LONDON, Feb 23, 2015 (BSS/AFP) – Chocolate lovers take heart: a steamy
greenhouse near London is helping to ensure that cocoa crops globally remain disease-free and bountiful to cope with the growing appetite for sweet treats.
On a winter morning, the temperature is a chilly eight degrees Celsius but inside the International Cocoa Quarantine Centre (ICQC), which simulates tropical conditions, the air is a balmy 23 degrees.
“Cocoa plants are generally quite difficult plants to grow,” said Heather Lake, a technician at the newly-revamped centre, which is funded half by the British chocolate industry and half by the US government.
“They don’t like too much sunlight, they don’t like too much shade. It’s
quite difficult to get the climate correct,” she told AFP at the facility,
which is hosted by the University of Reading.
Situated in the village of Arborfield, west of London, the ICQC boasts
around 1,000 square metres (10,760 square feet) of greenhouse space and 400
cocoa plant varieties.
The centre’s aim is to reduce the amount of disease affecting cocoa plants
by quarantining them before sharing them with different countries to produce
new, more resistant varieties.
The plants are often collected in the wild on expeditions to the tropics on
which researchers collect cuttings or seeds from disease-free samples.
At a time when changing tastes in emerging economies like China and India
are fuelling global demand for chocolate, the centre acts as a vital resource
for producer countries when pests or droughts strike crops.
“That’s where we come into play,” said Andrew Daymond, manager of the ICQC,
which was set up 30 years ago. “We are the main hub for international movements
of cocoa plants.”
Cocoa originates from South America but west Africa now dominates
production, accounting for 73 percent of global output, according to the
International Cocoa Organization.
Such a heavy concentration of production in one region — Ivory Coast and
Ghana alone represent 60 percent — makes it vulnerable to shocks.
Prices leapt to almost $3,400 (3,000 euros) a tonne in New York in
September amid fears that the Ebola crisis in west Africa could affect cocoa
supplies.
Both Ivory Coast and Ghana have, however, so far been spared by the
outbreak.
The three countries worst hit by Ebola — Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia
— represent just 0.7 percent of world cocoa output and saw their yields
plummet.
Cocoa prices later fell back again but still rose 15 percent overall during
2014.
There is also the potential threat to the industry from plant diseases,
which in west Africa can mean up to 30 percent of the annual harvest is lost.
“In each cocoa-growing country, they face particular challenges to do with
pest and diseases, low yield potential of planted materials, extreme weather
events,” Daymond said.
“The basic objective of the project is to allow safe movement of cocoa
plants from one part of the world to another.”
In Britain, which has no endemic pests or diseases affecting cocoa, the
centre can grow resistant varieties before dispatching them around the world,
though few people would recognise these as cocoa trees.
“When we do an export, we send the small branches off a tree,” Lake said.
“We then remove all the leaves and we just send a stick.”
Daymond explained that producer countries can then “establish a plant that
is genetically identical to the plant that they received the cutting from”.
The centre also researches the effects of climate change on cocoa crops and
is looking at developing new varieties that would be more resistant to droughts
or increased carbon dioxide levels.
All of which could help to make a box of chocolates that little bit more
affordable.
