6.29.2012
Nestle Chocolate produced with child labor
Here’s a cheery thought while you’re baking Nestle’s Toll House chocolate chip cookie dough: those chocolate chips may have been produced by children working long hours with no pay, some of whom have been injured by machetes. Nestle, the company famous for its chocolates and other foods, is accused of not doing enough to stop the brutal child labor in the chocolate industry, BBC News reported. 
Its long been known that child labor plays a major role in producing the world’s cocoa,GlobalPost reported, with about 600,000 children in Ivory Coast working on cocoa farms. 
More from GlobalPost: When the BRICs crumble
Nestle, the world’s largest food company, has pledged to stop the practice. More recently, Nestle commissioned the Fair Labor Association to map its cocoa supply chain in the Ivory Coast, the BBC said.
While Nestle gets credit for being the first multinational chocolate company to allow its system to be completely assessed, the results of the investigation were nonetheless not good. “The investigation by FLA found that child labor persists despite industry efforts to discourage the employment of children,” the FLA said in a statement,according to Reuters. 
Nestle accepted the findings of the report and said they hope to improve their labor practices: “The use of child labor in our cocoa supply goes against everything we stand for,” Jose Lopez, Nestle’s head of operations, said in a webcast following the news, Bloomberg News reported. 
The FLA report recommends that the Ivory Coast government take its own regulatory steps to end child labor. It also suggests that Nestle and other chocolate companies set clearer labor standards to all parties in its supply chain, Bloomberg reported.

Nestle Chocolate produced with child labor

Here’s a cheery thought while you’re baking Nestle’s Toll House chocolate chip cookie dough: those chocolate chips may have been produced by children working long hours with no pay, some of whom have been injured by machetes. Nestle, the company famous for its chocolates and other foods, is accused of not doing enough to stop the brutal child labor in the chocolate industry, BBC News reported

Its long been known that child labor plays a major role in producing the world’s cocoa,GlobalPost reported, with about 600,000 children in Ivory Coast working on cocoa farms. 

More from GlobalPost: When the BRICs crumble

Nestle, the world’s largest food company, has pledged to stop the practice. More recently, Nestle commissioned the Fair Labor Association to map its cocoa supply chain in the Ivory Coast, the BBC said.

While Nestle gets credit for being the first multinational chocolate company to allow its system to be completely assessed, the results of the investigation were nonetheless not good. “The investigation by FLA found that child labor persists despite industry efforts to discourage the employment of children,” the FLA said in a statement,according to Reuters

Nestle accepted the findings of the report and said they hope to improve their labor practices: “The use of child labor in our cocoa supply goes against everything we stand for,” Jose Lopez, Nestle’s head of operations, said in a webcast following the news, Bloomberg News reported

The FLA report recommends that the Ivory Coast government take its own regulatory steps to end child labor. It also suggests that Nestle and other chocolate companies set clearer labor standards to all parties in its supply chain, Bloomberg reported.

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Posted at 3:06 PM
4.24.2012
BALI, Indonesia — Indonesia’s tropical climate might not be the obvious choice for chocolate producers — not to mention the fact that the country’s 240 million citizens have traditionally favored robust spices and raw chili over delicate sweets.
But it’s here amid the palm trees of this famed resort island that Benjamin Ripple, Frederick Schilling and their Big Tree Farms company have opened up a chocolate factory that even Willy Wonka might envy.
(Read more — Bali’s Willy Wonka)

BALI, Indonesia — Indonesia’s tropical climate might not be the obvious choice for chocolate producers — not to mention the fact that the country’s 240 million citizens have traditionally favored robust spices and raw chili over delicate sweets.

But it’s here amid the palm trees of this famed resort island that Benjamin Ripple, Frederick Schilling and their Big Tree Farms company have opened up a chocolate factory that even Willy Wonka might envy.

(Read more — Bali’s Willy Wonka)

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Posted at 10:15 AM