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Chunks of chocolate
Chocolate is made in Africa, but EU rules mean it can’t be sold in Britain, says Tim Gossling. Photograph: Rui Santos/Alamy
Chocolate is made in Africa, but EU rules mean it can’t be sold in Britain, says Tim Gossling. Photograph: Rui Santos/Alamy

Is chocolate made in Africa? I should cocoa

This article is more than 6 years old
It’s a little tough, and the locals don’t rate it, but chocolate certainly is produced in Africa, according to Tim Gossling

Anna Jones (Letters, 18 September) asks, “why can’t the chocolate be made in Africa?” The answer is simple: it can. In Ghana, at least, there is a perfectly good cocoa processing company that makes excellent chocolate – free from additives. They cannot export to the EU, because of the limitation that ex-colonies may only export “primary produce” tariff-free. Therefore the company makes chocolate for the local market; it’s a bit on the hard side, so that it can be kept in stores without air-conditioning, and Ghanaians do not think very much of it. If Anna Jones buys a bar of Fairtrade chocolate in this country, she will find on the back, in the small print, “made in Germany”. Maybe post-Brexit we can offer Ghana a better deal. Apart from the advantage of selling in to a more stable market, there would be the added ecological bonus in that chocolate bars require much less transportation space than the beans that make them. So it’s win-win all round.
Tim Gossling
Cambridge

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