You famously never know what you’re going to get when you open a box of chocolates. But for Belgium, a state that’s synonymous with the high-end confectionery, soaring cocoa prices are making life for the nation’s chocolate aficionados even more uncertain than usual.

This year, after extreme weather hammered west Africa’s cocoa harvest for the third consecutive year, prices soared in response. Cocoa futures trading in London and New York temporarily hit as high as €9,300 per ton, triple last year’s amount.

The gaping shortage of beans has percolated its way through to Europe’s premier confectionery hub, putting chocolate makers under unprecedented cost pressure and forcing up prices just as seasonal demand peaks going into the Easter holiday.

  • heavy@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    Oh no, a colonizers famously historical exploitation is experiencing the consequences of some of their own actions.

    I mean, people don’t NEED chocolate right?

    • jol
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      8 months ago

      Not sure why you’re getting downvoted. Chocolatiers pay their chocolate colonies like shit. I’ll shed no tears for them when they die off.

    • eskimofry@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Europeans get salty when people remind them that their wealth and renaissance was built on colonialism.