The Dominant Origin
Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) is the undisputed giant of global cacao production. The country produces approximately 2.2 million tonnes of cacao annually — roughly 40-45% of the entire world supply. No other agricultural commodity is so dominated by a single country.
Cacao is the backbone of the Ivorian economy, accounting for roughly 15% of GDP and employing an estimated 1 million farming families directly, with 5-6 million people depending on the sector.
Growing Regions
| Region | Output | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Sud-Ouest (Soubré, San-Pédro) | ~40% of national output | Largest producing zone, frontier farming |
| Centre-Ouest (Daloa, Gagnoa) | ~25% | Traditional heartland, older farms |
| Sud (Abidjan hinterland) | ~15% | Proximity to export ports |
| Est (Abengourou, Bondoukou) | ~10% | Bordering Ghana, similar conditions |
| Ouest (Man, Danané) | ~10% | Mountainous terrain, newer plantations |
The vast majority of Ivorian cacao is Forastero — hardy, high-yielding, but with a simpler flavor profile than the fine-flavor varieties grown in South America.
The Supply Chain
Ivory Coast's cacao supply chain involves several layers:
- Smallholder farmers — average farm size is 3-5 hectares
- Pisteurs (buying agents) — travel to farms to purchase beans
- Traitants (intermediaries) — aggregate from pisteurs
- Exporters — major companies (Cargill, Barry Callebaut, Olam) with processing facilities
- Le Conseil du Café-Cacao (CCC) — government regulator that sets farmgate prices
The CCC sets a guaranteed minimum price each season, similar to Ghana's Cocobod system. For the 2025/26 season, the farmgate price was approximately 1,500 CFA francs per kilogram — a significant increase from historical levels due to global supply shortages.
Quality and Flavor
Ivorian cacao is primarily bulk-grade Forastero, valued for its consistency and volume rather than complex flavor. Typical characteristics:
- Strong cocoa flavor — robust, straightforward chocolate taste
- Higher bitterness — more astringent than fine-flavor origins
- Moderate acidity — less fruity than South American varieties
- Good blending base — the foundation of most mass-market chocolate
However, some regions (particularly the eastern border area near Ghana) produce cacao with more nuanced flavors, and a small but growing specialty sector is developing.
Sustainability Challenges
Ivory Coast faces significant sustainability issues in its cacao sector:
Deforestation
Cacao farming has been a primary driver of deforestation in Ivory Coast. The country lost approximately 80% of its forest cover between 1960 and 2020, with cacao expansion being a major cause. The Cocoa & Forests Initiative (CFI) launched in 2017 aims to end deforestation from cacao.
Child Labor
Despite significant efforts, child labor remains a concern in the Ivorian cacao sector. The International Cocoa Initiative and major chocolate companies fund programs to monitor and reduce child labor, but the root cause — farmer poverty — persists.
Farmer Poverty
The average Ivorian cacao farmer earns well below the living income threshold. This drives many of the sector's other problems: deforestation (clearing new land to increase production), child labor (inability to hire adult workers), and low investment in farm maintenance.
Cacao Juice Opportunity
Despite being the world's largest cacao producer, Ivory Coast has virtually no commercial cacao juice production. This represents both a challenge and an enormous opportunity:
Challenges:
- Forastero pulp is less aromatic than fine-flavor varieties
- Infrastructure for pulp collection at scale doesn't exist
- Farmers prioritize bean sales over pulp recovery
Opportunities:
- The sheer volume is staggering — even capturing 5% of the pulp would represent massive quantities
- Upcycling could provide the additional farmer income needed to address poverty
- Companies like Cabosse Naturals are beginning to develop supply chains for Ivorian cacao fruit ingredients
- The carbon footprint reduction from utilizing waste pulp aligns with European buyer sustainability requirements
The scale of Ivorian production means that even modest adoption of pulp recovery could transform the global cacao juice market overnight.