Venezuela's Cacao Plantations Stir Bitterness

Clay Gordon
@clay
07/29/09 08:26:40AM
1,680 posts
There is an interesting article on the current state of the cacao industry in Venezuela in today's (July 29, 2007) NY Times (registration may be required after two weeks from today). Don't miss the video featuring grower Kai Rosenberg with footage of the drying patio in Chuao.From the article:
Venezuela produces about the same amount of cacao as it did three centuries ago: 15,000 tons a year, less than 1 percent of global cacao output. But that amount stirs the passions of critics and devotees, turning a luxury crop destined for foreigners into a contentious, and sometimes violent, political issue. Cacao from here is so desirable that European chocolate makers sometimes engage in cut-throat competition to gain access to it. Chocolatiers talk of the unique factors here on the Caribbeans edge in a way that resembles the got de terroir, or taste of the earth, crucial to fine wines.Venezuela is in a league of its own, said Gary Guittard, a California chocolate maker who buys Venezuelan cacao. It takes years to develop the uniqueness of the best cacao, maybe 20 or 30 years, maybe 100, so other nations need to catch up.Viewed as a treasure abroad, cacao is seen differently by many Venezuelans, from the president to the poor. A loophole for this nature reserve allows cacao haciendas to dot the forest, near villages populated by descendants of African slaves and near poor migrants who live in squatter villages in the park....Despite partnering with the government in a cacao venture in Barinas, Mr. Chvezs home state, Chocolates El Rey, a leading company in Venezuelas gourmet chocolate industry, was powerless to stop squatters who invaded the farm earlier this decade and still occupy it.We could be a world leader with cacao, what beef is for Argentina or rice for Thailand, said Jorge Redmond, Chocolates El Reys chief executive, reflecting on the industrys upheaval. Instead were faced with 52 different permits to export a container of our product, compared with four steps to export when Chvez came to power.



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clay - http://www.thechocolatelife.com/clay/

updated by @clay: 04/30/15 08:39:24AM
Jeff Stern
@jeff-stern
07/30/09 01:02:41PM
78 posts
Bureaucracy is the choke-hold on the pent-up energy of many a business in Latin America. We face similar issues in Ecuador in producing chocolate from local cacao, but fortunately the export process is not as onerous as the one mentioned here.

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