Ivory Coast cocoa growers rue ‘curse of brown gold’

A cocoa producer sun-dries beans in Betykro, a camp of cocoa producers living in precarious conditions 20 km from Guiglo, Ivory Coast. (AFP)
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Updated 26 January 2026
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Ivory Coast cocoa growers rue ‘curse of brown gold’

  • In its last report on the sector in 2019, the World Bank estimated that more than half (54.9 percent) of cocoa producers lived on less than 757 CFA francs ($1.36) a day

GUIGLO: Laurent Kone’s wattle-and-daub house, with its tarpaulin roof and no electricity, lies down a bumpy red-earth track in western Ivory Coast.
For 30 years, he has been growing cocoa and is typical of the smallholders who have been the backbone in making the west African country the world’s leading producer of the crop.
But the country currently faces major difficulties in selling its cocoa, hit by a slowdown in exports amid buyers’ liquidity problems and a drop in global prices.
For growers who were already battling to eke out a living, the situation has only added to their plight.
In its last report on the sector in 2019, the World Bank estimated that more than half (54.9 percent) of cocoa producers lived on less than 757 CFA francs ($1.36) a day.
“I started planting in 1996 and I still don’t have a roof because there’s no money,” 54-year-old Kone told AFP at his home, 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the city of Guiglo.
“It’s not dignified,” he said.
The Ivorian government insists that conditions for growers are a priority and, following a rise in global prices, increased the amount it pays to producers to a record 2,800 CFA francs per kilogramme.
“Producers are standing tall and are able to eat their fill, find housing, get medical treatment, enjoy the benefits of electricity and drinking water, and send their children to school and university,” said in October the country’s agriculture minister, Kobenan Kouassi Adjoumani, who was replaced in a government reshuffle on Friday.
But, with the recent fall in exports, the hike in the price paid to producers has not had the desired effect.
Some growers say they have not been paid in months.

- ‘Increasingly vulnerable’ -

Near Kone’s house in Betykro, about 50 families live without electricity or a mobile phone network and share a single pump for water.
The nearest medical clinic is 10 km away along a rough track and, according to many growers, the universal health coverage put in place by the state does not adequately cover health care costs.
“We’re disappointed,” said 64-year-old village chief Boniface Djabia, sounding dejected.
“The farmers are the poorest people in Ivory Coast,” he added, showing his threadbare clothes.
Farmers are “increasingly vulnerable,” said Oscar Toukpo, a sociologist at Felix Houphouet Boigny University in Abidjan.
He blamed lower yields due to soil exhaustion and the rising cost of living.
“Smallholders run up debts with cooperatives and sellers of crop protection products to try to improve production” and this worsens the cycle of poverty, he added.
In his field, just a stone’s throw from his house, Kone still works only with a machete and wears open-toed shoes.
“A bag of fertilizer costs 22,000 CFA francs but there’s no money,” he said.
Maintaining production volume still depends on expanding plantations.
But the strategy is limited, as Ivory Coast has already lost 90 percent of its forest cover in 60 years.

- Despondency -

According to the World Bank, productivity in Ivorian cocoa groves has stagnated in the past 20 years, at about 450 to 550 kilograms per hectare.
The global lender said the cocoa sector was not fulfilling its role as a driver of economic development and suggested that some see “brown gold” as a “curse” due to the destruction of forests and persistent poverty.
Additionally, Ivory Coast receives only six percent of the profits from the global cocoa industry.
In recent years, the government has invested in cocoa processing facilities to transform the raw material on site.
To get by, some producers are diversifying by planting oil palms or hevea trees used to make rubber, which, unlike cocoa’s seasonal harvest, produce 11 months of the year.
“We manage with the rubber plantations,” said Alidou Traore, a 24-year-old farmer who has taken over his father’s land.
In his village, a few kilometers from Kone’s, the houses look sturdier.
But despondency is setting in. “The current situation with cocoa doesn’t give me any motivation,” he added.
“I don’t want my children to be planters like me,” added Kone. “It’s a life of suffering.”


World copper rush promises new riches for Zambia

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World copper rush promises new riches for Zambia

CAPE TOWN: Five years after becoming Africa’s first Covid-era debt defaulter, Zambia is seeing a dramatic turnaround in fortunes as major powers vie for access to its vast reserves of copper.
Surging demand from the artificial intelligence, green energy and defense sectors has exponentially boosted demand for the workhorse metal that underpins power grids, data centers and electric vehicles.
The scramble for copper exposes geopolitical rivalries as industrial heavyweights — including China, the United States, Canada, Europe, India and Gulf states — compete to secure supplies.
“We have the investors back,” President Hakainde Hichilema told delegates at the African Mining Indaba conference on Monday, saying that more than $12 billion had flowed into the sector since 2022.
The politically stable country is Africa’s second-largest copper producer, after the conflict-ridden Democratic Republic of Congo, and the world’s eighth, according to the US Geological Survey.
The metal, needed for solar panels and wind turbines, generates about 15 percent of Zambia’s GDP and more than 70 percent of export earnings.
Output rose eight percent last year to more than 890,000 metric tons and the government aims to triple production within a decade.
Mining is driving growth that is forecast by the International Monetary Fund to reach 5.2 percent in 2025 and 5.8 percent this year, which places Zambia among the continent’s faster-growing economies.
“The seeds are sprouting and the harvest is coming,” Hichilema said, touting a planned nationwide geological survey to map untapped deposits.
But the rapid expansion of the heavily polluting industry has also led to warnings about risks to local communities and concerns of “pit-to-port” extraction, in which raw copper is shipped directly abroad with little domestic refining.

’Dramatic new chapter’

“We need to be aware of the potential for history to repeat itself,” said Daniel Litvin, founder of the Resource Resolutions group that promotes sustainable development, referring to the colonial-era scramble for Africa’s resources.
There is a risk that elites will be enriched at the expense of the broader population, while “narratives of partnership” offered by major powers can mask underlying self-interest, he said.
Chinese firms have long dominated the sector in Zambia and control major stakes in key mines and smelters, cementing Beijing’s early-mover advantage.
Another major player is Canada’s First Quantum Minerals, Zambia’s largest corporate taxpayer.
Investors from India and the Gulf are expanding their footprint, and the United States is returning to the market after largely pulling out decades ago.
Washington, which has been stockpiling copper, this month launched a $12 billion “Project Vault” public-private initiative to secure critical minerals, part of an effort to reduce reliance on China.
In September, the US Trade and Development Agency announced a $1.4 million grant to a Metalex Commodities subsidiary, Metalex Africa, to expand operations in Zambia.
“We are at the beginning of what is going to unfold to be a dramatic new chapter in the way that the free world sources and trades in critical minerals,” US energy secretary adviser Mike Kopp said at Mining Indaba.
Sweeping US tariffs introduced last year helped send copper prices soaring to record highs, as companies rushed to buy both semi-finished and refined stocks.

Cost of rush

“The risk is that this great power competition becomes a race to secure supply on terms that serve markets and not the people in producer countries,” said Deprose Muchena, a program director at the Open Society Foundation.
Despite its mineral wealth, more than 70 percent of Zambia’s 21 million people live in poverty, according to the World Bank.
“The world is waking up to Zambia’s copper. But Zambia has been living with copper and its consequences for a century,” Muchena told AFP.
Environmental damage caused by mining has long plagued Zambia’s copper belt.
In February 2025, a burst tailings dam at a Chinese-owned mine near Kitwe, about 285 kilometers (180 miles) north of Lusaka, spilled millions of liters of acidic waste.
Toxins entered a tributary feeding the Kafue, Zambia’s longest river and a major source of drinking water. Zambian farmers have filed an $80 billion lawsuit.
“Whether this boom is different depends on whether governance, rights, and community agency are at the center, not just supply chain security,” Muchena said.