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With 40% of Its Cocoa Traceable, Côte d’Ivoire Faces a Race to Meet New E.U. Standards

With 40% of Its Cocoa Traceable, Côte d’Ivoire Faces a Race to Meet New E.U. Standards
Friday, 10 October 2025 11:01
  • Côte d’Ivoire traced 40% of cocoa for 2024/25 season
  • Most cocoa remains untracked due to informal supply chains
  • EU deforestation law delayed; national traceability efforts expanding

Côte d’Ivoire has traced 40% of its cocoa beans from the 2024/2025 season (October–September), according to the 2025 edition of the Cocoa Barometer report, released on Wednesday, October 8, by Voice Network, a coalition of NGOs.

The 200-page report, which analyzes key global issues in the chocolate industry such as poverty, deforestation, and human rights, blames weak traceability on the fragmented nature of the domestic supply chain.

The authors note that most cocoa sourcing in Côte d’Ivoire relies on informal intermediaries. Direct contact between traders or processors and farmers is rare, as the former usually work through middlemen, local buyers (traitants), cooperatives, or other operators.

This lack of transparency makes it difficult to monitor the sustainability of the cocoa supply and hampers accountability for deforestation and other environmental damage,” the report stated.

The findings suggest that 60% of Ivorian cocoa remains untracked , consistent with a 2023 study by the Trase platform and UCLouvain, which estimated that 55% of cocoa exported in 2019 , nearly one million tons , was untraceable.

Cécile Rénier, a researcher at UCLouvain, previously explained:

Links between cooperatives and farmers are loosely structured. Farmers often sell to multiple buyers to cope with payment delays, while cooperatives sometimes purchase from non-members to meet client volume targets. It’s also difficult to verify that the bags sold by a farmer actually come from their own field, since production per plot is hard to estimate.”

EU Regulation and Local Efforts

The report coincides with news that the European Commission (EC) is advocating another postponement, until 2026, of the bloc’s deforestation regulation. The law, intended to ban imports of agricultural products linked to deforestation, including cocoa, coffee, soy, palm oil, timber, and beef, had been slated to take effect at the end of this year.

Analysts say traceability remains a critical issue for Côte d’Ivoire’s cocoa industry, as the European Union (EU) accounts for 55% of the country’s cocoa and cocoa product exports.

Despite the challenges, several initiatives are underway. In September 2023, Côte d’Ivoire adopted a National Coffee-Cocoa Traceability System, built on a digital platform that records all commercial transactions and includes a mechanism to label coffee and cocoa sacks.

Between April 2019 and December 2020, the Coffee and Cocoa Board (CCC) conducted a census of farmers and their plots. In 2022, the CCC began issuing identification cards to farmers, which include names, plot sizes, and other details used in coffee and cocoa sales and payment operations.

Authorities report that nearly 855,000 cards have been distributed out of 993,000 registered farmers, who collectively cultivate more than 3.2 million hectares of coffee and cocoa.

Espoir Olodo

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