5:00AM Wednesday March 12, 2008
By Brian Harris NZ Herald

Indigenous people grew cocoa in Panama more than 2000 years ago. Now, their descendants are reviving the crop to meet world demand for high-quality chocolate.

Throughout Central America, farmers like Manuel Abrigo are planting cocoa, taking advantage of high world cocoa prices and the premium their cocoa commands.

"I sowed cocoa because I saw my neighbour had it and I wanted more income, too," Abrigo, a Ngobe Indian, said in broken Spanish.

His hillside farm, near the port of Almirante in western Panama, overlooks a glistening bay where Christopher Columbus dropped anchor in 1502.

Grown by the ancient Maya in Mexico and Central America long before the arrival of the Spanish, cocoa also has a long tradition with the Ngobe people, native to the Panama-Costa Rica border region, as well as indigenous communities in Belize, Guatemala and Nicaragua.

Spanish explorers recorded that indigenous people used cocoa beans as currency. Ten could buy a night with a prostitute, 100 could buy a slave, according to archaeologist Michael Coe, joint author of a book called The True History of Chocolate.

In the 1990s Abrigo and other farmers abandoned the crop when the trees were hit by fungus and world prices were low.

Now gourmet chocolate companies are turning to growers in Central America to supply cocoa that can be labelled organic and "fair trade", under which companies pledge to pay third-world farmers more for their crops.

The bulk of the world's cocoa is grown in Africa, where cacao trees were imported by Portuguese colonisers in the 1800s. But human rights groups accuse producers in Ivory Coast, the world's No 1 supplier, of using the labour of child slaves.

Abrigo belongs to a 1500-farmer co-operative that sells most of its bean to a small Swiss company called Pronatec AG, which markets organic products to independent candy makers.#In southern Belize, near the border with Guatemala, a group of Mayan farmers produce cocoa beans for Green & Black's, a division of Cadbury Schweppes.

Their cocoa is shipped to Italy and mixed with orange flavour and spices to make Maya Gold chocolate, sold in Europe and the United States for US$3 ($3.80) a bar.

Between 2002 and 2006, global sales of organic chocolate grew 120 per cent to US$401.3 million, less than 0.5 per cent of the world chocolate market.

But demand is enough to convince small farmers from Belize to Panama to produce more.

"People calculate they could easily double their output and not have any problems with finding a market," said Eduardo Somarriba, a cocoa expert at the Costa Rica-based tropical research centre CATIE.

Somarriba estimates Central America's cocoa output rose 40 per cent over the past three years to between 4000 and 5000 tonnes in the 2006-2007 harvest.

Planted area reached 21,000ha and a further 2000ha are expected to be planted this year, Somarriba said.

"Cocoa is one of the few cash crop alternatives in poor, indigenous areas," he said. US cocoa futures on the ICE exchange recently soared to a 28-year high as investment funds pour money into commodities.

Higher prices help farmers boost output by investing in methods to improve crop quality and avoid fungus outbreaks.

A fungus known as "frosty pod" wiped out much of Central America's crop in the 1990s.

Despite efforts to plant more cocoa, the scale of operations is still tiny on most Central American plots.

Abrigo's co-operative produced just over 600 tonnes of mostly organic cocoa last year, one of their biggest harvests in decades.#By comparison, the Ivory Coast produces more than 1 million tonnes of cocoa a year.

Central American farmers hand ferment their cocoa beans - the seed of a fleshy fruit - under banana leaves in hardwood boxes and dry them in the sun, a process that Green & Black's documents in its marketing.