Figure of the week 1.6 million children work in cocoa countries

SDA

22.6.2024 - 07:31

Children on cocoa plantations: this is often due to the poverty of small farmers. (archive picture)
Children on cocoa plantations: this is often due to the poverty of small farmers. (archive picture)
Keystone

The chocolate industry continues to struggle with child labor. Around 1.6 million children are currently working in the central cocoa countries of Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, according to a report by the Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa.

Keystone-SDA

According to the report, the main reason for child labor is the poverty of cocoa farmers. Child labor is defined as work that hinders children in their education and affects them physically or mentally. This includes working at night or carrying heavy loads.

All actors involved in the cocoa supply chain must now work together to improve conditions on the ground, the platform demands. For example, social systems and monitoring should be strengthened.

The Swiss Platform for Sustainable Cocoa (Swissco) is made up of 96 members who are active in cocoa-growing countries with a high proportion of child labor. They include chocolate manufacturers, commodity traders, retailers, NGOs and the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (Seco). Together they represent 93 percent of Switzerland's cocoa imports.