Chocolate prices spiked amid very dry conditions in Africa.
Chocolate prices spiked amid very dry conditions in Africa.
Arina Habich/Envato

Why the Price of Your Favorite Chocolate Will Continue to Rise

1 min read
Share
Chocolate prices spiked amid very dry conditions in Africa.
Chocolate prices spiked amid very dry conditions in Africa.
Arina Habich/Envato
Why the Price of Your Favorite Chocolate Will Continue to Rise
Copy

Valentine’s Day often conjures images of chocolates and romance. But the crop behind this indulgence faces an existential threat.

Regions like northeastern Brazil, one of the world’s notable cocoa-producing areas, are grappling with increasing aridity – a slow, yet unrelenting drying of the land. Cocoa is made from the beans of the cacao tree, which thrives in humid climates. The crop is struggling in these drying regions, and so are the farmers who grow it.

This is not just Brazil’s story. Across West Africa, where 70% of the world’s cacao is grown, and in the Americas and Southeast Asia, shifting moisture levels threaten the delicate balance required for production. These regions, home to vibrant ecosystems and global breadbaskets that feed the world, are on the frontlines of aridity’s slow but relentless advance.

Over the past 30 years, more than three-quarters of the Earth’s landmass has become drier. A recent report I helped coordinate for the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification found that drylands now cover 41% of global land, an area that expanded by nearly 1.7 million square miles (4.3 million square kilometers) over those three decades — about half the size of Australia.

This creeping dryness is not just a climate phenomenon. It’s a long-term transformation that may be irreversible and that carries devastating consequences for ecosystems, agriculture and livelihoods worldwide.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

‘My mission is to illuminate Rhode Island and America’s past in a way that inspires us all, nurturing a collective sense of identity and purpose’
Democratic Rep. Jason Knight had previously voted against the proposal to make it a misdemeanor for minors to gamble online, but changed his vote in the affirmative
We highlight a few of the many events happening across the Community Libraries of Providence – from a jug band ensemble to a PechaKucha night. Plus: what they’re reading at Rocheambeau Library’s banned books club
Former Majority Leader Pearson says other senators sparked his falling out with Ruggerio
But Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha calls the governor’s plan “half-baked”
List of short- and long-term strategies comes a day before Anchor Medical Associates closes Warwick office
Job growth, wage increases to slow as prices surge