The worst form of child labour refers to work that is not only damaging to a child’s development but can harm their health or expose them to danger, like carrying heavy loads or using sharp tools. This means that the combined and diligent efforts of these companies were able to identify approximately 26% of all these cases in Ghana and Cote d‘Ivoire. A tremendous effort! Imagine what could happen if these efforts expanded across more of companies’ supply chains.
We know that identifying cases of child labour alone is not enough. Chocolate companies also need to help the children leave situations of exploitation and put measures in place that prevent their return. We call this process remediation, and it can take different forms. We know that poverty is one of the biggest factors that increases the risk of child labour. So, remediation can often look like a chocolate company partnering with a local NGO to support not just the child, but the wider family and community. It can look like helping children access an education by providing bridging classes to cover what they’ve missed; and supporting a family to diversify their income into other agricultural products beyond cocoa.
It’s not only chocolate companies that benefit from the exploitation within the industry. We think it’s also important to pay attention to the role that supermarkets and department stores play in contributing to exploitation of the chocolate they sell. Globally, retailers make billions on the sale of chocolate. The 2015 Cocoa Barometer found that retailers take approx. 44% of the total profit of a chocolate bar, with cocoa farmers’ receiving just 6.6%.(9)
The Chocolate Scorecard also took a look at some of our favourite places to purchase chocolate, to see what they were doing to address sustainability issues within the industry.