London, 29 November 2013–The International Cocoa Organization today released its revised forecasts, summarized below, of world production, grindings and stocks of cocoa beans for the 2012/2013 cocoa year. The data published in Issue No. 4 – Volume XXXIX – Cocoa year 2012/2013 of the Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, reflect the most recent information available to the Secretariat as at the middle of November 2013.

Summary of revised estimates

 

Cocoa year
(Oct-Sep)
2011/2012 2012/2013 Year-on-year change
Revised
estimates
Previous
estimates a/
Revised
estimates
(thousand tonnes) (Per cent)
World production 4 080 3 986 3 931 – 149 – 3.7%
World grindings 3 956 3 998 4 052 + 96 + 2.4%
Surplus/deficit b/ + 83   – 52 – 160
End-of-season stocks 1 832 1 784 1 672 – 160 – 8.7%
Stocks/Grindings ratio 46.3% 44.6% 41.3%

Notes:
a/   Estimates published in Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, Vol. XXXIX – No. 3 – Cocoa year 2012/2013
b/   Surplus/deficit: net world crop (gross crop adjusted for loss in weight) minus grindings
Totals may differ due to rounding.

This issue of the Bulletin contains the Secretariat’s revised estimates for the 2012/2013 cocoa year as well as data for the past four years of production and grindings of cocoa beans, detailed by country. The main features of the global cocoa market are illustrated in colour charts. In addition, it includes comments on crop and demand prospects in the leading countries for the current season, and a review of price developments on international markets for cocoa beans during the 2012/2013 cocoa year.

Statistical information on trade in cocoa beans, cocoa products and chocolate, by country and by region, published in this edition, covers annual data from 2009/2010 to 2011/2012 and quarterly statistics for the period July-September 2011 to January-March 2013. Details of destination of exports and origin of imports for leading cocoa exporting countries are also provided. Historical statistics on cocoa trade and consumption, by country and by region, for the period 2003/2004 to 2011/2012 are presented for reference.

Copies of the Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, including in Microsoft Excel files and in Adobe PDF format versions, can be ordered by completing and returning this form or from the ICCO Secretariat at the address below:

International Cocoa Organization
Westgate House
Ealiong
London W5 1YY, UK

Tel:              +44 (0)20 7400 5050
Fax:             +44 (0)20 7421 5500
E-mail:         registry@icco.org or info@icco.org

The International Cocoa Organization is pleased to announce that The World Cocoa Directory 2013/2014 is now available.

The new edition of the Directory, published for the first time in six years, contains up-to-date information obtained through extensive research work and thanks to the ICCO’s strong connections within the cocoa and chocolate industry.

It is a remarkable and efficient reference book, a “must have” for any professional involved in the cocoa supply chain and chocolate production. Each link in this worldwide supply chain is represented, from the cocoa farmer to the chocolate manufacturer, making the long journey from raw material to finished product the business of everyone:

  • Associations / Cooperatives                   
  • Exporters / Importers                            
  • Traders / Banks / Insurers                       
  • Cocoa & Chocolate machinery makers
  • Carriers (land / sea transport)                
  • Chocolate makers / Chocolatiers
  • Warehousing / Cocoa handling               
  • Chocolate & Confectionery distributors
  • Packaging suppliers                             
  • Government bodies / NGOs                   
  • Research institutions                            
  • Fumigation / Fertilizer / Pesticide suppliers
  • Certification bodies                              
  • Industry Information / Consultants          
  • Inspection / Control organizations           
  • Cocoa & Chocolate processors

The World Cocoa Directory 2013/2014 is unique and truly reflects the current trends of the cocoa and chocolate industry.

The World Cocoa Directory 2013/2014 – very easy to use with a traditional alphabetical listing and two indexes (by country and by activity category) – is comprised of over 3,000 entries and includes over 2,500 verified email addresses, facilitating business contacts and opportunities and presenting a 360 degree view of the cocoa and chocolate industry.

The World Cocoa Directory 2013/2014 comes in a bound, hard cover edition and is available at €310 or £265 per copy, including postage and packaging worldwide. Generous discounts of course are given for multiple copy sales, and further details of these are available from Philippe Pestelle at the ICCO ( assist.wcc@icco.org).

To receive your copy, click here to download, complete and return the attached Order Form by email or fax.

DURATION:
Two years and six months
LOCATION:
Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea
NATURE OF PROJECT:
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Standards
ESTIMATED TOTAL COST:
US$ 824,359
FINANCING COMMITED BY STDF:
US$ 604,491 – STDF
CO-FINANCING
US$ 98,337 – Mars and others
COUNTERPART FINANCING
US$ 121,531
PROJECT EXECUTING AGENCY (PEA):
Center for Agriculture and Bioscience International (CABI)
PROJECT SUPERVISORY BODY:
International Cocoa Organization (ICCO)
PROJECT STARTING DATE:
September 2013
COMPLETION DATE:
March 2016

 

Brief Description:

The overall development goal of this project is to improve market access for cocoa beans from South East Asia through capacity building in SPS and food safety practices and compliance.

Project Status:

The project was completed and closed in March 2016.

Project Status:

Please click here to download the Project Completion Report (PCR)

 

At a press conference immediately after the meetings, the ICCO’s Executive Director, Dr Jean-Marc Anga, presented a review of the outcome of the 88th session of the International Cocoa Council, held at the Holiday Inn, Wembley, London, 23-27 September 2013:

Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome to the final day of the 88th session of the International Cocoa Council and its subsidiary bodies, where we have just concluded a wide-ranging and very well-attended meeting, including the expanded Consultative Board on the World Cocoa Economy.

We were pleased this week to have our meetings graced with the presence of Ministers, Ambassadors and High Commissioners representing our member countries.

We are coming to the end of the first year of the International Cocoa Agreement 2010, which first came into force on 1 October 2012. I was pleased to be able to report that Ecuador, has now officially joined the Agreement, bringing the number of member countries of the Organization up to 46. With a number of other countries on the point of joining as well, we are quite confident that the number of member countries under the Agreement will exceed 50 before the end of the new cocoa year.

This week the first meeting of the Consultative Board on the World Cocoa Economy took place in its expanded form, as agreed by the Council at its previous meeting in March 2013 in Bali, Indonesia. This Consultative Board now includes representatives from across the spectrum of the cocoa and chocolate industry, NGOs, suppliers to the industry and ancillary businesses related to cocoa. We had a good first meeting of this expanded group, and they are tackling a number of important issues under the auspices of the Council.

After the great success of the first World Cocoa Conference, held in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire last November, we were able to report to the Council that plans are well in hand for the second edition of the Conference, to take place in Amsterdam from 9 – 13 June 2014. This event will review the progress made towards achieving the development goals set out in the Global Cocoa Agenda and agreed by all major stakeholders, for the sustainable future of the industry. We will also be addressing significant issues in the Conference content, including achieving remunerative prices and improved livelihoods for cocoa farmers by 2020. The latest details of the World Cocoa Conference 2014 are in a new brochure that has just been published.

We were able to report to the Council as well on the success of two other capacity building meetings held in member countries in the past few months—the International Workshop on Cocoa Certification held in Douala, Cameroon in June, and the International Seminar on Cocoa Terminal Markets and Econometric Modelling of the Cocoa Market, which took place in Guayaquil, Ecuador in July. The certification workshop brought together over 130 experts and stakeholders together to debate this important issue, while the seminar on cocoa terminal markets is now planned to be repeated in both Africa and Indonesia.

Among the projects we introduced to the Council is a new one called CocoaSafe, to take place in Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea, and which will aim to help smallholder producers and exporters improve their cocoa in order to consistently meet international food safety and SPS standards.

Closer to home, we were able to report on a smooth move into the Secretariat’s new offices at Westgate House in Ealing, West London, a move that will save the Organization significant outlay in rent, and will help the Organization achieve a zero-growth budget for the upcoming two years. These premises will serve us well until the agreed September 2015 date for a Council decision on whether the headquarters of the Organization will be relocated to Abidjan.

The ICCO last week published for the first time in six years its World Cocoa Directory, which we were able to introduce to the Council. The 2013/14 edition has been completely revised and updated, and it will soon be available in digital form as well, on the ICCO website.

We also discussed in the Council the organization of an ICCO delegation to China, in order to establish stronger links with the industry there, and of course to solicit China’s membership in the Organization. We feel that the potential cocoa market in China is very significant, and its closer participation in the work of the Organization can only be beneficial to the entire cocoa value chain. We were pleased to welcome representatives of the government of the People’s Republic of China to our meetings this week.

And finally, we are very grateful to two of our members: the government of Switzerlandwhich has kindly agreed to host the next meeting of the International Cocoa Council and its subsidiary bodies in Bern in March 2014; and the government of Côte d’Ivoire, which has kindly agreed to host the March 2015 meetings in Abidjan.

Also at the meetings: Executive Director Dr. Jean-Marc Anga presented outgoing International Cocoa Council Chairman Mr. Michael Ndoping with the ICCO’s golden cocoa pod (pictured above, Mr. Ndoping on the left). The Council elected Ms. Anna Tofftén of Sweden as Chairman for 2013/14, and Mr. Conradin Rasi of Switzerland as Vice Chairman.   

The following presentations from the meetings are available to download:

Presentation on Activity-based budgeting, given by Mr. Michael Mann, EU Consultant (presentation to  the Council);

Presentation on the new Common Fund for Commodities (CFC) funding policy, given by Dr. Parvindar Singh, Managing Director a.i. of the Common Fund for Commodities (presentation to the Council);

Presentation on Sustainable Certification given by Mr. Christopher Wunderlich, Co-ordinator of the United Nations Forum on Sustainability Standards (UNFSS) (presented to the Economics Committee);

National Cocoa Development Plan presentations to the Consultative Board on the World Cocoa Economy, given by the Governments of

Ecuador on 25 September 2013 signed the International Cocoa Agreement 2010, the United Nations Treaty Section has confirmed.

Click here to see the official notification of accession to the Agreement from the United Nations.

London, 30 August 2013–The International Cocoa Organization today releases its revised forecasts for the current 2012/2013 cocoa year and revised estimates for 2011/2012 of world production, grindings and stocks of cocoa beans, summarized below.  The data published in Issue No. 3 – Volume XXXIX – Cocoa year 2012/2013 of the Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, reflect the most recent information available to the Secretariat as at the beginning of August 2013.

Summary of revised estimates and forecasts

 

Cocoa year
(Oct-Sep)
2011/2012 2012/2013 Year-on-year change
Revised
estimates
Previous
forecasts a/
Revised
forecasts
(thousand tonnes) (Per cent)
World production 4 082 3 967 3 986 – 96 – 2.4%
World grindings 3 954 3 987 3 998  + 44 + 1.1%
Surplus/deficit b/ + 87   – 60   – 52
End-of-season stocks 1 836 1 773 1 784 – 52 – 2.8%
Stocks/Grindings ratio 46.4% 44.5% 44.6%

Notes:
a/   Forecasts published in Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, Vol. XXXIX – No. 2 – Cocoa year 2012/2013
b/   Surplus/deficit: net world crop (gross crop adjusted for loss in weight) minus grindings
Totals may differ due to rounding.

This issue of the Bulletin contains the Secretariat’s revised forecasts for the 2012/2013 cocoa year as well as data for the past four years of production and grindings of cocoa beans, detailed by country. The main features of the global cocoa market are illustrated in colour charts. In addition, it includes comments on crop and demand prospects in the leading countries for the current season, and a review of price developments on international markets for cocoa beans during the April-June quarter of 2013.

Statistical information on trade in cocoa beans, cocoa products and chocolate, by country and by region, published in this edition, covers annual data from 2009/2010 to 2011/2012 and quarterly statistics for the period April-June 2011 to October-December 2012. Details of origin of imports and destination of exports for leading cocoa importing countries are also provided. Historical statistics on cocoa trade and consumption, by country and by region, for the period 2003/2004 to 2011/2012 are presented for reference.

Copies of the Quarterly Bulletin of Cocoa Statistics, including in Microsoft Excel files and in Adobe PDF format versions, can be ordered by completing and returning this form or from the ICCO Secretariat at the address below:

International Cocoa Organization
Westgate House
Ealing
London W5 1YY, UK

Tel:              +44 (0)20 8991 6000
Fax:             +44 (0)20 8997 4372
E-mail:         registry@icco.org or info@icco.org

Malaysia on 5 August 2013 signed the International Cocoa Agreement 2010, the United Nations Treaty Section has confirmed.

Click here to see the official notification of accession to the Agreement from the United Nations.

The ICCO has published a full report on the International Workshop on Cocoa Certification, held in Douala, Cameroon in June.

The report, which can be downloaded here, includes a summary of the Workshop’s themes, proceedings and outcome, along with its recommendations, a statement by co-organizer the United Nations Forum on Sustainable Standards, a summary of the vision from key stakeholders participating at the Workshop, a fully updated programme and a list of participants.

The Workshop, which was held at the Hotel Sawa in Douala, was co-organized by Cameroon’s Ministry of Commerce and the Office National du Café et du Cacao (ONCC). It was kindly sponsored by the Government of Cameroon, the UNFSS, the Dutch Sustainable Trade Initiative (IDH), Hershey, Mondelēz International and Mars Chocolate.

Pictured: The trade and industry perspective panel at the International Workshop on Cocoa Certification in Douala

LONDON, 22 July 2013—The African Cocoa Coalition (ACC), which comprises autonomous non-governmental organizations and farmer groups active in the cocoa sector, has become the 35th stakeholder to sign the Abidjan Cocoa Declaration.

David Guba Kpelle, the ACC’s Programme Director, signed the Declaration on behalf of the Coalition at the recent International Workshop on Cocoa Certification in Douala, Cameroon.

ACC has been playing an active role in the ICCO’s multi-stakeholder sustainability initiatives in the cocoa sector since the first Roundtable on Sustainable Cocoa Economy was held in Accra in 2007 and it has since been involved in capacity building for cocoa farmers, including training them to form strong associations and cooperatives.

The ground-breaking Abidjan Cocoa Declaration now has 35 signatories from across the entire cocoa sector. The international stakeholders began signing the Declaration at a special ceremony during the first World Cocoa Conference in Abidjan in November.

The Declaration recommends specific and measurable actions to achieve a sustainable cocoa economy, and reflects the more detailed proposals of the Global Cocoa Agenda. The important issues highlighted by the Agenda formed the basis of the many presentations and panels that took place at the Conference.

The Declaration is the first step in an ongoing process aimed at creating a sustainable future for the cocoa sector and helping to ensure that its benefits are shared along the entire chain, starting with the growers. Another World Cocoa Conference, planned for 9 – 13 June, 2014 in Amsterdam, is set to monitor and review the progress being made to deal with the issues outlined by the Declaration and the Agenda.

The texts of both the Abidjan Cocoa Declaration and the Global Cocoa Agenda, as well as most of the presentations that were delivered at the first World Cocoa Conference, can be downloaded here.

The other signatories to the Abidjan Cocoa Declaration are: Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Indonesia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Togo, Papua New Guinea, Mars, Mondelēz International, Nestlé, Blommer Chocolate, CEMOI, Ferrero Trading, Armajaro Trading Ltd, ADM, Barry Callebaut, Cargill,  Hershey, Petra Foods, Amtrada/Continaf, Noble Group, Olam International / Outspan Ivoire, Touton, Transmar Group, Federation of Cocoa Commerce, CAOBISCO, World Cocoa Foundation, IDH (Dutch Sustainable Agriculture Initiative), ECA (European Cocoa Association), ACP (The Africa, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States), Talents (farmer), ICI (International Cocoa Initiative) and HCCO (Hamburg Cocoa & Commodity Office GmbH).

The Declaration remains open, and all cocoa stakeholders are urged to sign it.

Nicaragua on 15 July 2013 acceded to the International Cocoa Agreement 2010, the United Nations Treaty Section has confirmed.

Click here to see the official notification of accession to the Agreement from the United Nations.