Archive for the ‘Cocoa’ Category

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3 Perspectives on Rainforest Alliance Certification: Balance Bar, Bissinger’s and Endangered Species

April 12, 2013

In March, the Rainforest Alliance team headed to Natural Products Expo West—the nation’s largest tradeshow for natural, organic and healthy products—to promote certification and meet with some of the forward-thinking companies sourcing ingredients from Rainforest Alliance Certified™ farms. We asked representatives from Balance Bar®, Bissinger’s Handcrafted Chocolatier and Endangered Species Chocolate to discuss why they chose Rainforest Alliance certification—and how their commitments are benefitting communities, wildlife and the global environment.

Balance Bar

What they did at Expo West? Balance Bar® announced the launch of three new flavors made with 100 percent cocoa from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms: Dark Chocolate Crunch, Dark Chocolate Coconut and Dark Chocolate Peanut.

Bissinger’s Handcrafted Chocolatier

What they did at Expo West? Bissinger’s Handcrafted Chocolatier announced the launch of three new bars made with 100 percent cocoa from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms: Banana Pecan Caramel Bar, Coconut Caramel with Red Hawaiian Sea Salt Bar and Dulce de Leche with Sea Salt Bar.

Endangered Species Chocolate 

What they did at Expo West? Endangered Species Chocolate announced the launch of two new natural chocolate bars featuring cocoa from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms: Dark Chocolate with Sea Salt and Almonds and Dark Chocolate with Cherries.

Are you a chocolate lover looking to find more great products bearing the Rainforest Alliance Certified seal? Visit Shop the Frog!

Are you a company representative looking to get involved? Visit our website!

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From the Experts: Child Labor and the Cocoa Industry

April 10, 2013

Edward Millard, the Rainforest Alliance’s director of sustainable landscapes, reflects on the causes of child labor in the West African cocoa industry and the tools necessary to combat it.

The Rainforest Alliance believes that independent certification programs, like Rainforest Alliance Certified™, are central to delivering solutions to economic, environmental and social issues that are endemic within the cocoa sector, including child labor.

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Cocoa Certification by the Numbers

March 13, 2013

How do we know our work with cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire is improving lives, lands and livelihoods? 

We commissioned the Committee on Sustainability Assessment (COSA) to conduct on-the-ground research in the West African country. In 2009, and again in 2011, COSA scientists collected data at Rainforest Alliance Certified and non-certified farms, representing a total of 452 farm visits. Their research revealed an assortment of changes on Rainforest Alliance Certified farms in the world’s largest cocoa producing nation:

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Want to learn more? Meet an Ivoirian farmer benefiting from Rainforest Alliance certification.

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Hope in the Shade of Cocoa Trees

February 25, 2013

Ouedraogo Boureima was just four years old when, in 1985, his family left their village in Burkina Faso and walked across the border and into Côte d’Ivoire. They brought only the clothes on their backs, two sheep, four cooking pots, food for travel and a picture of their ancestors. The family traveled south and then west, finally settling in the rural community of Blolequin, where Ouedraogo’s father declared that he would support them as a cocoa farmer.

Ouedraogo’s family planted and then cultivated cocoa trees, and they built a new life for themselves. Ouedraogo came of age and eventually joined his father in the cocoa fields. Then in 2011, the Second Ivoirian Civil War broke out, leaving Blolequin in shambles with dozens killed, and forcing the family to retreat to Burkina Faso. Last year, as a measure of peace began to settle back over the land, Ouedraogo returned to Côte d’Ivoire.

“My heart, my loyalty and my livelihood lies among the shade of my cocoa trees and the blood red earth of Western Côte d’Ivoire,”  explains Ouedraogo Boureima.

“My heart, my loyalty and my livelihood lies among the shade of my cocoa trees and the blood red earth of Western Côte d’Ivoire,” explains Ouedraogo Boureima.

“My heart, my loyalty and my livelihood lies among the shade of my cocoa trees and the blood red earth of Western Côte d’Ivoire,” he explains. Now 31, Ouedraogo is carrying his father’s dream forward. It is a dream shared by more than 4.5 million people in Côte d’Ivoire, who depend on cocoa for their livelihoods. But as the Boureima family knows well, cocoa is an industry fraught with challenges, including price volatility, farmer exploitation, low wages and child labor, in a country plagued by political instability.

Despite the war’s end, political unrest continues to threaten Côte d’Ivoire’s cocoa crop—already under pressure from pests, fungi, unsustainable farming techniques, climate change and drought—while global cocoa demand climbs steadily at a rate of three percent a year. At the same time, increasingly low yields raise concerns about future cocoa shortages and hurt the incomes and aspirations of millions of Ivoirians.

In 2008, the Rainforest Alliance began to introduce socially, environmentally and economically sustainable practices to farmers in Côte d’Ivoire—helping farmers increase their yields and their profits, and improve their lives. Ouedraogo is one of tens of thousands of farmers in Côte d’Ivoire who have benefited from Rainforest Alliance certification.

In an effort to improve his family’s life, in 2011 he joined a cooperative of cocoa farmers working toward Rainforest Alliance certification. Many farmers in his community were initially skeptical of certification. The country’s history of violence and political unrest colored their perception; over the years, they had been approached by a number of NGOs offering aid, but in the end, they all failed to deliver on their promises. Desperate to support his family, Ouedraogo was willing to accept the possibility that certification would not pan out.

Ouedraogo Boureima (third row center, yellow shirt) with Rainforest Alilance staff andother members of the COABOB co-op.

Ouedraogo Boureima (third row center, yellow shirt) with Rainforest Alliance staff and other members of the COABOB co-op.

Just one year later, Ouedraogo’s understanding of certification has evolved substantially. As with many farmers, it was initially talk of a price premium that attracted him. In actuality, certification does not guarantee a price premium, but higher yields resulting from the techniques promoted by the Rainforest Alliance have improved farmers lives. A 2012 study found that net income on Rainforest Alliance Certified farms in Côte d’Ivoire was 291 percent higher than on noncertified farms.

As Ouedraogo and other farmers have learned, however, higher incomes are just one aspect of the complex journey to sustainability. Now in its second year, Ouedraogo’s Rainforest Alliance Certified cooperative COABOB is composed of 798 farmers who have a much deeper understanding of the challenges and benefits of certification. It was a struggle, for example, for many farmers to accept certification requirements that prohibit the use of toxic agrochemicals and encourage the use of alternative methods to control pests and add nutrients to the soil. With decreasing yields, many farmers felt pressure to increase their use of pesticide and chemical fertilizers on cocoa trees “It takes the Rainforest Alliance training and an outside perspective to understand that these chemicals are not long term solutions,” explains Ouedraogo.

Certification has led to other on-farm improvements, as well. Through his work with the Rainforest Alliance, Ouedraogo learned to prune his trees (cutting away old, dead and diseased branches) and put a mixture of wood shavings and composted cocoa pods around the base of each cocoa tree (helping to keep the soil around the trees’ roots moist).  He has also planted a variety of trees on his farm to protect his cocoa from the sun and enrich his soil.

This year, Ouedraogo noticed that his trees had sprouted new, healthy growth. He is hopeful that his harvest will be larger as a result. If other certified farms in the country are any indication, he will get his wish. Certified cocoa farms in Côte d’Ivoire have produced 72 percent more than their uncertified counterparts.

“I am starting to believe that I can think long term, something that I have never been able to do before,” Ouedraogo says. “I want to practice farming techniques that will allow my son to have a future on this same land.” He feels hopeful knowing that there are consumers demanding certified products. “There are people who believe in what I am doing,” he says, smiling.  “This makes the world feel smaller and gives me pride in my work.”

Thanks to commitments from leading brands like Mars, Unilever, Kraft and Hershey, the Rainforest Alliance’s certification work in Côte d’Ivoire has experienced remarkable growth. Over the last six years, 85,000 Ivorian farms covering more than one million acres (410,000 hectares) have become Rainforest Alliance Certified.  Companies now recognize that environmental, social and economic sustainability are essential to securing the global cocoa supply—and that Rainforest Alliance certification can help to accomplish these goals.

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6 Ways to Love a Greener World

February 6, 2013

This Valentine’s Day, love a greener world by spoiling your loved one without spoiling the planet. Choose goods and services that feature the Rainforest Alliance’s little green frog, and you can help conserve forests, protect wildlife and improve the lives of workers and communities across the globe.

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  1. Treat your love to Rainforest Alliance Certified™ chocolate. Farmed on over 18 million acres of tropical land, cocoa provides a livelihood for some 40 million people. Make sure the chocolate you buy contains cocoa grown in a way that protects forests and helps cocoa farming communities thrive.
  2. Surprise your Valentine with a beautiful bouquet grown on a farm that curbs deforestation, conserves soil and water, provides habitat for wildlife and protects the rights and well-being of farm workers. You can find Rainforest Alliance Certified blooms at Whole Foods Market, Sam’s Club, Walmart and Costco.
  3. Escape on a romantic getaway. Find stunning and sustainable destinations in Latin America and the Caribbean on SustainableTrip.org, a Rainforest Alliance website featuring tourism businesses that conserve natural resources, protect plants and wildlife, and support local communities.
  4. Enter to win a basket overflowing with treats! Write a catchy caption for our Valentine’s Day Facebook contest for a chance to take home an assortment of delicious and nutritious chocolate treats from Balance Bar, Bixby & Co., Hershey’s Bliss, Bissinger’s Handcrafted Chocolatier, Dove Chocolate, Endangered Species Chocolate, Newman’s Own Organics, NibMor, Salazon Chocolate Co. and Sun Cups.
  5. Make a donation of $50 or more and you could win a free 5-night stay in Costa Rica just in time for Valentine’s Day! Guests will stay in a secluded, eco-friendly resort; take a hiking tour of Corcovado National Park; and travel by boat to an ancient burial ground.
  6. Watch and share our new “Love a Greener World” stop animation video to see how sustainable sweets can bring people (and the environment) closer together.

 

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25 Things You Might Not Know About Chocolate

January 31, 2013

It’s amazing melted and mixed with milk. It’s the perfect addition to cake and cookie batter. It’s divine sweetened with a little sugar. We know it’s delicious (in all its forms), but there’s more to chocolate than great taste. A few facts to nourish your mind…

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  1. On Valentine’s Day, more than 36 million heart-shaped boxes of chocolate will be sold in the United States.
  2. Chocolate (really, the cocoa beans it is made from) grows on theobroma cacao trees and — like coffee – can flourish under the shade of the forest canopy and support biodiversity.
  3. A cocoa pod contains an average of about 42 beans; it takes some 270 beans to make a pound of chocolate.
  4. Experts predict that there will be a “modest” cocoa shortage of about 100,000 tons over the coming year.
  5. According to the Greeks,  theobroma is literally the “food of the gods.”
  6. Côte d’Ivoire produces more cocoa than any other nation in the world; the industry supports an estimated 4.5 million people in the West African country.
  7. Rainforest Alliance Certified™ cocoa farms conserve forests and wildlife while ensuring that workers are provided with decent wages and safe living and working conditions, and their families have access to health care and education.
  8. In South American civilizations, cocoa beans were once used as a form of currency and only eaten as their quality degraded. According to ancient records, a horse cost 10 beans and a rabbit could be purchased for four beans.
  9. Approximately 70 percent of the world’s cacao comes from West Africa (including Côte d’Ivoire). Cacao trees grow across the lowland tropical regions of Africa, Asia and the Americas.
  10. The Mayans were the first to grind up cacao seeds and use them to concoct a drink.
  11. Cocoa is farmed on more than 28,000 square miles (18 million acres or 7.5 million hectares) worldwide. That’s an area about the size of Ireland or the state of South Carolina.
  12. The word chocolate probably comes from the Aztec word “xocolatl” meaning “bitter water.”
  13. About 40 million people worldwide, including five million farmers, rely on cocoa for their livelihoods. Most cocoa is grown by “smallholder” farmers who own one- or two-acre plots of land.
  14. Cocoa was introduced in Spain as early as the 1600’s, but it wasn’t until 1765 that the first chocolate factory was established in the United States.
  15. Like turkey, chocolate contains tryptophan — a chemical that the brain uses to produce serotonin, which can generate feelings of ecstasy or love.
  16. There are Rainforest Alliance Certified cocoa farms in 14 countries: Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Ghana, Indonesia, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, Tanzania and Togo.
  17. Chocolate (especially the dark variety) is rich in antioxidants.
  18. The average American eats about 12 pounds of chocolate per year.
  19. In the infamous shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Psycho,” chocolate syrup is used as fake blood.
  20. This year, 47 percent of US consumers will exchange Valentine’s Day candy – and 75 percent of that candy will be chocolate.
  21. The Rainforest Alliance is working with farmers in Ghana to produce “climate-friendly” cocoa that benefits workers and communities financially while helping them to adopt practices that curb climate change and mitigate its impacts.
  22. Two out of three women say choosing their own chocolate is just as personal a decision as selecting their own lipstick.
  23. A cacao tree takes five years to produce its first beans.
  24. A COSA study on cocoa farms in Côte d’Ivoire found that (compared to their uncertified neighbors) Rainforest Alliance Certified cocoa farmers produced more cocoa per hectare; earned a higher net income; implemented more soil and water conservation measures; and were more committed to community engagement.
  25. Emperor Montezuma is said to have sipped 50 golden goblets of hot chocolate – dyed red and spiced with chili peppers – daily.

Is your mouth watering yet? Visit Shop the Frog to find brands and stores offering Rainforest Alliance Certified chocolate goodies; enter to win a basket full of Rainforest Alliance Certified chocolate; and watch our new Valentine’s Day video.

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Report from the World Cocoa Conference

November 28, 2012

Last week, key players in the cocoa industry came together at the first-ever World Cocoa Conference in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire.  The Rainforest Alliance sent a delegation, including Christian Mensah, manager of sustainable landscapes in West Africa, Mercedes Tallo, international director of sustainable value chains, and Sarah Fadika Khanu, cocoa program associate. Here, Sarah shares a dispatch from the milestone event.

On November 17 I left London for Abidjan, a city known as the Perle des Lagunes (Pearl of the Lagoons), to attend the World Cocoa Conference. Even at the airport, I could feel the excitement surrounding the conference and the pride locals felt about hosting such a landmark event.

The World Cocoa Conference was an extraordinary occasion, bringing together an incredible array of important players in the cocoa industry including growers, traders, buyers, nonprofits and major chocolate manufacturers. Ivorians, who lead the world in the production and export of cocoa, hadn’t been this excited about cocoa since the “Ivorian Miracle” of the 1970s – 1980s, a time when favorable prices on the international cocoa markets fortuitously coincided with a stable political environment.

The whole country mobilized to host the conference, which they hoped would revive an economy in crisis — and a country in turmoil — since 2010. Held at the “Hotel Ivoire,” a fitting symbol of the country’s past glory, the World Cocoa Conference provided one of the industry’s greatest platforms since the 2008 International Cocoa Organisation (ICCO) conference in Trinidad and Tobago.  Experts and industry representatives from around the world attended, and I was able to put faces to the names of many people with whom I’d corresponded over email.

Sarah Fadika, Melanie Bayo and Mercedes Tallo attend the World Cocoa Conference.

For the people of Cote d’Ivoire, the conference provided an opportunity to discuss increasing cocoa productivity, addressing the difficult problem of child labor, improving the image of Ivorian cocoa and, most importantly, bettering the livelihood of cocoa farmers.

Increasingly, the perspectives of Ivorian authorities are coming in line with those of the global cocoa industry.  Both are focused on rewarding good production practices and highlighting the importance of sustainability and certification. We all want to bring the cocoa sector beyond certification to conserve biodiversity, improve livelihoods and ensure ethical trading.

For the Rainforest Alliance team, the opportunity to build even more support for these principles arose on the second day of the conference. The panel on certification was the most highly attended and one of the most controversial. Against this background, Christian brilliantly demonstrated that the Rainforest Alliance certification program has always focused on achieving sustainability and working in the best interest of farmers, the environment and their communities.

He explained that the Rainforest Alliance is unique — especially when compared with other certification bodies — because we are so much more than a certification body. We have technical teams in agriculture, forestry, climate, education, and monitoring and evaluation that work at the field level.

The biggest sustainability challenges for the cocoa industry are in the areas of productivity improvement, yield increase, biodiversity protection and overall improvement of farmer’s livelihoods. Emotions ran high at the session when the audience heard from cocoa farmers, who expressed their disappointment about the current cocoa system in Cote d’Ivoire and explained how they felt cheated by the global market.

The conference highlighted the fact that farmers, their children and the protection of the environment must remain key priorities in the industry. We left feeling humbled yet optimistic about the future of our work in cocoa and the direction the industry is headed as a whole.

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Good News for Cocoa and the Global Food System

November 27, 2012

Eric Servat, senior manager of the Rainforest Alliance’s cocoa program, talks about the growth and challenges of our cocoa work.

While Halloween is the peak time for chocolate news in the US, the holidays are  our peak chocolate eating season.   Any chocolate enjoyed in the US is likely to contain cocoa grown in Côte d’Ivoire, the world’s largest cocoa producer.  And cocoa beans from Côte d’Ivoire are now increasingly likely to be grown on Rainforest Alliance CertifiedTM farms.

Rainforest Alliance certification has grown phenomenally in Côte d’Ivoire since leading brands such as Mars, Unilever, Kraft and Hershey, and processors such as Barry Callebaut, the world’s largest chocolate manufacturer, committed to sourcing their cocoa from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms. Some 75,000 Ivorian farms, covering more than 1.2 million acres (500,000 hectares), have become Rainforest Alliance Certified in just the last six years.  This massive expansion is driven by the recognition that cocoa farmers’ incomes and yields need to rise dramatically to make cocoa production  sustainable, and that certification can help accomplish these goals.

There are more than a million cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire, the vast majority of them smallholders, plus another 3.5 million Ivorians who depend on income from cocoa-related activities.  After a brief spike during the 2011 civil conflict, prices paid to farmers for cocoa beans are again low. Until recently, Ivorian farmers received a fraction of what cocoa sold for on commodities markets in London and New York.  Côte d’Ivoire has a long history of price volatility, exploited smallholders earning low wages and child labor.

These are intertwined, systemic and longstanding problems.  But they’re problems with consequences too severe to tolerate, and the new Ivorian government acknowledges that they must be remedied.  Unfair cocoa prices and poverty wages for cocoa farmers have been cited as important factors in Côte d’Ivoire’s political instability during the last 11 years of civil war.  The Nation wrote in 2011, “The fundamental reason that fighting is breaking out again [in Côte d'Ivoire is] a profoundly unjust international economic order that pays the people who supply our primary products a pittance and leaves their nations chronically ill with unemployment and poverty, and with people who will fight one another over scarce resources.”

Unrest in Côte d’Ivoire threatened disruptions in cocoa supply, already under long-term pressure from pests, fungi, unsustainable farming techniques and, increasingly, climate change and drought.  Supply will have to increase steadily to meet progressively climbing demand  — for the last century, cocoa demand has grown consistently at a rate of 3 percent a year.   Low yields have raised speculation about future cocoa shortages.  More fundamentally, low yields and inadequate incomes undercut the aspirations of millions of Ivorians for better lives for themselves and their families, and basic equity for growers of this $5 billion global commodity.

The key to achieving justice for Ivorians and an adequate future supply of cocoa for consumers is to raise yields dramatically.  It can certainly be done.  After working with USDA and IBM to map the cocoa genome, Mars announced this year it knows how to raise yields from 400 kg per hectare to 1,500 kg. Beyond assuring future supply, higher yields generate higher income for farmers, and reduce economic pressures that exploit smallholders and draw children into working on the farms.

Since 2008 the Rainforest Alliance has worked with multiple stakeholders to make cocoa production sustainable and raise yields and profitability. In Côte d’Ivoire and elsewhere, Rainforest Alliance Certified farms rely on sustainable soil, crop, pest, water and energy management to cut costs and raise yields on existing farmland, without clearing forestland for crops or resorting to damaging slash-and-burn, chemical-intensive methods.  The Committee on Sustainability Assessment (COSA) recently studied the impact of Rainforest Alliance certification on cocoa farming in Côte d’Ivoire.   It found that after adopting sustainable techniques and becoming certified, farms increased their yields 58 percent, and raised their net incomes by almost a factor of four.

Meanwhile, the Coffee and Cocoa Council issued this new reform, which  has raised expectations; their objectives are to promote transparency, sustainability, fair pricing and farmers group strengthening.   We’re confident that as certification grows, and collaboration continues to improve among the key actors, so will the lives of cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire.

Problems there remain entrenched — prices and yields generally are low, farms are vulnerable, examples of child labor and other abuses aren’t yet hard to find, future and sustainable supply isn’t yet secure.  Farmers and those who depend on them are still poor and competing for scarce resources.  But certification has proven an efficient tool for increasing yields and multiplying farmers’ incomes, putting more farms and livelihoods on a sustainable footing.

Globally, we’re facing rising food demand as the population heads to 10 billion by mid-century and emerging economies eat higher on the food chain.  To meet this demand, the global food system must do what Côte d’Ivoire is now doing: working with stakeholders to raise yields on existing farmland sustainably, without clearing more forests, degrading more grazing land or exacerbating climate change and biodiversity loss. Rainforest Alliance certification offers a body of evidence that argues this can be done, and is being done, by adopting environmentally and socially sustainable farming practices that help local ecosystems and communities thrive together.

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A Community of Cocoa Farmers Collaborates to Confront Challenges

June 14, 2012

Meet a group of villagers in Papua, Indonesia fighting to earn a decent living from cocoa, their only marketable crop. Since 2008, the local crop has been ravaged by disease and threatened by a decline in world cocoa prices.

Today, the community of 100 farmers is embarking on what may be a long and challenging journey toward Rainforest Alliance certification.

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Tensie Whelan Visits Dominican Republic

May 9, 2012

Rainforest Alliance president, Tensie Whelan with Nell Newman, founder of Newman’s Own Organics

Last week, I was lucky enough to go on a field visit to the Dominican Republic to visit Rainforest Alliance Certified™ cocoa farms as part of a conference organized by the Sustainable Food Lab.  About 15 people were on our two-day “Learning Journey,” including Nell Newman of Newman’s Own Organics, whose organic, Rainforest Alliance Certified chocolate contains cocoa produced by the farmers we visited.

Our first stop was with FUPAROCA, a foundation to assist and organize 4,500 small producers, set up and paid for by Rizek, a Dominican cocoa producer, manufacturer and exporter.  FUPAROCA invited the president of the farmers’ group and 40 farmers from Newman’s Own Organics supply to meet with us and share their experiences.  Then we visited a few farms and had lunch at a Rizek facility where we had hot chocolate with ginger (yum!) and dipped juicy pineapple and papaya into a chocolate fountain (really!).  We were all buzzing with cocoa energy afterward.

Meeting with farmers is my favorite perk of my job.  They are practical but see the bigger picture in the way that anyone who deals directly with Mother Nature day in and day out cannot avoid.  Here are a few of my favorite quotes from the farmers we met:

“After certification, everything changed.  The product is of the best quality and we get a good price, so we are really thankful.”

“We are proud of protecting biodiversity, life at the global level and producing a globally important product.” 

“My community is happy, joyful.  We see the benefit.”

According to Rizek and FUPAROCA, average farmer yields have more than doubled with the certification and the group received one million in certification premium last year (half due to Rainforest Alliance).  FUPAROCA started in 2001 after a big hurricane destroyed much of the island’s cocoa production.  Since they were starting almost from scratch, they decided to put in place better practices from the beginning.  So, they prepared the farmers for organic production—and today the Dominican Republic is the largest source of organic cocoa worldwide.  Then in 2006, they achieved Rainforest Alliance certification, followed in 2009 by UTZ, and they are now planning for Fair For Life.  The doubling in yields happened between 2006 and today, so Rainforest Alliance can take some of the credit.  According to FUPAROCA, the primary changes the farmers had to make in order to become Rainforest Alliance Certified were related to protection of biodiversity, wildlife inventories, tree planting and protection as well as some changes related to social issues, such as the provision of potable water and worker benefits.

While embracing all of these standards sounds like a lot of work, FUPAROCA has combined them all into a single standard, provides training for farmers on that broader standard, and is using the new standard adoption as a way to help the farmers to continue learning and improving.  It’s exciting to see certification used as an extension tool to help farmers produce higher quality, planet and people healthy and productive crops!

Carmelo Paulina Pena on his farm in La Malena

One of our farmer visits was with Carmelo Paulino Peña in La Malena, Atabalero Abajo, San Francisco de Macorís.  His farm totals 31 hectares and he has four family members as well as harvesters whom he hires locally to work on the farm.  He bought the farm with funds he earned working in a meat packing factory in the U.S.   We visited some of his cocoa trees most prized for their productivity and saw the shade trees that provide habitat and carbon sequestration. He said they no longer kill snakes and woodpeckers (previously a standard practice) and manage their waste and wastewater carefully.  There was no garbage on the farm—which is a marked difference from the garbage you see everywhere on the roads and fields and in the towns.

Nell Newman told us later how pleased she was to see these farmers so proud of the changes they have made.  She started Newman’s Own Organics because as a young girl she had become concerned about the plight of the birds effected by DDT (pesticide) and worked on a peregrine falcon reintroduction project as a college student.  It was thrilling for her to see how the good price paid by Newman’s Own Organics and the incentive they have provided for organic and Rainforest Alliance certification has helped these famers lead better lives.

We also had representatives from Blommer Chocolate (they manufacture Newman’s Own Organic chocolate), Cliff Bar and Mars (who have committed to purchasing cocoa from Rainforest Alliance Certified farms), Sustainable Harvest, and NGOs such as Catholic Relief Services.  The Sustainable Food Lab, our host, brought together representatives from business and civil society to learn from each other and tackle the challenges in the current food system.  No small task, but it was an impressive group of leaders from all walks of life!

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