Cocoa futures have dropped below the $9,000 per ton mark, settling at $8,796 this week amid shifting global market conditions. The decline is attributed to speculative trading activity, market reactions to new U.S. tariffs, and recalibrated supply expectations following weather-related disruptions in West Africa.
In response to ongoing volatility in the international cocoa market, Nigeria is accelerating plans to increase domestic chocolate production and reduce its reliance on raw cocoa exports. The country, currently ranked as the sixth-largest cocoa exporter globally, is implementing strategic reforms to add more value across its cocoa supply chain.
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Central to Nigeria’s approach is a transition from exporting unprocessed cocoa beans to producing semi-processed and finished chocolate products. While cocoa beans currently command up to $9,000 per ton in global markets, value-added products such as cocoa butter, liquor, and finished chocolate bars can fetch between $30,000 and $50,000 per ton. The Nigerian government is seeking to capture a larger share of this margin through increased local processing capacity.
To support this transformation, cocoa production in Nigeria has been growing steadily. National output rose from approximately 280,000 metric tons in 2022 to 340,000 metric tons by early 2024. The government is targeting an expansion to 500,000 metric tons in the near term, driven by improved farming practices, seed distribution, and mechanization.
A newly established National Cocoa Management Board is tasked with overseeing this sector-wide shift. The board will coordinate production standards, monitor exports, and incentivize processing investments. In parallel, new policies are being drafted to promote local chocolate consumption, including proposals to integrate chocolate into school feeding programs and public sector procurement.
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This national push is taking place against the backdrop of continued challenges in the agricultural sector. Infrastructure deficits, limited access to capital, security concerns in rural regions, and erratic climate patterns have all impacted crop yield and investment inflows. Nevertheless, cocoa is attracting renewed interest from young Nigerian entrepreneurs, many of whom are shifting to cocoa farming as a lucrative alternative to urban employment.
Despite the recent softening in cocoa prices, Nigeria’s broader strategy aims to reduce economic dependence on crude oil exports by developing agro-industrial value chains. Increased processing and domestic consumption are expected to create jobs, improve export earnings, and position the country as a competitive player in the global chocolate industry.
As global cocoa markets adjust to supply and demand shifts, Nigeria’s focus on value addition signals a longer-term vision to transform its raw commodity exports into high-value finished products.