The End of Chocolate?

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
126
Get ready for crappy chocolate substitutes as Asian countries plow over cocoa plantations and plant rubber trees in their place. Looks like we have about 7 years of the good stuff left at current consumption rates :( :

http://www.nbcnews.com/business/war...ing-prices-threaten-chocolate-bars-8C11418435

Willy Wonka didn't see this coming -- crisis in chocolate-land.

The humble candy bar could soon change beyond recognition as palm oil, chemical flavorings and fillers replace increasingly scarce cocoa beans and expensive ingredients.

And that means real chocolates will become a luxury item -- for the wealthy only.

"People are prepared to pay 70 pounds ($113) per kilogram (2.2 pounds) for chocolate" said Angus Kennedy, a former chocolate taster for major manufacturers.

And he warned that if chocolatiers continue with "business as usual", the world could find itself with a shortage of cocoa beans within seven years.

"The industry is keeping it fairly quiet at the moment, but they're all looking very carefully at the situation over the next few years," Kennedy said.

According to research by Mintec, the raw material costs involved in producing a generic milk chocolate bar weighing 100 grams, or 3.5 ounces, have increased 28 percent in the year through to October.

The price of cocoa butter, the vegetable fat extracted from cocoa beans which makes up about a quarter of every chocolate bar, rose 63 percent in the past 20 months, reaching a four-year high. Whole milk powder, another major component, rose over 20 percent. These hikes more than offset the prices for cocoa powder and white sugar dropping over 50 percent and 15 percent respectively since January 2012.

As Simona Gambarini, research analyst at ETF Securities tells CNBC the price of the cocoa bean – from which the powder and butter are made – is up 22 percent in the year to date, hitting a two-year high in early October due in part to dry weather in West Africa "coupled with Ghana's decision to gradually reduce fertilizer subsidies and phase out pest and disease control".

The West African region, with Ivory Coast and Ghana in the lead, is a major global producer of cocoa beans so as Gambarini explains, weather dynamics and social tensions there "are likely to have a strong impact on cocoa prices".

One factor that could have an important influence on the supply and demand of cocoa is the emerging markets' increasing appetite for sweet treats.

Currently, the world's biggest eaters of chocolate are in Europe. On average, each European will eat 8 kilograms (17 pounds) of chocolate a year, whereas in China the yearly consumption per capita is less than 4 ounces, according to Euromonitor International.

For the global market research and consulting company TechSci, the Indian chocolate market's compounded annual growth rate should be around 21 percent from 2013-2018 to reach $3.2 billion in 2018.

Other markets with huge expected increases include Russia and China. In its "The Chocolate of Tomorrow" report released in June 2012, consultancy KPMG forecast that the Russian market should grow 45 percent by 2016 to reach $8 billion, and that Chinese sales had grown by a yearly average of 40 percent since 2009.

Kennedy warns that world production is not equipped for the emerging markets' growing appetite for the sweet.

"If the industry doesn't do anything, with the increased appetite in Asia, then we'd see a shortage of cocoa butter," he says.

Farmers need a lot more money to invest in pesticides and new trees, he adds.

"They don't have a lot of money, so there are lots of diseased trees or the trees are very old. Each newly planted tree needs four to five years to produce beans".

An increase in the cost of the chocolate bar's raw materials either means the manufacturers will have to absorb the price rises or the final product would have to become more expensive. The bulk of chocolate products' sales takes place in supermarket (42 percent according to KPMG), so analysts forecast mass market manufacturers will introduce other ingredients to keep their products within reach of low-income earners.

Therefore, there will be more imitation flavorings, argues Kennedy, and cocoa butter will be used less in favor of other sources of vegetable fat such as palm oil. Confectionary products will increasingly be filled with nuts, almonds and raisins. And the 100g chocolate bar will have "loads of inclusions and less cocoa content".

Paul Young, founder and master chocolatier at Paul A. Young Fine Chocolates told CNBC that "the key is sustainability". Chocolatiers need to buy their cocoa straight from the grower as the grower is more likely to invest back into his plantation. He also points that that the average Ecuadorean grower is 62 year-old and by buying straight from the grower would attract younger people.

"The growth is massive, but for really good quality and creative products," says Young, "It's huge, affordable luxury, some of it is reassuringly expensive" and people love that "luxurious feeling".
 
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Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
14,233
234
106
I loved eating chocolate as a kid, but that craving went away with adulthood. Tastes good no doubt, but I wouldn't miss it.
 

momeNt

Diamond Member
Jan 26, 2011
9,290
352
126
The US government committed massive war crimes and genocide in order to keep Guatemala a shithole banana producing country.

When you compare having bananas out of season to having ANY CHOCOLATE AT ALL? I think the USA will intervene before it gets out of hand.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
72,877
33,953
136
The last chocolate I bought had a depiction of beastiality on every piece. People of good morals should abstain from eating chocolate.
 

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
126
The last chocolate I bought had a depiction of beastiality on every piece. People of good morals should abstain from eating chocolate.

That's what happens when you buy candy in an adult book store.
 

monkeydelmagico

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2011
3,961
145
106
Peak chocolate is a myth. We will just invent a better technique for harvesting it like cocoa fracking.
 

ImpulsE69

Lifer
Jan 8, 2010
14,946
1,077
126
The last chocolate I bought had a depiction of beastiality on every piece. People of good morals should abstain from eating chocolate.


Just because the chocolate easter bunny was hollow didn't mean you were supposed to fill it up with penis.
 
Mar 10, 2005
14,647
2
0
i will resort to becoming a world-class chocolate thief

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Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
70,592
13,807
126
www.anyf.ca
Pretty sad when we have to rely on places half way across the world because companies are too cheap to do stuff here.

If this really happens time for people in the south to start growing their own and selling it. Until some corporation lobbys to make that illegal.
 

JEDI

Lifer
Sep 25, 2001
29,391
2,738
126
Get ready for crappy chocolate substitutes as Asian countries plow over cocoa plantations and plant rubber trees in their place. Looks like we have about 7 years of the good stuff left at current consumption rates :( :

http://www.nbcnews.com/business/war...ing-prices-threaten-chocolate-bars-8C11418435

tl;dr

why r they plowing over cocoa plantations for plant rubber trees?

and obligatory Hershey's fall from Grace:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hershey_Company

In 2007, the Chocolate Manufacturers Association in the United States, whose members include Hershey, Nestlé, and Archer Daniels Midland, lobbied the Food and Drug Administration to change the legal definition of chocolate to let them substitute partially hydrogenated vegetable oils for cocoa butter in addition to using artificial sweeteners and milk substitutes.[8] Currently, the Food and Drug Administration does not allow a product to be called "chocolate" if the product contains any of these ingredients.[9][10]

In December 2007, Philadelphia city councilman Juan Ramos called for Hershey's to stop marketing "Ice Breakers Pacs", a kind of mint, due to the resemblance of its packaging to a kind that was used for illegal street drugs.[11]

In September 2008, MSNBC reported that several Hershey chocolate products were reformulated to replace cocoa butter with vegetable oil as an emulsifier. According to the company, this change was made to reduce the costs of producing the products instead of raising their prices or decreasing the sizes. Some consumers complained that the taste was different, but the company stated that in the company-sponsored blind taste tests, approximately half of consumers preferred the new versions. As the new versions no longer met the Food and Drug Administration's official definition of "milk chocolate", the changed items were relabeled from stating they were "milk chocolate" and "made with chocolate" to "chocolate candy" and "chocolaty."[12]

:mad:
 

halik

Lifer
Oct 10, 2000
25,696
1
81
Already pay premium for good chocolate, so no change here. Hershey is garbage by the way.
 
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