Ivory Coast explores auctioning in cocoa price control effort
August 23, 20181.1K views0 comments
Ivory Coast’s Cocoa Coffee Council (CCC) has decided to auction all of its cocoa production to exporters in advance in order to set a guaranteed price throughout the season for producers, according to a report monitored by business a.m.
Approximately 1.7 million tonnes of cocoa export contracts have already been sold in mid-August, which should allow the CCC to set a guaranteed price of between 750 and 800 CFA per kg in October.
One CCC source said it had already sold 1.4 million tonnes of the main and 320,000 tonnes of the mid-crop.
“We think that by selling all the harvest before the beginning of the season, it gives us more guarantee in case of falling prices and allows us to set a guaranteed price for planters unchanged between the main and the mid-crop,” the source said.
“We have been forced to change our sales methods to adapt to the current environment. There is too much fluctuation and instability in the market,” added another source.
Ivory Coast cocoa production is expected to remain stable at around 1.8 million and 1.9 million tonnes in the next two to three years, compared with 2 million tonnes last season, due to swollen shoot development.
The government, through the ministry of water and forests, has also undertaken to clamp down on illegal cocoa farming, which would also reduce cocoa production.