Halloween

Brazil court fines Cargill in case involving child labor on Cocoa Farms by By Marcelo Teixeira and Ana Mano

SAO PAULO, Sept 26 (Reuters) - Commodities trader Cargill has been ordered by a Brazilian court to pay 600,000 reais ($120,185) as indemnity for buying cocoa from farms where child labor or forced work has been identified.

U.S.-based Cargill said on Tuesday it disagreed with the complaints and fine and would appeal the ruling to a higher court.

According to a decision dated Sept. 18, seen by Reuters, from the 39th Labor Court in the northeastern state of Bahia, Cargill was also ordered to add to its contracts with Brazilian cocoa suppliers clauses to end the commercial relationship if child labor or other unlawful working conditions occur.

Read the rest of the article HERE

SUSTAINABILITY INITIATIVES IN THE COCOA INDUSTRY by Bright Adjei Debrah

SUSTAINABILITY INITIATIVES IN THE COCOA INDUSTRY by Bright Adjei Debrah

The sustainability issues in cocoa are multidimensional and complex. Farmers are getting older, and they tend to be on small farms with large families, they work on the farm with very little to no external paid labor and they don’t have very big harvests. They also have a dropping productivity rate and they have murky land tenure rights. That combination often leads to encroachment into protected lands and forests. Poverty also leads to children needing to contribute to the family income by working on the farms but often by engaging in illegal child labor. Illegal child labor means things like carrying really heavy loads, using dangerous materials like machetes, or using chemicals and they are missing school or not going to school at all.

The latest numbers we have are that more than 2 million children are engaged in illegal child labor on West African cocoa farms. Smallholder farmers also have very little say in the prices that are paid for cocoa, actually pretty much none because the government set the price of cocoa. The farmers are very dependent on their local bean collectors (purchasing clerks) for the timing of when they pass by the farm to collect the seeds. The price that they get paid for the cocoa beans is way too low to earn a living income.

If we as a society want real economically stable societies that are linked up to the global food chain, then that is something that needs to change. Earning a living income is a basic human right that has been agreed upon with the UN as one of the global sustainable development goals, and cocoa farmers are far from it because most West African cocoa farmers are under a dollar a day.

The manufacturing process is very fractured, and this fractured process leads to enmity, when what we really need in the cocoa value chain is connection, empathy, and responsibility.

If we want to change the cocoa industry, and that I mean the entire cocoa industry, we have to look at how cocoa flows through 99% of the chocolate you have ever consumed in your life, and would probably continue to consume because only at scale will we achieve a significant impact on the ground. For now, we are doing much too little, much too late, and much too slowly.

SO HOW DO WE ACHIEVE THAT CONNECTION?

Connection comes through traceability. Chocolate brands have the obligation to know exactly who the cocoa farmers are, and who are providing the cocoa beans for their chocolate. Only then can they understand their circumstances and actually take full responsibility towards them for the human rights and the planet rights that we are all working towards.

Empathy is putting yourself in another person’s experience within their frame of reference. Farmers don’t want to ruin the last standing forest in their country, and farmers don't relish watching their children carry heavy loads, miss school or not go to school.

There is a systematic inequality that exists in the cocoa supply chain that is causing this exploitation. What is happening here in the cocoa-growing regions in Africa is a symptom of how stakeholders approach issues at their end. If stakeholders don't connect, empathize, and take responsibility for what is happening here in the cocoa-growing regions in Africa, then directly or indirectly, they are responsible for deforestation, exploiters, and child traffickers.

The cocoa value chain is shaped like an hourglass ⌛️. You’ve millions of cocoa farmers, mostly smallholders on one side, and on the other are billions of chocolate consumers. In the middle are just a few chocolate giants or stakeholders. The chocolate market is dominated by a few chocolate manufacturers, cocoa processors, and traders. These few actors have all the powers in the supply chain and great power comes with great responsibility. These stakeholders therefore have arapid goal-oriented and collective approach to changing the system.

Here is an interesting thing that is happening. Currently, there are more than 50 active separate sustainability initiatives or programs that are going on in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire alone. A lot of these initiatives are focused on the same groups of farmers but with little to no cohesive approach between the programs, meaning that not a single farmer is being pulled out of poverty. Many of the farmers are also left in the cold and not being engaged at all.

What is happening is that chocolate giants are competing with each other and protecting their sustainability initiatives and they are doing it for just a very small fraction of the supply chain.

WHAT CAN BE DONE ABOUT THIS

Collaboration is the best new form of competition. Because, in this sharing economy, isn’t collaboration on sustainability programs much more purposeful than competition? As stake holders, we already know what the tools are to connect to farmers and to engage, but we need to do it together so that we can make a positive impact much faster.

As an example, picture a farmer who has been asked to have a map made of his farm. You can make GPS polygon maps by walking the perimeter of the farm and taking coordinate points. These marks are very important to both the farms and the farmer groups as well as the buying companies. Farmers and farmers groups can make an assessment of current yields, potential yields, and collective purchases for example of fertilizers/seedlings they might need for the year and buyers can analyze the maps for deforestation and deforestation risks. The maps are important and a tool that we know.

Picture the farmer welcoming a person with a company logo onto his farm to come and walk the perimeter of the farm. Then picture a week later, a different person with a different company logo came to do the exact same work again. Picture something that is even more frustrating than that wasted time and that duplicated effort. The frustrating part is that the farmer or the farmer groups do not even own, see it, use it, or leverage it.

Another connection, and collaboration that chocolate brands need to do is on living income. Chocolate brands can and should collaborate on paying a price to farmers that enables a living income. It is not fair for one chocolate brand to carry that financial burden for all other chocolate brands. It is also not a good idea for a farmer or farmer groups to sell their entire harvest to just one buyer or buying company. That is not resilient, that is risky business. It is not a good idea. But if you are only selling a fraction of your harvest at a living income price, the price that enables living income, then you are never going to get out of poverty.

There should be a level playing field amongst consumer brands to lift farmers out of poverty to create wealth. When that happens, farmers can make the investment in their farms, that chocolate companies say they need to do. Farmers would invest in their families, farms, and children’s education but without resources, they cannot do that. Chocolate brands and stakeholders that realize this connection, this empathy, and this responsibility can achieve that opportunity to amplify their positive impact on the ground through collaboration. If they are transparent about it, then consumers would know which chocolate brands to award with their chocolate buying sense.

To be clear, chocolate companies should compete fiercely on delicious chocolate, but they should not compete on cocoa. There should be no competition for child labor, deforestation on poverty, community development, additional livelihood programs, etc.

Consumers should award the chocolate brands that make farmers and forest protection their priority, and not a unique selling point, but something that is an absolute baseline.It is not a race we should be competing with each other, but it’s something that we should be doing together, so that we can get to where we are going faster.

Slave Free Chocolate's Halloween 2022 Letter to the public.

In the week leading up to Halloween 2022 90 million pounds of chocolate will be sold in the US alone. The vast majority tied to child labor and slavery. Not only has the industry known of this for 21 years now, but they also promised to remedy this situation when they all signed the Harkin Engel Protocol​ in 2001.​  The first milestone was set for 2005. I founded Slave Free Chocolate.org just a few years after the 2005 milestone was horrifically missed and no one seemed to know anything about this situation. Chocolate is a treat; therefore, we the consumers have all the power to change this. Though we’ve caused a lot of flurries, the only news that isn’t fake is that the dial hasn’t moved in the right direction. Sadly, the last report sponsored by the US Department of Labor has the number of exploited children increasing. When Slave Free Chocolate was started the number was estimated at 800,000 it is now 1.6 million.

 

Before I delve deep into this State of Halloween Address, I feel I must first clarify what the activist community is referring to when talking about child labor​ i​n the cocoa sector. Especially in the developing world, it is normal to help your parents. This could be a part-time job after school or perhaps helping them with the corner market they own before and after school or having a big list of chores on the family farm after school and on the weekends. The operative word here is “school”.  The children we are fighting for aren’t going to school as their parents can’t A. afford to send them, and B. can’t afford to replace that child with a paid adult laborer. These children fall under what the UN has defined as ​The ​Worst Forms of Child Labor. In the case of cocoa, these children aren’t going to school, don’t have access to medical care, work with toxic chemicals, and machetes that are illegal for children to use, and lift weights too heavy for their growing frames. Additionally, a percentage of these 1.6 million children are trafficked in from poorer countries like Burkina Faso and Mali. These children are coerced and trafficked with the hope of getting paid for their work and sending money home to help their families. This is not the case; they aren’t getting paid. They are slaves.

 

Why​ are there 1.6 million children illegally harvesting our cocoa?​ The simple answer is that the farmers haven’t received a price increase for their beans since the late 70s. In The Ivory Coast, they are reported to be making $.75 cents a day, and in Ghana just a bit over $1. This is less than 1/2 of what is considered the poverty line. Not only has this 21-year cycle of abject poverty resulted in horrific child labor problems, but there is also a large negative environmental impact as well. The planet has lost 90% of an important rainforest. 

 

The question of why the industry hasn’t paid a living wage is the $64,000 question. True, dealing with governments in developing countries is plagued with challenges. But industrial cocoa is the biggest client of Ghana and The Ivory Coast. When you add to that, we are talking about a $100 Billion-dollar industry, it seems the power is there. The problem is that the intent isn’t. It must really boil down to profit over promises. Promises not only made to these children but to the world.

 

The industry has responded to consumer outrage with various initiatives and more promises while the goalposts continue to move into the future. Perhaps some of these initiatives could have merit but only if they are on top of paying the farmers a living wage. Without that, they are just marketing ploys to protect their brands. Even this week one chocolate company issued a report card, of course putting them on top. None of this is verified. It’s all a case of the fox guarding the hen house. I think you can safely claim that since the dial hasn’t been moved in the right direction, everything tried to date has failed. 

 

One thing that I consider to be good news is that the generic claims of “sustainability” and “traceable” have started to run their course. Consumers are waking up to the fake news associated when they see either of these words on websites and/or packaging. Remember that everyone in this industry is monitoring themselves. “Traceable” is a verb, not a guarantee that good things are at the end of the line. Journalists of the UK’s Channel 4’s piece Cadbury Exposed followed Cadbury’s traceable line to a farm where no children were going to school and horrific cuts from machetes weren’t treated in a clinic. Why? The farmers couldn’t afford any of that.  Of course, we all want everything to be “sustainable” but what does that really mean? Currently, the definitions are set by individual corporations. More of the fox guarding the hen house. There is good news in this regard. Consumers are getting wise to the emptiness of these claims and there is now an opportunity to introduce labeling that defines what “sustainable” means and how that product ranks. 


​Additional good news is that there are lawsuits filed that need our awareness of and support. International Rights Advocates is the place to immerse yourself with this information and ways you can help.

 

In the meantime, we need to keep pressuring the industrial chocolate companies to pay a living wage and ​open themselves up to independent auditing when they make their claims of doing all they can. Basically, fulfill the promises they not only made to these children but to the world. 

 

For ways to get into action, visit slavefreechocolate.org. Have a Happy Halloween!

 

Ayn Riggs

Director

Slave Free Chocolate

Slavefreechocolate.org

Email

Interview with former child slave of the cocoa industry.

Interview with Hon. Nelson Donkor owner of Shahamana Chocolate.

Mr. Donkor is a former child slave who escaped and is now running his own chocolate company. It is extremely important that we support people and companies like his as it is an avenue the growers can use to help bring them out of abject poverty.

1. Tell me about yourself, where are you from? I am Nelson Donkor. A young cocoa farmer from Tepa, in the Ahafo Ano North Municipal of the Ashanti Region of Ghana. I am an elected Assemblymember (a councilor) for the Kyekyewere electoral area. I was voted into power in 2015 and re-elected again in 2019. It’s a volunteer position and I rule over 2000 people. The people are mainly cocoa farmers.

2. How did you get involved with cacao? I will say that I got into cocoa from childhood. I was sold into child slavery. I was rescued and sent to the city where I was able to start school. I got back again into cocoa farming in 2012 when my dad died. I have been an active cocoa farmer since then.

3. What motivated you to get start your own chocolate company? I had the chance to taste chocolate in 2012 when some Swedish friends visited my farm. They brought the chocolate all the way from Sweden. Before that meeting, I didn't know what the beans were used for. I became interested in chocolate at that point. A German friend, Marie Schlemm, inspired and convinced me to make chocolate from my own cocoa beans. She organized a fundraising effort and bought me a 5kg grinder. I also learned that adding value to the cocoa beans is more profitable than selling the raw beans.

4. What changes have you seen in the industry since the big companies signed the Harkin Engle Protocol 20 years ago? I haven’t seen any change in the industry since the big companies signed the Harkin Engle Protocol 20 years ago. I think they have changed their tactics of robbing the farmers.

5. What is your message to the consumers in the west? I want the consumers in the west to buy directly from farmers or cooperative chocolate makers instead of the big companies.

6. If you had the power to change things, what would you do? If I have the power to change things, I will make sure cocoa farmers get fair prices for their beans. Also make sure farmers sell their beans directly to buyers instead of selling to Cocobod, the government cocoa regulator. Additionally, I would like to see those that participate in trafficking and the worst forms of child labor prosecuted and jailed.

7. What is your message to the big cocoa companies? I want the big companies to know that we the cocoa farmers are going through a lot of hardship so they should pay us a fair price for our beans. Our lives have to be better for ours to be able to continue producing cocoa beans. I have learned that farmers use children in their farms because they want cheap labour. With fair prices, child slavery will be a thing of the past.

8. What makes you happy? Seeing rescued children in the classroom makes me happy.