How the rise of gourmet chocolate can lift the fortunes of small farmers

As consumers discover the subtle flavors of single-source cocoa, this cacao-producing company is working to make sure that demand lifts the fortunes of small producers around the world.

coffee farming
As chocolate gourmets come to appreciate the higher quality of criollo beans—the world’s purest and most flavourful beans—there has been a rising need for indigenous chocolate producers. Image: Taras Young,CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Chocolate once reigned supreme in Central America: the Mayans considered it the food of the gods, and they used cocoa beans as a form of currency. But the birthplace of chocolate has benefitted little from the chocolate boom – despite the fact that this is where most of the world’s purest and most flavorful beans, called “criollo” beans come from. Indeed, whil Ghana produces more than 40 per cent of the world’s cocoa, Belize and Guatemala combine for only about 1 per cent of global production, leaving its indigenous producers on the sideline.

But that’s changing as gourmets come to appreciate both the higher quality of criollo beans, which account for less than 3 per cent of world production, and the importance of buying from chocolatiers that treat their suppliers right.

With this new trend, initiatives like Uncommon Cacao (named for the cacao plant that provides the raw material for the cocoa we buy in stores) have found an enormous opportunity to revive chocolate production in countries with a rich tradition of cocoa cultivation like Belize and Guatemala.

Uncommon Cacao (UC) began in 2010, with a goal of growing high-quality, sustainably produced cocoa bound to export to quality-focused brands overseas. After successfully launching in Belize, UC has expanded to Guatemala. In both countries, UC is revolutionizing local economies by linking small indigenous producers with the specialized cocoa industry.

Cacao to Cocoa

In the chocolate industry, cacao is normally harvested from cacaotales (cacao plantations) when the cacao en baba (cacao beans) are ripe. They’re then carefully taken out of the pod and fermented for a week, then dried in the sun or in an oven for 48 hours, then packed in sacks and sold to processors, who make the real money by blending the beans into a commoditized product, then liquefying them and creating the product we find on shelves.

Commoditized cocoa often passes through multiple middlemen and processors, but “bean to bar” producers work directly with farmers or cooperatives and handle all of the processing themselves.

Uncommon Cacao is one of them.

I saw that the market was really growing for this type of cocoa. So, two weeks after quitting my job I was already in Belize with Taza, looking for how to start a pilot project.

Emily Stone, Uncommon Cacao

Beans to bars

Company founder Emily Stone learned about bean-to-bar while working as a shareholder advocate at Green Century Funds. There, she came upon a Boston-based start-up called Taza Chocolate, and she visited co-founder Alex Whitmore to learn more about the model. Soon, she decided to go into business for herself.

“I saw that the market was really growing for this type of cocoa,” she says. “So, two weeks after quitting my job I was already in Belize with Taza, looking for how to start a pilot project.”

Once there, she found a small cooperative that had been certified sustainable by Fair Trade, but was struggling to make ends meet – largely because of procedural issues that could be easily corrected and demand issues that she sensed would soon fix themselves.

Farmers, for example, tended to dry and ferment beans in their houses and then transport them by bus to the village, often to find they didn’t meet the quality criteria established by the cooperative. At the same time, aggressively-harvested cacao would wreak havoc on soil, so cacao became a low-priority crop, behind sugar and coffee.

Meanwhile, few outside Belize had tasted the country’s unique chocolate – but those that did were liking it.

“Belize has a cultural history of cocoa with very good genetics,” says Stone. “It was the perfect place to start: a small country where it is feasible to cover a large part of the country and work with many producers.”

That same year, Taza, UC, and Dandelion Chocolate pooled their resources to start working with Mayan Q’eqchi’ communities, and Maya Mountain Cocoa (MMC) was born.

UC held meetings with local farmers and explained how agroforestry could provide shade trees that ensure better cacao and nourish the soil while generating a second income stream, and how improved processing could lead to more consistent quality in the cocoa. The farmers said they’d give it a try if UC would come to them to buy rather than asking them to haul their product to market.

Fifty-two families joined the program, and their plots were soon certified as organic by the Intitute of Marketecology (IMO). By 2013, UC was exporting six tons of cocoa per year to 10 US bean-to-bar chocolate companies and gaining international recognition. It won the International Chocolate AwardsGood Food Awards and the Academy of Chocolate Awards, and Belize, was now in the chocolate map.

Meeting demand

By 2016, UC’s network had grown to 2620 farmers, of whom 868 are women who are growing cacao in 3194 hectares; and by 2016, farmers’ revenue had increased 61 per cent. Meanwhile, consumers were gobbling up the product, and UC faced a challenge any businessman would envy: meeting the surging demand.

But orders for Maya Mountain Cocoa were backing up, and it became clear that Belize did not have the capacity to satisfy that market, so Stone turned to neighboring Guatemala. The country was home to the same Maya communities (Q’echi’ and Mopan), and it produced much more cocoa (2000 tons) than Belize did while facing the same quality challenges that Belize had when UC first showed up.

It also had interested US buyers, like Lake Champlain Chocolate, which had an affiliation with local NGO Fundación Lachuaand was interested in buying cocoa. They met with Stone and hired her as a consultant to replicate the processes she’d undertaken in Belize, and soon they were buying six tons per year themselves.

The Guatemalan government then began to invest in chocolate projects as well, promoting best practices across the region.

Building cooperatives

With this momentum, Stone and her partners created a second company, Cacao Verapaz, to buy from select community associations rather than individual farmers. The company provides training and technical assistance to communities, as well as controlling the quality.

More than 40 chocolate companies now buy from Guatemala, but most consumers still don’t know about single-source cocoa. So UC acquired a cocoa broker in the US and is now importing cocoa from select communities in a half-dozen countries, and selling more than 200 tons of community-specific cocoa to more than 130 chocolatiers.

“We are still very small compared to the international cocoa and chocolate market in general, but we are some of the biggest value chains in terms of bean-to-bar,” says Stone. “This phenomenon is beginning to grow in many geographies, and we want to be part of it, creating authentic and lasting relationships with quality producers around the world.”

This story was published with permission from Ecosystem Marketplace.

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