:. Food Industry News


Ivory Coast Ups Cocoa Guide Price 40 pct for '08/9

Source: Reuters
06/10/2008

Abidjan, Oct 5 - Ivory Coast launched its 2008-2009 cocoa season on Sunday and raised the indicative farm-gate price by 40 percent, the head of an interim authority overseeing the cocoa sector in the world's top grower said.

Daily News Alerts

Gilbert Ano N'Guessan, who heads a committee set up to manage the industry after many top officials were arrested in a graft probe, declared the season open but said purchases would likely be slow for at least two weeks as the market adjusted.

Industry officials said on Saturday new lists of approved exporters and levies to fund sector administration would not be ready until Monday, suggesting the season may have a slow start.

N'Guessan announced a new indicative farm-gate price of 700 CFA ($1.48) per kg for October-December 2008, up from 500 CFA/kg the previous quarter, but exporters dismissed it as unrealistic.

"If you ask my view, I'd say we will see purchases blocked from tomorrow for at least two weeks while producers see that the realities of the market have changed," N'Guessan said.

The indicative price is a guideline minimum, though buyers in Ivory Coast offer higher or lower prices depending on world market prices, quality, transport costs and other factors.

"It is absurd to fix the farm-gate price at 700 CFA when last Friday the price at the port was 610 CFA/kg. I think it is unrealistic and unworkable," said the director of a large international exporting company in the main port Abidjan.

World market prices reached a 28-year high of $3,290 per tonne in New York in July, but have since fallen back and closed on Friday at $2,488 per tonne, representing $2.49/kg on international markets, which take account of shipping costs.

"We have done well, because 700 CFA is a good price for us farmers and from tomorrow we will travel to the villages to tell farmers not to sell their cocoa for less," said Sanssan Kouao, a member of a farmers' group who attended Sunday's announcement.

FOCUS ON QUALITY

Quality problems with cocoa beans have worried exporters in Ivory Coast in recent months, and N'Guessan announced measures to improve quality, including banning the export of sweepings, residue and other leftovers from local grinding factories.

"The texts governing quality control companies will be more rigorously enforced to improve Ivory Coast's reputation as an origin," he said. "You can obtain better prices by delivering good quality cocoa. That is, well-fermented, well dried and well sorted cocoa."

Weather conditions have led to beans being smaller and allowed diseases such as black pod to spread in plantations. Exporters have forecast the 2008-2009 crop to be 6-8 percent down on the previous season, due mainly to black pod damage.

"Even the most optimistic forecasts unfortunately anticipate a fall in production. We must further improve quality to maintain our revenues," N'Guessan said.

Cocoa bean deliveries at Ivory Coast's two ports in the 2007-2008 season reached around 1.35 million tonnes by Sept. 28, two days before the season ended, exporters estimated. That was up from 1.29 million tonnes by the same date the previous year.

Details on new levies were unavailable after World Bank officials asked for the levy for sector bodies to be cut to 5.5 CFA/kg from over 26 CFA/kg, Marie-Louise Acquah, second vice-president of the management committee, told Reuters.

The World Bank's vice-president for Africa, Obiageli Ezekwesili, warned last month the Bank would lend Ivory Coast no money until it tackled "serious corruption" in the cocoa sector, which accounts for around 20 percent of the country's economy.



GO   View more articles on this subject

Email This Article To A Colleague     Print A Copy Of This Page
 
 
 
 
FLEXNEWS - Business News for the Food Industry

About Us | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy
 
Daily News Alerts
Related Items
Ivorian Cocoa Crop Seen Down at 1 Million Tonnes
Rising Ivorian Cocoa Prices Dampen Ghana Trade
Rain, Old Trees, Disease Cut Ivorian Cocoa Yields
Ivorian Cocoa Strike Lengthens, Talks Awaited In East
Ivorian Cocoa Strike Extends, Ghana Buyers Move in
Ivorian Cocoa Strike Goes into Second Week - Unions...
Farmers Block Ivorian Cocoa Port, Quality Risk Seen
Ivory Coast Aims to Be Top Cocoa Grinder by 2010
Ivorian Cocoa Farmers Threaten Blockade over Price
Ivorian 2008/09 Cocoa Crop Seen Picking up in November

More in Food Industry News
UK: Real Good Food Warns on Profit Again
Tesco Preparing for Tougher Times Ahead
Brown-Forman to Divest Italian Wines
DeMet's Candy Company Acquires the Treasures and Stixx...
Canada Greens File Complaint on Nestle Water Ads
Saputo Completes the Acquisition of the Activities...
Carrefour Plans More French "Carrefour" Brand...
Solae Announces Global Price Increase for Soy Ingredients
Dollar Funding Rates Dip, Japan Pumps Cash
FDA Reports Significant Progress in Protecting the...

Top Headlines
FDA Reports Significant Progress in Protecting the...
Colruyt Issues Interim Financial Report; Revenues Rise...
UK: Bidders Circle Troubled Woolworths
UK: Confectionery Firm Zetar Could Lose 3% of Turnover...
Ardo Confirms Take-Over of Austria Frost
Oil-and-Fat Composition for Spray, and Method for Production...
Carrefour Still Planning Indian Joint Ventures
Hong Kong Sets Maximum Standards for Melamine in Food
Drought Sends Saffron Price Skyrocketing
Thai Govt to Sell 1.37 Million Tonnes Rice Stocks
Aryzta Q1 Revenue up 32 pct
China Lifts Price Controls on Food -NDRC
SABMiller Looks for Growth in India's Beer Market
Massachusetts Firm Recalls Ready-To-Eat Frozen Beef...
Singapore Food's Majority Shareholder in Talks to Sell...
Coke's Europe Chief Sees Slower Growth Amid Crisis
FDA Defends U.S. Infant Formula; Sets Safe Level
Russia's X5 Retail Group Q3 Net Loss $14.7 Mln
Canada: Health Authorities Say Milk Formula Safe Despite...
Taste Potentiator Compositions in Oral Delivery Systems
Enzyme Preparations Yielding a Clean Taste
T1R1 Receptor Binding Assays for Identification of...


 


FLEXNEWS 2008 - All rights reserved
ISSN 1950-6228