Leading West African cocoa producers Ghana 🇬🇭 & Ivory Coast 🇨🇮 face an uphill battle to comply with a new EU regulation preventing commodity imports linked to forest loss. The EU’s De-forestation Regulation (EUDR) came into force in June 2023 with an 18-month transition for companies. Ambassadors from 17 countries have described the EUDR as an “inherently discriminatory and punitive unilateral benchmarking system. The EU’s law disregards these countries’ efforts to balance nature conservation with people’s livelihoods. The EU 🇪🇺 did not make clear who should pay for carbon credits to offset any de-forestation, which is turning out to look like the producers from mostly poorer countries should bear the costs to be able to export into the EU. In Ghana, farmers don’t get their fair share of profits because cocoa beans are not sold at the true market value. These regions need better infrastructure to for better market access and reducing losses. If the EU wanted only ethical cocoa entering Europe, then investment is a better solution than carbon credits. Even worse, Africa have historically fetched lower carbon credit prices, currently averaging less than $10 per tonne compared to over $100 in other countries. One of the better environmental solutions the Ghanaian 🇬🇭 gov’t have started is for farmers to plant shade trees to reduce the heat on the ground and increase production; they also learn how to prune effectively and apply other sustainable farming techniques. Cocoa prices have soared 47% in the past year due to El Nino, disease and other factors. Multinational chocolate makers ($130 billion in annual profits) have done everything possible to pay extremely low prices for the raw cocoa beans from Africa, only to have an a massive profit margin for the final product. To begin to counteract this, Africans are reviewing a feasibility study on establishing an African Cocoa Exchange. Video source - African Stream Источник: The Paradigm Shift Channel ⏳
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