African cocoa exports to Europe are among the oldest established directional flows in the global commodities trade, accounting for more than two-thirds of the cocoa trade.
But with the start of China’s zero-tariff regime for African goods in May, exporters of the main ingredient in chocolate, are now looking east as they contemplate export expansion, according to industry officials.
For Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana, the two largest cocoa exporters, cocoa products entering China faced import tariffs ranging from about 8% to 22%, depending on whether the cocoa was exported in a raw or processed state. Those tariffs have now been removed under the new regime.
“The policy definitely is an incentive to increase exports of cocoa to China, which has a very large population,” Adeola Adegoke, president of the Cocoa and Coffee Farmers Alliance of Africa, told African Business.
“Europe consumes two-thirds of African cocoa but other markets are now emerging in China and India, and these are also competing.”
Production problems
West Africa accounts for more than 70% of global cocoa production, with the rest coming from South America and Asia. Four of the top five producers are in the region, including the leader, Côte d’Ivoire; second placed Ghana; and Nigeria and Cameroon, which occupy fourth and fifth places, respectively. Indonesia is the third-biggest producer.
The cocoa season, which runs from October to September, has two harvests. These are the smaller light crop, harvested between March and June, and the main crop that runs from October to December.
In recent years, African cocoa production has been hit by the vagaries of ageing trees in the top producers Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, as well as erratic weather, leading to global output shortfalls and price volatility.
Following a brief production recovery in the 2024-2025 cocoa year, the main crop harvest suffered at the start of the 2025-2026 season, creating more supply uncertainties. Output is currently estimated at 4.368 million tonnes, a decline of 12.9% from the previous year, according to the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO).
Production fell to 1.6 million tonnes from 2 million tonnes in top producer Côte d’Ivoire and by as much as 500,000 tonnes or half in Ghana as a combination of disease and unstable weather took its toll. The US and Europe were the leading export destinations, followed by Malaysia, which has emerged as an important processing hub in Asia for chocolate makers in China, India and other countries in the region.
“Statistically, we are seeing emerging consumption in China and India,” said Adegoke. “China has put forward zero tariffs as an incentive, it is now on us to look at that incentive as a pathway to more gains.”
The value of China’s cocoa imports jumped from $714m in 2013 to $1.34bn in 2024, according to New York-based Trading Economics, an increase of 88%. Chinese buyers have already shown an inclination to import processed cocoa products.
Making chocolate in Africa
In the world’s biggest producer, Côte d’Ivoire, China has been involved in setting up two major cocoa-processing plants, undertaken by the China Light Industry Nanning Design Engineering Company (CLINDE). One is the 50,000-tonnes-per year processing plant in the PK24 Industrial Park, just outside the commercial capital, Abidjan; and the 100,000-tonne plant in the cocoa-trading port town of San Pedro.
In neighbouring Ghana, there is the FCL Processing’s 32,000-tonne per annum plant near the capital, Accra, also built by CLINDE.
In all the cases, the facilities were built with Chinese financing in a state-to-state partnership, with the objective of providing China preferential access to products such as cocoa butter, powder, cake, and other derivatives of the crop. Sometimes as much as 40% of the output is reserved for export to China, according to officials of Ghana’s agriculture ministry.
This potentially pitches Chinese interests against the old guard of the industry such as Cargill, Barry Callebaut, and Olam that have long dominated the global cocoa trade. The producer countries find the prospects of more value-added cocoa exports attractive and more partnerships with China are likely to expand domestic processing capacity.
In Nigeria, which produces more than 300,000 tonnes annually, Sunbeth Global Concepts, one of the country’s biggest exporters, is building a 50,000 tonnes per annum cocoa-processing factory in the town of Sagamu, north of the commercial capital of Lagos. The company exports to Europe and North America.
Sunbeth Global’s CEO Olasunkanmi Owoyemi told African Business that China’s zero-tariff has yet to influence the company’s business decisions.
“But that might change soon,” he added.
West Africa demands cocoa processing
The West African producers from Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Nigeria and Cameroon met in Abuja, the Nigerian capital, on July 16, where they signed a joint declaration to work toward more local processing of cocoa butter and powder while discouraging raw cocoa exports. Beyond local processing, they pledged to provide incentives for the local manufacture of chocolates and other chocolate products. The four countries account for more than two-thirds of global production.
Nigerian minister of state for industry, John Owan Enoh, said the declaration is a rejection of an inherited colonial trade structure that condemned Africa to shipping raw materials and buying expensive finished goods made with them.
“For a hundred years, Africa has sent its cocoa to the world in sacks and received it back in wrappers,” Enoh said.“We are not interested in exporting anonymous sacks anymore.”
The CEO of the Ghana Cocoa Board Ransford Abbey told reporters that African producers received only about $10-15bn of the value generated by the global cocoa-products industry estimated to be worth more than $130bn. European countries export more than $28bn of chocolate products annually, using cocoa imported from Africa, he said.
The four African producers will also adopt a common position in negotiations on the European Union Deforestation Regulations set to come into effect on December 30. It requires that all cocoa exported to the EU must be traceable to where it was produced to ensure it did not cause deforestation.
West to East?
Exports to China and other parts of Asia may provide an opportunity for African farmers to escape the stranglehold of big-time buyers from Europe, who have dominated the trade for decades, denying farmers access to the international market, according to Adegoke of the African farmers alliance.
Many cocoa exporters currently tied to European buyers by supply contracts will likely explore opportunities with China and other Asian countries where there is growing demand once their current contracts expire, industry officials said.
Still, for African cocoa farmers to make full use of emerging opportunities, there is an urgent need to boost productivity and yield, said Adegoke. Currently, West African cocoa farmers have an average yield of between 400 kilograms and 600 kilograms per acre.
“There’s a lot to be done in terms of enhancing our productivity,” he said. “If we can increase our productivity per acre to 800-900 kilograms, then there will be higher profit margins.”
Facts Only
* African cocoa exports are among the oldest established directional flows in global commodities trade.
* China started a zero-tariff regime for African goods in May.
* Cocoa products entering China faced import tariffs of 8% to 22% based on raw or processed state.
* The aforementioned tariffs have been removed under the new regime.
* West Africa accounts for more than 70% of global cocoa production.
* Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana are the two largest cocoa exporters in the region.
* The cocoa season runs from October to September, with two harvests: a light crop (March-June) and the main crop (October-December).
* African cocoa production has faced shortfalls due to aging trees, erratic weather, and disease.
* Estimated global cocoa output is 4.368 million tonnes, a 12.9% decline from the previous year, according to ICCO.
* Côte d’Ivoire's production fell to 1.6 million tonnes, and Ghana's fell by up to 500,000 tonnes due to disease and weather instability.
* China's cocoa import value increased from $714m in 2013 to $1.34bn in 2024.
* China has set up cocoa-processing plants in Côte d’Ivoire (50,000 tonnes/year) and Ghana (32,000 tonnes/year) with Chinese financing.
* A joint declaration was signed by West African producers to pursue local processing of cocoa butter and powder and discourage raw cocoa exports.
Executive Summary
African cocoa exports to Europe constitute over two-thirds of the global trade in that commodity. Recent shifts are occurring as exporters look toward emerging markets in China and India, influenced by China's zero-tariff regime for African goods. This development is prompting a reevaluation of existing trade flows, as other markets now compete with traditional European demand.
West Africa accounts for over 70% of global cocoa production, with Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana being the largest exporters. Production has been impacted by aging trees and erratic weather, resulting in supply uncertainties, including a decline in output estimated at 4.368 million tonnes in the most recent estimate. Production specifically fell significantly in Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana due to disease and unstable weather conditions.
Efforts are underway among West African producers to shift focus toward local processing of cocoa products, such as butter and powder, while discouraging raw cocoa exports. This initiative aims to increase value capture locally, which contrasts with the historical structure where African nations exported raw materials. Furthermore, Chinese investment in processing facilities in the region suggests a potential realignment of processing power and international partnerships.
Full Take
The narrative suggests a shift in geopolitical leverage regarding commodity flows, moving away from the historical dependency on European markets toward burgeoning Asian demand, particularly China. The pattern emerging is one where external policy shifts—like tariff removal—act as catalysts that can disrupt established commercial relationships and incentivize alternative routes for resource monetization. This exposes a tension between established producer interests tied to traditional buyers like Cargill and Barry Callebaut, and new opportunities offered by state-driven economic incentives in emerging economies.
The push for local processing among West African nations represents an attempt to reclaim value previously extracted externally, challenging the colonial legacy of raw material exportation. However, the mechanism through which China is engaging—investment via state-to-state partnerships and tariff incentives—introduces a new dynamic where geopolitical strategy intersects with agricultural output. The underlying tension lies in whether these emerging avenues offer genuine, sustainable sovereignty for African producers or merely displace old dependency structures under new forms of asymmetrical economic influence.
The critical friction point is the balance between immediate market access gains (via China) and long-term structural development (via local processing and productivity enhancement). If production can be significantly increased through yield improvements, as suggested by the need to reach 800-900 kg per acre, the power dynamic shifts substantially. The persistence of the call for greater local control implies that simply accessing new markets is insufficient; true cognitive sovereignty requires integrating external incentives into a cohesive strategy for domestic value addition and productivity scaling.
BRIDGE QUESTIONS: What specific mechanisms can be established to ensure that investments in Chinese processing facilities translate into equitable, long-term benefits for West African producers rather than reinforcing existing asymmetries? How can local processing infrastructure be financed to avoid replicating the historical dynamic of exporting raw materials? If increased yield is achieved, what are the necessary policy levers required to manage potential price volatility introduced by new export corridors?
Sentinel — Human
The article presents a complex geopolitical and agricultural analysis based on verifiable economic data and policy shifts, exhibiting the structure and detail typical of journalistic reporting rather than pure generative text.
