On the eve of the opening of World Cocoa Foundation Partnership Meeting in Sao Paulo last week, and important reception was held by WINCC - Women in Cocoa & Chocolate to celebrate the organisation becoming a formal foundation. 'Since 2016, WINCC has consistently highlighted the visibility of women in the cocoa sector, and the network connects and engages women throughout the cocoa and chocolate supply chain, empowering them to expand their influence and lead industry transformation.' In a separate announcement The Fairtrade Foundation also doubled down on its support for women in agriculture. See the article below for reports on both initiatives.
World Cocoa Foundation
国际贸易与发展
Washington,D.C. 35,664 位关注者
Collaborating for a thriving cocoa sector: improving farmer income, reversing deforestation & combatting child labour.
关于我们
The World Cocoa Foundation (WCF) is an international membership organization whose members span the entire global cocoa and chocolate sector, including farmer cooperatives, cocoa processors, chocolate manufacturers, supply chain companies and other companies worldwide. Our vision is to be a catalyst for a thriving and equitable cocoa sector that is collaborating to improve farmer income, reverse deforestation, and combat child labour.
- 网站
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https://www.worldcocoafoundation.org
World Cocoa Foundation的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 国际贸易与发展
- 规模
- 11-50 人
- 总部
- Washington,D.C.
- 类型
- 非营利机构
- 创立
- 2000
- 领域
- Agricultural Development、Public-Private Partnerships、Cocoa Sustainability、Supply Chain Sustainability、International Development、Empowered Communities、Prosperous Farmers和Healthy Planet
地点
World Cocoa Foundation员工
动态
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Regulatory changes are brewing in the EU — and they matter for the cocoa sector worldwide. The Omnibus Package could delay and reshape how companies report on sustainability and due diligence. That means new timelines, new thresholds, and big questions for supply chain transparency. Here are 3 smart questions every cocoa or chocolate company should be asking right now. ?? Read more: https://lnkd.in/eWdvXd9f #CocoaAction #SustainableCocoa #Omnibus
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???? ???????????????????? ?????????????? ????????????????????????????: ?????? ?????????????????? ???????? ?????? ?????????? ?????????? ???????????????????? ?????????????????????? ?????????????? ???? ????? ?????????? Over the past two days, Proforest joined stakeholders from across the cocoa supply chain at the World Cocoa Foundation event to discuss key challenges and opportunities for the sector. Discussions focused on: ? ???????????????????????? ???????????????????? – Mechanisation, financing, cooperativism, and technical assistance. ? ????????-???????????? ?????????????????? – The need for high-quality, comprehensive data to support producers and companies. ? ???????????????? ?????????????????????????? – Uniting efforts across the supply chain. ? ?????? ???????????????? ???????? ?????? ???????????????????????????? – Beyond regulations, sustainability strengthens production resilience. ? ?????????????????????? ?????????? ?????????????????? – Strategies for Brazil’s growth. ? ???????????????? ?????????????????? – Communication and incentives to support their transition. Proforester Jane Lino moderated a panel on the ???????????????? ???????? ?????? ???????????????????????? ?????? ???????????????????????? ???? ??????????, bringing together insights from academia, industry, producers, and civil society. The discussion reinforced that biodiversity and agroforestry are viable and beneficial approaches, leading to productivity gains and an attractive opportunity cost. Cocoa has a unique advantage among agricultural commodities, thriving in shaded and agroforestry systems that benefit people, nature, and the climate. Success depends on ???????????? ????????, ?????????? ????????????????????, ?????? ?????? ?????????? ???????????????????? ?????? ??????????????????. #SustainableCocoa #Agroforestry #Biodiversity #Resilience #Sustainability #WCFPM2025
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On Wednesday, Nicoletta Lumaldo and Youssouf N'djoré, together with Tawiah Agyarko-Kwarteng, Stephanie L. Daniels, Rupert Day, and johanna renckens, presented the Cocoa Household Income Study (CHIS) methodology and the outcomes of our study in Ghana at the 2025 World Cocoa Foundation Partnership Meeting in Brazil. The session,“?????????????????????????? ?????????????????? ???????????? ???????????????? ???? ?????????? ???????????? ???????????? ??????????????????????????”, covered: 1?? The presentation of the Cocoa Household Income Study (#CHIS) methodology 2?? Results from our study with Cocobod in Ghana 3?? Perspectives from the government (CIGCI), NGOs (Rikolto), and the private sector (Cargill) on how a sector-wide methodology enables accurate income measurement to drive meaningful change “Helping cocoa farmers succeed requires everyone in the cocoa sector to work together. Therefore, having one common methodology to measure and compare how much income cocoa farming families receive is important to help us understand their economic situation accurately and improve our interventions,” said Nicoletta. Based on surveys of 600 farming households and 22 focus group discussions during the 2022/23 cocoa harvest, our study found that 91% of cocoa farmers in Ghana are not yet earning a living income. Access our household income study here ?? https://lnkd.in/e7Cvr2_v At the end of the 2024/25 harvest period, the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa plans to conduct another study, which will be coordinated with Ghana and will consider all relevant price and income factors. Thank you for the inspiring discussions! #SustainableCocoa #LivingIncome #Sustainability #WCFPM25 Pictures: World Cocoa Foundation
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A Huge Thank You to Our Partnership Meeting Sponsors! ?? We’re incredibly grateful to our sponsors for their support in making the World Cocoa Foundation Partnership Meeting a success. Your leadership and dedication shape resilience through sustainability. #WCFPM2025 #WCFPM #SustainableCocoa #CocoaAction
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In a year defined by uncertainty - soaring prices, regulatory shifts, funding cuts -?one message rang clear: resilience is only possible through sustainability. And sustainability only works when it’s built together. ? As we wrap up this year’s WCF Partnership Meeting, we want to thank everyone who made it possible, from our incredible speakers to our attendees, co-organisers and the many hands behind the scenes. ? Partnership across the sector is our foundation. Your resilience, in the face of market volatility, climate pressure and regulatory shifts, is our shared call to action. ? We look forward to turning this week’s conversations into impact. See you next year! #WCFPM #WCFPM2025 #SustainableCocoa #CocoaAction
As we close this year’s WCF Partnership Meeting in S?o Paulo, I leave with a renewed sense of purpose. The challenges we face today aren’t passing disruptions, they are the new reality. Our answer must be resilience, built through sustainability. To all our speakers, partners and participants: thank you. To the countless others - farmers, local leaders, civil society, government allies - your work powers the cocoa sector every day, whether or not you were in the room. We’ve spent the past days with minds wide open and sleeves rolled up. From deep dives on compliance to lessons from Brazil’s diversified agriculture, what’s clear is this: no one actor can tackle this alone. Collaboration is an easy word to use, but harder to measure. The real question we must each ask ourselves in a year’s time is, “What did we accomplish?” Now comes the most important part: What will you do next? How will you turn insight into action? ?? See you in Amsterdam, February 2026.
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This week the World Cocoa Foundation 2025 Partnership Meeting is taking place in S?o Paulo, Brazil. This leading global event brings together #cocoa stakeholders throughout the value chain and from all over the world to talk about the future of the sector. Brazil, as a smaller production country compared to the West-African countries, wants to increase its production in the upcoming 5 years and can share many valuable experiences on transparency and agroforestry. This event marks another wake-up call and shows that we are reaching the planetary and human boundaries, also for Cocoa production. It is clear that we need a #Mutir?o – the Portuguese word derived from the indigenous Tupi-Guarani language that refers to a group coming together to work on a shared task. This is Brazil’s strong motto for the #COP30, upcoming in #Belem. Since the Netherlands is the world’s biggest importer of cocoa beans (providing the Dutch economy with an added value of EUR 9,9 billion), we are committed to contribute to making the cocoa sector more resilient, securing cocoa supplies in the future. The cocoa sector is currently under stress, supply has dropped due to crop disease, illegal mining and climate change. Cocoa prices have increased to historical heights. At the same time, EU legislation is demanding full transparency of a sector that is still very hard to trace due to all the smallholder farmers involved. It is great to see the dynamic within the sector and the best practices that can be shared across countries.? Our Consul-General in S?o Paulo Wieneke Vullings together with our Agricultural Counselor Paul Van de Logt, our Honorary Consul Annette de Castro and the team from the Hague (Mirte Ruesen) participated in the conference, and particularly contributed to the event Women in Cocoa, the panel on cocoa policies and the Living Income breakfast we organized together with IDH The Sustainable Trade Initiative and VOICE Network ?#WCF2025 #WCFPM2025 Solidaridad Network Sustainable economic development @ Dutch MFA
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"The issues facing the cocoa sector are systemic, woven into the very structure of our global supply chains. To build a sustainable future, we must collaborate pre-competitively to design a long term commitment, where long-term solutions take precedence over short-term gain. The world is shifting beneath our feet - the only way forward is together.” – Santiago Gowland “We must focus on what unites us, creating partnerships with associations where possible, and utilising existing resources. If we don’t prioritise clearly as a country, progress will stagnate. Being honest and transparent in forums like this is essential, as is understanding our internal strengths and weaknesses, and defining what we aim to achieve.” – Merlyn Casanova Loor “Regulatory uncertainty is not a setback - it's an opportunity. From evolving traceability standards to new sustainability frameworks, we have the chance to proactively engage with these changes and ensure the solutions we create reflect the needs of the cocoa sector.” – Brian McKeon “Changing consumer preferences are clear. If you want to eat chocolate, you want to know it didn’t do damage. The next generation of chocolate consumers wants more than just a product - they demand transparency, ethical sourcing, and sustainability in every bite. Every dollar wasted is one a farmer doesn’t get.” – Paul Davis “Technology alone won’t solve the problem. Smallholder farmers need the right access to tools, tech, and support to boost productivity. It's about making sure these innovations reach the farmers who need them most - at scale.” – Anna Paula Losi “Our world is breaking. We don't know what the new reality will be in one month, one year. Take steps as you leave the room today and force people to collaborate. Explain to farmers around the world why the carbon market, fair market value, blended finance is important. If we succeed in that, we’ll build resilience through sustainability. If we don’t, we lose.” – Marcello Brito As we leave this room, we carry more than insights - we carry responsibility. The time for theory is over - the next decade is about execution. Let’s move with urgency, act with intention and build something that lasts. #WCFPM #WCFPM2025 #CocoaAction #SustainableCocoa ?
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"For thousands of years, my people have spoken about biodiversity and our connection with nature. Cocoa is the heart of the world. If we separate ourselves from nature, it will impact us - we must share this planet and care for it. Agroforestry is the way to protect biodiversity and we still have time to return to these practices. We must do this, not just for ourselves, but for the future." – Cayetano H. Hernandez ? Biodiversity is essential but often overlooked. It underpins economies, ecosystems, and cocoa productivity. ? Agroforestry is more than planting trees. It’s about managing shade, regenerating ecosystems and leveraging existing biodiversity for long-term resilience. ? The business case is clear. Investing in biodiversity can drive higher yields and climate resilience, while inaction could cost billions. ? Indigenous knowledge matters. Traditional practices offer valuable solutions for sustainable cocoa farming and biodiversity protection. Protecting biodiversity isn’t just an environmental need - it’s a necessity for the future of cocoa. Let’s take action. ?? #WCFPM25 #WCFPM #CocoaAction #SustainableCocoa
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“No single country can combat cocoa diseases alone – we have a lot to learn from each other” – Rolando H. Cerda ???? Cocoa diseases are among the biggest threats to global supply, causing 30-40% losses and putting millions of livelihoods at risk. And with climate change accelerating the spread of pests and pathogens, the need for global collaboration has never been greater. ?? Genetics is at the core of the solution. Developing disease-resistant varieties is critical, but they must be resilient to multiple threats - not just one. Public-domain genetic research offers a foundation for cross-border collaboration. ?? Agroforestry isn’t just an environmental practice - it’s disease prevention. A better microclimate reduces plant stress, enhances resilience, and even slows disease transmission by mitigating wind-borne spores. ?? Preparedness is key. Every outbreak gives us a chance to learn from past experiences. Sharing knowledge, investing in farmer training and implementing early detection strategies (like CSSV test kits) can make a difference before crises spiral. ?? Funding is the missing link. The biggest challenge isn’t just developing solutions - it’s financing them. A global fund or knowledge-sharing platform could accelerate innovation, helping farmers and scientists get ahead of emerging threats. This is a collective challenge and no single country, organization, or farmer can tackle it alone. Breaking silos, sharing experiences and working together will determine the future of cocoa. #CocoaAction #WCFPM #WCFPM2025 #SustainableCocoa
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