The Dark Side of Chocolate revealed that children smuggled from Mali to the Ivory Coast were forced to earn income for their parents, while others were sold as slaves for €230.

In 2010, the US Department of Labor formed the Child Labor Cocoa Coordinating Group as a public-private partnership with the governments of Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire to address child labor practices in the cocoa industry.[50]

As of 2017, approximately 2.1 million children in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire were involved in harvesting cocoa, carrying heavy loads, clearing forests, and being exposed to pesticides.[51] According to Sona Ebai, the former secretary general of the Alliance of Cocoa Producing Countries: "I think child labor cannot be just the responsibility of industry to solve. I think it's the proverbial all-hands-on-deck: government, civil society, the private sector. And there, you really need leadership."[52] As Reported in 2018, a 3-year pilot program, conducted by Nestlé with 26,000 farmers mostly located in Côte d'Ivoire, observed a 51% decrease in the number of children doing hazardous jobs in cocoa farming.[53]

Lawsuits

In 2021, several companies were named in a class action lawsuit filed by eight former children from Mali who alleged that the companies aided and abetted their enslavement on cocoa plantations in Ivory Coast. The suit accused Barry Callebaut, Cargill, The Hershey Company, Mars, Mondelez, Nestlé, and Olam International, of knowingly engaging in forced labour, and the plaintiffs sought damages for unjust enrichment, negligent supervision, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.[54]

Production

Cocoa bean production, 2020[55]
Country Weight (tonnes)
  Ivory Coast 2,200,000
  Ghana 800,000
  Indonesia 739,483
  Nigeria 340,163
  Ecuador 327,903
  Cameroon 290,000
  Brazil 269,731
World 5,756,953

In 2020, world production of cocoa beans was 5.8 million tonnes, led by Ivory Coast with 38% of the total. Secondary producers were Ghana and Indonesia (each with about 14%).[55]

Cocoa trading

Cocoa beans are traditionally shipped and stored in burlap sacks, in which the beans are susceptible to pest attacks.[56] Fumigation with methyl bromide was to be phased out globally by 2015. Additional cocoa protection techniques for shipping and storage include the application of pyrenoids as well as hermetic storage in sealed bags or containers with lowered oxygen concentrations.[57] Safe long-term storage facilitates the trading of cocoa products at commodity exchanges.

Cocoa beans, cocoa butter and cocoa powder are traded on futures markets. The London market is based on West African cocoa and New York on cocoa predominantly from Southeast Asia. Cocoa is the world's smallest soft commodity market. The futures price of cocoa butter and cocoa powder is determined by multiplying the bean price by a ratio. The combined butter and powder ratio has tended to be around 3.5. If the combined ratio falls below 3.2 or so, production ceases to be economically viable and some factories cease extraction of butter and powder and trade exclusively in cocoa liquor.

Cocoa futures traded on the ICE Futures US Softs exchange, are valued at 10 Tonnes per contract with a tick size of 1 and tick value of US$10.[58]

Contract Specification[58]
Cocoa (CCA)
Exchange: NYI
Sector: Soft
Tick Size: 1
Tick Value: 10 USD
BPV: 10
Denomination: USD
Decimal Place: 0

Sustainability

Multiple international and national initiatives collaborate to support sustainable cocoa production. These include the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa (SWISSCO), the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa (GISCO), and Beyond Chocolate, Belgium. A memorandum between these three initiatives was signed in 2020 to measure and address issues including child labor, living income, deforestation and supply chain transparency.[59] Similar partnerships between cocoa producing and consuming countries are being developed, such as the cooperation between the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) and the Ghanaian Cocoa Authority, who aim to increase the proportion of sustainable cocoa being imported from Ghana to Switzerland to 80% by 2025.[60] The ICCO is engaged in projects around the world to support sustainable cocoa production and provide current information on the world cocoa market.[61]

Voluntary sustainability standards

There are numerous voluntary certifications including Fairtrade and UTZ (now part of Rainforest Alliance) for cocoa which aim to differentiate between conventional cocoa production and that which is more sustainable in terms of social, economic and environmental concerns. As of 2016, at least 29% of global cocoa production was compliant with voluntary sustainability standards.[62] However, among the different certifications there are significant differences in their goals and approaches, and a lack of data to show and compare the results on the farm level. While certifications can lead to increased farm income, the premium price paid for certified cocoa by consumers is not always reflected proportionally in the income for farmers. In 2012 the ICCO found that farm size mattered significantly when determining the benefits of certifications, and that farms an area less than 1ha were less likely to benefit from such programs, while those with slightly larger farms as well as access to member co-ops and the ability to improve productivity were most likely to benefit from certification.[63] Certification often requires high up front costs, which are a barrier to small farmers, and particularly, female farmers. The primary benefits to certification include improving conservation practices and reducing the use of agrochemicals, business support through cooperatives and resource sharing, and a higher price for cocoa beans which can improve the standard of living for farmers.[64]

Fair trade cocoa producer groups are established in Belize, Bolivia, Cameroon, the Congo,[65] Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic,[66] Ecuador, Ghana, Haiti, India, Ivory Coast, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Sierra Leone, and São Tomé and Príncipe.

In 2018, the Beyond Chocolate partnership was created between multiple stakeholders in the global cocoa industry to decrease deforestation and provide a living income for cocoa farmers. The many international companies are currently participating in this agreement and the following voluntary certification programs are also partners in the Beyond Chocolate initiative: Rainforest Alliance, Fairtrade, ISEAL, BioForum Vlaanderen.[67]

Many major chocolate production companies around the world have started to prioritize buying fair trade cocoa by investing in fair trade cocoa production, improving fair trade cocoa supply chains and setting purchasing goals to increase the proportion of fair trade chocolate available in the global market.[68][69][70][71][72]

The Rainforest Alliance lists the following goals as part of their certification program:

The UTZ Certified-program (now part of Rainforest Alliance) included counteracting against child labor and exploitation of cocoa workers, requiring a code of conduct in relation to social and environmentally friendly factors, and improvement of farming methods to increase profits and salaries of farmers and distributors.[73]

Environmental impact

The relative poverty of many cocoa farmers means that environmental consequences such as deforestation are given little significance. For decades, cocoa farmers have encroached on virgin forest, mostly after the felling of trees by logging companies. This trend has decreased as many governments and communities are beginning to protect their remaining forested zones.[74] However, deforestation due to cocoa production is still a major concern in parts of West Africa. In Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana, barriers to land ownership have led migrant workers and farmers without financial resources to buy land to illegally expand their cocoa farming in protected forests. Many cocoa farmers in this region continue to prioritize expansion of their cocoa production, which often leads to deforestation.[75]

Sustainable agricultural practices such as utilizing cover crops to prepare the soil before planting and intercropping cocoa seedlings with companion plants can support cocoa production and benefit the farm ecosystem. Prior to planting cocoa, leguminous cover crops can improve the soil nutrients and structure, which are important in areas where cocoa is produced due to high heat and rainfall which can diminish soil quality. Plantains are often intercropped with cocoa to provide shade to young seedlings and improve drought resilience of the soil. If the soil lacks essential nutrients, compost or animal manure can improve soil fertility and help with water retention.[76]

In general, the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides by cocoa farmers is limited. When cocoa bean prices are high, farmers may invest in their crops, leading to higher yields which, in turn tends to result in lower market prices and a renewed period of lower investment.

While governments and NGOs have made efforts to help cocoa farmers in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire sustainably improve crop yields, many of the educational and financial resources provided are more readily available to male farmers versus female farmers. Access to credit is important for cocoa farmers, as it allows them to implement sustainable practices, such as agroforestry, and provide a financial buffer in case disasters like pest or weather patterns decrease crop yield.[75]

Cocoa production is likely to be affected in various ways by the expected effects of global warming. Specific concerns have been raised concerning its future as a cash crop in West Africa, the current centre of global cocoa production. If temperatures continue to rise, West Africa could simply become unfit to grow the beans.[77][78] The International Center for Tropical Agriculture warned in a paper published in 2013 that Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, the world's two top cocoa growers, will experience a decline in suitable areas for cocoa production as global temperatures rise by up to 2 °C by 2050.[79]

Climate change, coupled with pests, poor soil health, and the demand for sustainable cocoa, has led to a rapid decline in cocoa productivity, resulting in reduced income for smallholder cocoa farmers.[80] Severe droughts have led to soil fertility decline, causing a decrease in yields, and resulting in some farmers abandoning cocoa production.[81][82]

Cocoa beans also have a potential to be used as a bedding material in farms for cows. Using cocoa bean husks in bedding material for cows may contribute to udder health (less bacterial growth) and ammonia levels (lower ammonia levels on bedding).[83]

Agroforestry

Cocoa beans may be cultivated under shade, as done in agroforestry. Agroforestry can reduce the pressure on existing protected forests for resources, such as firewood, and conserve biodiversity.[84] Integrating shade trees with cocoa plants reduces risk of soil erosion and evaporation, and protects young cocoa plants from extreme heat.[76] Agroforests act as buffers to formally protected forests and biodiversity island refuges in an open, human-dominated landscape. Research of their shade-grown coffee counterparts has shown that greater canopy cover in plots is significantly associated with greater mammal species diversity.[85] The amount of diversity in tree species is fairly comparable between shade-grown cocoa plots and primary forests.[86]

Economic effects

Cocoa contributes significantly to Nigerian economic activity, comprising the largest part of the country's foreign exchange, and providing income for farmers.[87] Farmers can grow a variety of fruit-bearing shade trees to supplement their income to help cope with the volatile cocoa prices.[88] Although cocoa has been adapted to grow under a dense rainforest canopy, agroforestry does not significantly further enhance cocoa productivity.[89] However, while growing cocoa in full sun without incorporating shade plants can temporarily increase cocoa yields, it will eventually decrease the quality of the soil due to nutrient loss, desertification and erosion, leading to unsustainable yields and dependency on inorganic fertilizers. Agroforestry practices stabilize and improve soil quality, which can sustain cocoa production in the long term.[75]

Over time, cocoa agroforestry systems become more similar to forest, although they never fully recover the original forest community within the life cycle of a productive cocoa plantation (approximately 25 years).[90] Thus, although cocoa agroforests cannot replace natural forests, they are a valuable tool for conserving and protecting biodiversity while maintaining high levels of productivity in agricultural landscapes.[90]

In West Africa, where about 70% of global cocoa supply originates from smallholder farmers, recent public–private initiatives such as the Cocoa Forest Initiatives in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire (World Cocoa Foundation, 2017) and the Green Cocoa Landscape Programme in Cameroon (IDH, 2019) aim to support the sustainable intensification and climate resilience of cocoa production, the prevention of further deforestation and the restoration of degraded forests.[90] They often align with national REDD+ policies and plans.[90]

Consumption

People around the world enjoy cocoa in many different forms, consuming more than 3 million tons of cocoa beans yearly. Once the cocoa beans have been harvested, fermented, dried and transported they are processed in several components. Processor grindings serve as the main metric for market analysis. Processing is the last phase in which consumption of the cocoa bean can be equitably compared to supply. After this step all the different components are sold across industries to many manufacturers of different types of products.

Global market share for processing has remained stable, even as grindings increase to meet demand. One of the largest processing country by volume is the Netherlands, handling around 13% of global grindings. Europe and Russia as a whole handle about 38% of the processing market. Average year after year demand growth has been just over 3% since 2008. While Europe and North America are relatively stable markets, increasing household income in developing countries is the main reason of the stable demand growth. As demand is awaited to keep growing, supply growth may slow down due to changing weather conditions in the largest cocoa production areas.[91]

Chocolate production

 

To make 1 kg (2.2 lb) of chocolate, about 300 to 600 beans are processed, depending on the desired cocoa content. In a factory, the beans are roasted. Next, they are cracked and then deshelled by a "winnower". The resulting pieces of beans are called nibs. They are sometimes sold in small packages at specialty stores and markets to be used in cooking, snacking, and chocolate dishes. Since nibs are directly from the cocoa tree, they contain high amounts of theobromine. Most nibs are ground, using various methods, into a thick, creamy paste, known as chocolate liquor or cocoa paste. This "liquor" is then further processed into chocolate by mixing in (more) cocoa butter and sugar (and sometimes vanilla and lecithin as an emulsifier), and then refined, conched and tempered. Alternatively, it can be separated into cocoa powder and cocoa butter using a hydraulic press or the Broma process. This process produces around 50% cocoa butter and 50% cocoa powder. Cocoa powder may have a fat content of about 12%,[92] but this varies significantly.[93] Cocoa butter is used in chocolate bar manufacture, other confectionery, soaps, and cosmetics.

Treating with an alkali produces Dutch process cocoa, which is less acidic, darker, and more mellow in flavor than untreated cocoa. Regular (non-alkalized) cocoa is acidic, so when cocoa is treated with an alkaline ingredient, generally potassium carbonate, the pH increases.[94] This process can be done at various stages during manufacturing, including during nib treatment, liquor treatment, or press cake treatment.

Another process that helps develop the flavor is roasting, which can be done on the whole bean before shelling or on the nib after shelling. The time and temperature of the roast affect the result: A "low roast" produces a more acid, aromatic flavor, while a high roast gives a more intense, bitter flavor lacking complex flavor notes.[95]

Phytochemicals and research

 
A roasted bean, the papery skin rubbed loose
 
Press cake of the paste

Cocoa contains various phytochemicals, such as flavanols (including epicatechin), procyanidins, and other flavanoids. A systematic review presented moderate evidence that the use of flavanol-rich chocolate and cocoa products causes a small (2 mmHg) blood pressure lowering effect in healthy adults—mostly in the short term.[96]

The highest levels of cocoa flavanols are found in raw cocoa and to a lesser extent, dark chocolate, since flavonoids degrade during cooking used to make chocolate.[97]

Methylxanthines

 
Structure of theobromine (IUPAC name: 3,7-dimethyl-1H-purine-2,6-dione)

The beans contain theobromine, and between 0.1% and 0.7% caffeine, whereas dry coffee beans are about 1.2% caffeine.[98]

Theobromine found in the cocoa solids is fat soluble.[99]

See also

Sources

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO (license statement/permission). Text taken from The State of the World’s Forests 2020. Forests, biodiversity and people – In brief​, FAO & UNEP, FAO & UNEP. To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles, please see this how-to page. For information on reusing text from Wikipedia, please see the terms of use.

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cocoa, bean, other, uses, cacao, cacao, disambiguation, cocoa, bean, technically, cocoa, seed, simply, cocoa, also, called, cacao, dried, fully, fermented, seed, theobroma, cacao, from, which, cocoa, solids, mixture, nonfat, substances, cocoa, butter, extracte. For other uses of Cacao see Cacao disambiguation The cocoa bean technically cocoa seed or simply cocoa ˈ k oʊ k oʊ also called cacao k e ˈ k aʊ 1 is the dried and fully fermented seed of Theobroma cacao from which cocoa solids a mixture of nonfat substances and cocoa butter the fat can be extracted Cocoa beans native to the Amazon rainforest are the basis of chocolate and Mesoamerican foods including tejate an indigenous Mexican drink Forms of the cocoa bean during productionPods at various stages of ripeningBeans in pulp in freshly cut podBeans In pulp in skin and nakedNibs pieces of kernels are generally powdered and melted into chocolate liquor but also inserted into chocolate bars to give additional crunch The cacao tree native to the Amazon rainforest was first domesticated 5 300 years ago in South America before being introduced to Central America by the Olmecs Cacao was consumed by pre Hispanic cultures in spiritual ceremonies and its beans were a common currency in Mesoamerica The cacao tree grows in a limited geographical zone and today West Africa produces nearly 70 of the world s crop The three main varieties of cocoa plant are Forastero Criollo and Trinitario with Forastero being the most widely used In 2020 global cocoa bean production reached 5 8 million tonnes with Ivory Coast leading at 38 of the total followed by Ghana and Indonesia Cocoa beans cocoa butter and cocoa powder are traded on futures markets with London focusing on West African cocoa and New York on Southeast Asian cocoa Various international and national initiatives aim to support sustainable cocoa production including the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa SWISSCO the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa GISCO and Beyond Chocolate Belgium At least 29 of global cocoa production was compliant with voluntary sustainability standards in 2016 Deforestation due to cocoa production remains a concern especially in West Africa Sustainable agricultural practices such as agroforestry can support cocoa production while conserving biodiversity Cocoa contributes significantly to economies like Nigeria and demand for cocoa products continues to grow steadily at over 3 annually since 2008 To produce 1 kg of chocolate around 300 to 600 cocoa beans are processed The beans are roasted cracked and deshelled resulting in pieces called nibs which are ground into a thick paste known as chocolate liquor or cocoa paste The liquor is processed into chocolate by adding cocoa butter sugar and sometimes vanilla and lecithin Alternatively cocoa powder and cocoa butter can be separated using a hydraulic press or the Broma process Treating cocoa with an alkali produces Dutch process cocoa which has a different flavor profile than untreated cocoa Roasting can also be done on the whole bean or nib affecting the final flavor Cocoa contains phytochemicals like flavanols procyanidins and other flavanoids and flavanol rich chocolate and cocoa products may have a small blood pressure lowering effect The beans also contain theobromine and a small amount of caffeine Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Varieties 3 1 Criollo 3 2 Forastero 3 3 Nacional 3 4 Trinitario 4 Cultivation 4 1 Harvesting 4 2 Harvest processing 4 3 Child slavery 4 3 1 Lawsuits 5 Production 6 Cocoa trading 7 Sustainability 7 1 Voluntary sustainability standards 7 2 Environmental impact 7 3 Agroforestry 8 Economic effects 8 1 Consumption 9 Chocolate production 10 Phytochemicals and research 10 1 Methylxanthines 11 See also 12 Sources 13 ReferencesEtymology Edit Aztec sculpture with pod The word cocoa comes from the Spanish word cacao which is derived from the Nahuatl word cacahuatl 2 3 The Nahuatl word in turn ultimately derives from the reconstructed Proto Mixe Zoquean word kakawa 4 Used on its own the term cocoa may also mean Hot cocoa the drink more known as hot chocolate 5 Terms derived from cocoa include Cocoa paste ground cocoa beans 6 the mass is melted and separated into Cocoa butter a pale yellow edible fat Cocoa solids the dark bitter mass that contain most of cacao s notable phytochemicals including caffeine and theobromine Cocoa powder a powder made by removing most of the cocoa butter from ground cacao seeds or its derivatives such as Dutch process cocoaCocoa beans are technically not beans or legumes but seeds 7 History EditSee also History of chocolate and Montegrande archaeological site The cacao tree is native to the Amazon rainforest It was first domesticated 5 300 years ago in equatorial South America before being introduced in Central America by the Olmecs Mexico More than 4 000 years ago it was consumed by pre Hispanic cultures along the Yucatan including the Maya and as far back as Olmeca civilization in spiritual ceremonies It also grows in the foothills of the Andes in the Amazon and Orinoco basins of South America in Colombia and Venezuela Wild cacao still grows there Its range may have been larger in the past evidence of its wild range may be obscured by cultivation of the tree in these areas since long before the Spanish arrived As of November 2018 evidence suggests that cacao was first domesticated in equatorial South America 8 before being domesticated in Central America roughly 1 500 years later 9 Artifacts found at Santa Ana La Florida in Ecuador indicate that the Mayo Chinchipe people were cultivating cacao as long as 5 300 years ago 9 Chemical analysis of residue extracted from pottery excavated at an archaeological site at Puerto Escondido in Honduras indicates that cocoa products were first consumed there sometime between 1500 and 1400 BC Evidence also indicates that long before the flavor of the cacao seed or bean became popular the sweet pulp of the chocolate fruit used in making a fermented 5 34 alcohol beverage first drew attention to the plant in the Americas 10 The cocoa bean was a common currency throughout Mesoamerica before the Spanish conquest 11 2 Cacao trees grow in a limited geographical zone of about 20 to the north and south of the Equator Nearly 70 of the world crop today is grown in West Africa The cacao plant was first given its botanical name by Swedish natural scientist Carl Linnaeus in his original classification of the plant kingdom where he called it Theobroma food of the gods cacao Cocoa was an important commodity in pre Columbian Mesoamerica 12 A Spanish soldier who was on Hernan Cortes side during the conquest of the Aztec Empire tells that when Moctezuma II emperor of the Aztecs dined he took no other beverage than chocolate served in a golden goblet Flavored with vanilla or other spices his chocolate was whipped into a froth that dissolved in the mouth No fewer than 60 portions each day reportedly may have been consumed by Moctezuma II and 2 000 more by the nobles of his court 13 Chocolate was introduced to Europe by the Spaniards and became a popular beverage by the mid 17th century 14 Spaniards also introduced the cacao tree into the West Indies and the Philippines 15 It was also introduced into the rest of Asia South Asia and into West Africa by Europeans In the Gold Coast modern Ghana cacao was introduced by a Ghanaian Tetteh Quarshie Varieties Edit The three main varieties Forastero Trinitario and Criollo The three main varieties of cocoa plant are Forastero Criollo and Trinitario The first is the most widely used comprising 80 90 of the world production of cocoa Cocoa beans of the Criollo variety are rarer and considered a delicacy 16 17 Criollo also tends to be less resistant to several diseases that attack the cocoa plant hence very few countries still produce it One of the largest producers of Criollo beans is Venezuela Chuao and Porcelana Trinitario from Trinidad is a hybrid between Criollo and Forastero varieties It is considered to be of much higher quality than Forastero has higher yields and is more resistant to disease than Criollo 17 Criollo Edit Representing only 5 of all cocoa beans grown as of 2008 update 18 Criollo is the rarest and most expensive cocoa on the market and is native to Central America the Caribbean islands and the northern tier of South American states 19 The genetic purity of cocoas sold today as Criollo is disputed as most populations have been exposed to the genetic influence of other varieties Criollo is particularly difficult to grow as they are vulnerable to a variety of environmental threats and produce low yields of cocoa per tree The flavor of Criollo is described as delicate yet complex low in classic chocolate flavor but rich in secondary notes of long duration 20 Forastero Edit The most commonly grown bean is Forastero 18 a large group of wild and cultivated cocoas most likely native to the Amazon Basin The African cocoa crop is entirely made up of Forastero They are significantly hardier and of higher yield than Criollo The source of most chocolate marketed 18 Forastero cocoas are typically strong in classic chocolate flavor but have a short duration and are unsupported by secondary flavors producing quite bland chocolate 18 Forastero is particularly tannic and is therefore more astringent and bitter than the other varieties of cocoa 21 Nacional Edit Main article Nacional cocoa bean The Nacional is a rare variety of cocoa bean found in areas of South America such as Ecuador and Peru 22 23 Some experts in the 21st century had formerly considered the Nacional bean to be extinct after an abrupt end in 1916 when an outbreak of witch s broom disease devastated the Nacional variety throughout this countries 23 Pure genotypes of the bean are rare because most Nacional varieties have been interbred with other cocoa bean varieties 24 Ecuadorian Nacional traces its genetic lineage as far back as 5 300 years to the earliest known cacao trees domesticated by humanity In the 18th and 19th centuries Nacional was considered by many European chocolatiers to be the most coveted source of cacao in the world due to its floral aroma and complex flavor profile Trinitario Edit Trinitario is a natural hybrid of Criollo and Forastero Trinitario originated in Trinidad after an introduction of Forastero to the local Criollo crop Nearly all cocoa produced over the past five decades is of the Forastero or lower grade Trinitario varieties 25 Cultivation EditA cocoa pod fruit is about 17 to 20 cm 6 7 to 7 9 in long and has a rough leathery rind about 2 to 3 cm 0 79 to 1 18 in thick this varies with the origin and variety of pod filled with sweet mucilaginous pulp called baba de cacao in South America with a lemonade like taste enclosing 30 to 50 large seeds that are fairly soft and a pale lavender to dark brownish purple color During harvest the pods are opened the seeds are kept and the empty pods are discarded and the pulp made into juice The seeds are placed where they can ferment Due to heat buildup in the fermentation process cacao beans lose most of the purplish hue and become mostly brown in color with an adhered skin which includes the dried remains of the fruity pulp This skin is released easily by winnowing after roasting White seeds are found in some rare varieties usually mixed with purples and are considered of higher value 26 27 Harvesting Edit Harvesting in Cameroon Cocoa trees grow in hot rainy tropical areas within 20 of latitude from the Equator Cocoa harvest is not restricted to one period per year and a harvest typically occurs over several months In fact in many countries cocoa can be harvested at any time of the year 11 Pesticides are often applied to the trees to combat capsid bugs and fungicides to fight black pod disease 28 Immature cocoa pods have a variety of colours but most often are green red or purple and as they mature their colour tends towards yellow or orange particularly in the creases 11 29 Unlike most fruiting trees the cacao pod grows directly from the trunk or large branch of a tree rather than from the end of a branch similar to jackfruit This makes harvesting by hand easier as most of the pods will not be up in the higher branches The pods on a tree do not ripen together harvesting needs to be done periodically through the year 11 Harvesting occurs between three and four times weekly during the harvest season 11 The ripe and near ripe pods as judged by their colour are harvested from the trunk and branches of the cocoa tree with a curved knife on a long pole Care must be used when cutting the stem of the pod to avoid damaging the junction of the stem with the tree as this is where future flowers and pods will emerge 11 30 One person can harvest an estimated 650 pods per day 28 31 Harvest processing Edit Beans drying The harvested pods are opened typically with a machete to expose the beans 11 28 The pulp and cocoa seeds are removed and the rind is discarded The pulp and seeds are then piled in heaps placed in bins or laid out on grates for several days During this time the seeds and pulp undergo sweating where the thick pulp liquefies as it ferments The fermented pulp trickles away leaving cocoa seeds behind to be collected Sweating is important for the quality of the beans 32 which originally have a strong bitter taste If sweating is interrupted the resulting cocoa may be ruined if underdone the cocoa seed maintains a flavor similar to raw potatoes and becomes susceptible to mildew Some cocoa producing countries distill alcoholic spirits using the liquefied pulp 33 A typical pod contains 30 to 40 beans and about 400 dried beans are required to make 1 pound 450 g of chocolate Cocoa pods weigh an average of 400 g 14 oz and each one yields 35 to 40 g 1 2 to 1 4 oz dried beans this yield is 9 10 of the total weight in the pod 28 One person can separate the beans from about 2000 pods per day 28 31 The wet beans are then transported to a facility so they can be fermented and dried 28 31 The farmer removes the beans from the pods packs them into boxes or heaps them into piles then covers them with mats or banana leaves for three to seven days 34 Finally the beans are trodden and shuffled about often using bare human feet and sometimes during this process red clay mixed with water is sprinkled over the beans to obtain a finer color polish and protection against molds during shipment to factories in other countries Drying in the sun is preferable to drying by artificial means as no extraneous flavors such as smoke or oil are introduced which might otherwise taint the flavor The beans should be dry for shipment which is usually by sea Traditionally exported in jute bags over the last decade beans are increasingly shipped in mega bulk parcels of several thousand tonnes at a time on ships or standardized to 62 5 kilograms 138 lb per bag and 200 12 5 metric tons 12 3 long tons 13 8 short tons or 240 15 metric tons 15 long tons 17 short tons bags per 20 feet 6 1 m container Shipping in bulk significantly reduces handling costs Shipment in bags either in a ship s hold or in containers is still common Throughout Mesoamerica where they are native cocoa beans are used for a variety of foods The harvested and fermented beans may be ground to order at tiendas de chocolate or chocolate mills At these mills the cocoa can be mixed with a variety of ingredients such as cinnamon chili peppers almonds vanilla and other spices to create drinking chocolate 35 The ground cocoa is also an important ingredient in tejate Child slavery Edit Main articles Children in cocoa production and Harkin Engel Protocol Collecting beans after drying The first allegations that child slavery is used in cocoa production appeared in 1998 36 In late 2000 a BBC documentary reported the use of enslaved children in the production of cocoa in West Africa 36 37 38 Other media followed by reporting widespread child slavery and child trafficking in the production of cocoa 39 40 The cocoa industry was accused of profiting from child slavery and trafficking 41 The Harkin Engel Protocol is an effort to end these practices 42 In 2001 it was signed and witnessed by the heads of eight major chocolate companies US senators Tom Harkin and Herb Kohl US Representative Eliot Engel the ambassador of the Ivory Coast the director of the International Programme on the Elimination of Child Labor and others 42 It has however been criticized by some groups including the International Labor Rights Forum as an industry initiative which falls short as the goal to eliminate the worst forms of child labor from cocoa production by 2005 was not reached 43 44 45 46 The deadline was extended multiple times and the goal changed to a 70 child labor reduction 47 48 Child labour was growing in some West African countries in 2008 09 when it was estimated that 819 921 children worked on cocoa farms in Ivory Coast alone by 2013 14 the number went up to 1 303 009 During the same period in Ghana the estimated number of children working on cocoa farms was 957 398 children 49 The 2010 documentary The Dark Side of Chocolate revealed that children smuggled from Mali to the Ivory Coast were forced to earn income for their parents while others were sold as slaves for 230 In 2010 the US Department of Labor formed the Child Labor Cocoa Coordinating Group as a public private partnership with the governments of Ghana and Cote d Ivoire to address child labor practices in the cocoa industry 50 As of 2017 approximately 2 1 million children in Ghana and Cote d Ivoire were involved in harvesting cocoa carrying heavy loads clearing forests and being exposed to pesticides 51 According to Sona Ebai the former secretary general of the Alliance of Cocoa Producing Countries I think child labor cannot be just the responsibility of industry to solve I think it s the proverbial all hands on deck government civil society the private sector And there you really need leadership 52 As Reported in 2018 a 3 year pilot program conducted by Nestle with 26 000 farmers mostly located in Cote d Ivoire observed a 51 decrease in the number of children doing hazardous jobs in cocoa farming 53 Lawsuits Edit In 2021 several companies were named in a class action lawsuit filed by eight former children from Mali who alleged that the companies aided and abetted their enslavement on cocoa plantations in Ivory Coast The suit accused Barry Callebaut Cargill The Hershey Company Mars Mondelez Nestle and Olam International of knowingly engaging in forced labour and the plaintiffs sought damages for unjust enrichment negligent supervision and intentional infliction of emotional distress 54 Production EditCocoa bean production 2020 55 Country Weight tonnes Ivory Coast 2 200 000 Ghana 800 000 Indonesia 739 483 Nigeria 340 163 Ecuador 327 903 Cameroon 290 000 Brazil 269 731World 5 756 953In 2020 world production of cocoa beans was 5 8 million tonnes led by Ivory Coast with 38 of the total Secondary producers were Ghana and Indonesia each with about 14 55 Cocoa trading EditCocoa beans are traditionally shipped and stored in burlap sacks in which the beans are susceptible to pest attacks 56 Fumigation with methyl bromide was to be phased out globally by 2015 Additional cocoa protection techniques for shipping and storage include the application of pyrenoids as well as hermetic storage in sealed bags or containers with lowered oxygen concentrations 57 Safe long term storage facilitates the trading of cocoa products at commodity exchanges Cocoa beans cocoa butter and cocoa powder are traded on futures markets The London market is based on West African cocoa and New York on cocoa predominantly from Southeast Asia Cocoa is the world s smallest soft commodity market The futures price of cocoa butter and cocoa powder is determined by multiplying the bean price by a ratio The combined butter and powder ratio has tended to be around 3 5 If the combined ratio falls below 3 2 or so production ceases to be economically viable and some factories cease extraction of butter and powder and trade exclusively in cocoa liquor Cocoa futures traded on the ICE Futures US Softs exchange are valued at 10 Tonnes per contract with a tick size of 1 and tick value of US 10 58 Contract Specification 58 Cocoa CCA Exchange NYISector SoftTick Size 1Tick Value 10 USDBPV 10Denomination USDDecimal Place 0Sustainability EditMultiple international and national initiatives collaborate to support sustainable cocoa production These include the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa SWISSCO the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa GISCO and Beyond Chocolate Belgium A memorandum between these three initiatives was signed in 2020 to measure and address issues including child labor living income deforestation and supply chain transparency 59 Similar partnerships between cocoa producing and consuming countries are being developed such as the cooperation between the International Cocoa Organization ICCO and the Ghanaian Cocoa Authority who aim to increase the proportion of sustainable cocoa being imported from Ghana to Switzerland to 80 by 2025 60 The ICCO is engaged in projects around the world to support sustainable cocoa production and provide current information on the world cocoa market 61 Voluntary sustainability standards Edit There are numerous voluntary certifications including Fairtrade and UTZ now part of Rainforest Alliance for cocoa which aim to differentiate between conventional cocoa production and that which is more sustainable in terms of social economic and environmental concerns As of 2016 at least 29 of global cocoa production was compliant with voluntary sustainability standards 62 However among the different certifications there are significant differences in their goals and approaches and a lack of data to show and compare the results on the farm level While certifications can lead to increased farm income the premium price paid for certified cocoa by consumers is not always reflected proportionally in the income for farmers In 2012 the ICCO found that farm size mattered significantly when determining the benefits of certifications and that farms an area less than 1ha were less likely to benefit from such programs while those with slightly larger farms as well as access to member co ops and the ability to improve productivity were most likely to benefit from certification 63 Certification often requires high up front costs which are a barrier to small farmers and particularly female farmers The primary benefits to certification include improving conservation practices and reducing the use of agrochemicals business support through cooperatives and resource sharing and a higher price for cocoa beans which can improve the standard of living for farmers 64 Fair trade cocoa producer groups are established in Belize Bolivia Cameroon the Congo 65 Costa Rica the Dominican Republic 66 Ecuador Ghana Haiti India Ivory Coast Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Peru Sierra Leone and Sao Tome and Principe In 2018 the Beyond Chocolate partnership was created between multiple stakeholders in the global cocoa industry to decrease deforestation and provide a living income for cocoa farmers The many international companies are currently participating in this agreement and the following voluntary certification programs are also partners in the Beyond Chocolate initiative Rainforest Alliance Fairtrade ISEAL BioForum Vlaanderen 67 Many major chocolate production companies around the world have started to prioritize buying fair trade cocoa by investing in fair trade cocoa production improving fair trade cocoa supply chains and setting purchasing goals to increase the proportion of fair trade chocolate available in the global market 68 69 70 71 72 The Rainforest Alliance lists the following goals as part of their certification program Forest protection and sustainable land management Improve rural livelihoods to reduce poverty Address human rights issues such as child labor gender inequality and indigenous land rightsThe UTZ Certified program now part of Rainforest Alliance included counteracting against child labor and exploitation of cocoa workers requiring a code of conduct in relation to social and environmentally friendly factors and improvement of farming methods to increase profits and salaries of farmers and distributors 73 Environmental impact Edit Main article Environmental impact of cocoa production The relative poverty of many cocoa farmers means that environmental consequences such as deforestation are given little significance For decades cocoa farmers have encroached on virgin forest mostly after the felling of trees by logging companies This trend has decreased as many governments and communities are beginning to protect their remaining forested zones 74 However deforestation due to cocoa production is still a major concern in parts of West Africa In Cote d Ivoire and Ghana barriers to land ownership have led migrant workers and farmers without financial resources to buy land to illegally expand their cocoa farming in protected forests Many cocoa farmers in this region continue to prioritize expansion of their cocoa production which often leads to deforestation 75 Sustainable agricultural practices such as utilizing cover crops to prepare the soil before planting and intercropping cocoa seedlings with companion plants can support cocoa production and benefit the farm ecosystem Prior to planting cocoa leguminous cover crops can improve the soil nutrients and structure which are important in areas where cocoa is produced due to high heat and rainfall which can diminish soil quality Plantains are often intercropped with cocoa to provide shade to young seedlings and improve drought resilience of the soil If the soil lacks essential nutrients compost or animal manure can improve soil fertility and help with water retention 76 In general the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides by cocoa farmers is limited When cocoa bean prices are high farmers may invest in their crops leading to higher yields which in turn tends to result in lower market prices and a renewed period of lower investment While governments and NGOs have made efforts to help cocoa farmers in Ghana and Cote d Ivoire sustainably improve crop yields many of the educational and financial resources provided are more readily available to male farmers versus female farmers Access to credit is important for cocoa farmers as it allows them to implement sustainable practices such as agroforestry and provide a financial buffer in case disasters like pest or weather patterns decrease crop yield 75 Cocoa production is likely to be affected in various ways by the expected effects of global warming Specific concerns have been raised concerning its future as a cash crop in West Africa the current centre of global cocoa production If temperatures continue to rise West Africa could simply become unfit to grow the beans 77 78 The International Center for Tropical Agriculture warned in a paper published in 2013 that Ghana and Cote d Ivoire the world s two top cocoa growers will experience a decline in suitable areas for cocoa production as global temperatures rise by up to 2 C by 2050 79 Climate change coupled with pests poor soil health and the demand for sustainable cocoa has led to a rapid decline in cocoa productivity resulting in reduced income for smallholder cocoa farmers 80 Severe droughts have led to soil fertility decline causing a decrease in yields and resulting in some farmers abandoning cocoa production 81 82 Cocoa beans also have a potential to be used as a bedding material in farms for cows Using cocoa bean husks in bedding material for cows may contribute to udder health less bacterial growth and ammonia levels lower ammonia levels on bedding 83 Agroforestry Edit See also Regenerative cacao Cocoa beans may be cultivated under shade as done in agroforestry Agroforestry can reduce the pressure on existing protected forests for resources such as firewood and conserve biodiversity 84 Integrating shade trees with cocoa plants reduces risk of soil erosion and evaporation and protects young cocoa plants from extreme heat 76 Agroforests act as buffers to formally protected forests and biodiversity island refuges in an open human dominated landscape Research of their shade grown coffee counterparts has shown that greater canopy cover in plots is significantly associated with greater mammal species diversity 85 The amount of diversity in tree species is fairly comparable between shade grown cocoa plots and primary forests 86 Economic effects EditCocoa contributes significantly to Nigerian economic activity comprising the largest part of the country s foreign exchange and providing income for farmers 87 Farmers can grow a variety of fruit bearing shade trees to supplement their income to help cope with the volatile cocoa prices 88 Although cocoa has been adapted to grow under a dense rainforest canopy agroforestry does not significantly further enhance cocoa productivity 89 However while growing cocoa in full sun without incorporating shade plants can temporarily increase cocoa yields it will eventually decrease the quality of the soil due to nutrient loss desertification and erosion leading to unsustainable yields and dependency on inorganic fertilizers Agroforestry practices stabilize and improve soil quality which can sustain cocoa production in the long term 75 Over time cocoa agroforestry systems become more similar to forest although they never fully recover the original forest community within the life cycle of a productive cocoa plantation approximately 25 years 90 Thus although cocoa agroforests cannot replace natural forests they are a valuable tool for conserving and protecting biodiversity while maintaining high levels of productivity in agricultural landscapes 90 In West Africa where about 70 of global cocoa supply originates from smallholder farmers recent public private initiatives such as the Cocoa Forest Initiatives in Ghana and Cote d Ivoire World Cocoa Foundation 2017 and the Green Cocoa Landscape Programme in Cameroon IDH 2019 aim to support the sustainable intensification and climate resilience of cocoa production the prevention of further deforestation and the restoration of degraded forests 90 They often align with national REDD policies and plans 90 Consumption Edit People around the world enjoy cocoa in many different forms consuming more than 3 million tons of cocoa beans yearly Once the cocoa beans have been harvested fermented dried and transported they are processed in several components Processor grindings serve as the main metric for market analysis Processing is the last phase in which consumption of the cocoa bean can be equitably compared to supply After this step all the different components are sold across industries to many manufacturers of different types of products Global market share for processing has remained stable even as grindings increase to meet demand One of the largest processing country by volume is the Netherlands handling around 13 of global grindings Europe and Russia as a whole handle about 38 of the processing market Average year after year demand growth has been just over 3 since 2008 While Europe and North America are relatively stable markets increasing household income in developing countries is the main reason of the stable demand growth As demand is awaited to keep growing supply growth may slow down due to changing weather conditions in the largest cocoa production areas 91 Chocolate production EditMain article Chocolate Production To make 1 kg 2 2 lb of chocolate about 300 to 600 beans are processed depending on the desired cocoa content In a factory the beans are roasted Next they are cracked and then deshelled by a winnower The resulting pieces of beans are called nibs They are sometimes sold in small packages at specialty stores and markets to be used in cooking snacking and chocolate dishes Since nibs are directly from the cocoa tree they contain high amounts of theobromine Most nibs are ground using various methods into a thick creamy paste known as chocolate liquor or cocoa paste This liquor is then further processed into chocolate by mixing in more cocoa butter and sugar and sometimes vanilla and lecithin as an emulsifier and then refined conched and tempered Alternatively it can be separated into cocoa powder and cocoa butter using a hydraulic press or the Broma process This process produces around 50 cocoa butter and 50 cocoa powder Cocoa powder may have a fat content of about 12 92 but this varies significantly 93 Cocoa butter is used in chocolate bar manufacture other confectionery soaps and cosmetics Treating with an alkali produces Dutch process cocoa which is less acidic darker and more mellow in flavor than untreated cocoa Regular non alkalized cocoa is acidic so when cocoa is treated with an alkaline ingredient generally potassium carbonate the pH increases 94 This process can be done at various stages during manufacturing including during nib treatment liquor treatment or press cake treatment Another process that helps develop the flavor is roasting which can be done on the whole bean before shelling or on the nib after shelling The time and temperature of the roast affect the result A low roast produces a more acid aromatic flavor while a high roast gives a more intense bitter flavor lacking complex flavor notes 95 Phytochemicals and research Edit A roasted bean the papery skin rubbed loose Press cake of the paste Cocoa contains various phytochemicals such as flavanols including epicatechin procyanidins and other flavanoids A systematic review presented moderate evidence that the use of flavanol rich chocolate and cocoa products causes a small 2 mmHg blood pressure lowering effect in healthy adults mostly in the short term 96 The highest levels of cocoa flavanols are found in raw cocoa and to a lesser extent dark chocolate since flavonoids degrade during cooking used to make chocolate 97 Methylxanthines Edit Structure of theobromine IUPAC name 3 7 dimethyl 1H purine 2 6 dione The beans contain theobromine and between 0 1 and 0 7 caffeine whereas dry coffee beans are about 1 2 caffeine 98 Theobromine found in the cocoa solids is fat soluble 99 See also EditCarob Cash crop Catechin and epicatechin flavonoids present in cocoa Coenraad Johannes van Houten for Dutch process Coffee bean Domingo Ghirardelli Ghana Cocoa Board Montevideo archaeological site International CoCoa Farmers OrganizationSources Edit This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA 3 0 IGO license statement permission Text taken from The State of the World s Forests 2020 Forests biodiversity and people In brief FAO amp UNEP FAO amp UNEP To learn how to add open license text to Wikipedia articles please see this how to page For information on reusing text from Wikipedia please see the terms of use References Edit Cacao Free Dictionary Retrieved 17 February 2015 cocoa n Online Etymology Dictionary Bingham Ann Roberts Jeremy 2010 South and Meso American Mythology A to Z 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CD008893 doi 10 1002 14651858 cd008893 pub3 ISSN 1465 1858 PMC 6478304 PMID 28439881 Cocoa nutrient for lethal ills BBC News 11 March 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2010 Kim Jiyoung Kim Jaekyoon Shim J Lee CY Lee KW Lee HJ 2014 Cocoa phytochemicals Recent advances in molecular mechanisms on health Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition 54 11 1458 72 doi 10 1080 10408398 2011 641041 PMID 24580540 S2CID 20314911 Baggott MJ Childs E Hart AB de Bruin E Palmer AA Wilkinson JE de Wit H July 2013 Psychopharmacology of theobromine in healthy volunteers Psychopharmacology 228 1 109 18 doi 10 1007 s00213 013 3021 0 PMC 3672386 PMID 23420115 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cocoa bean amp oldid 1148432560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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