Shop for Ethical, Slave Labor-Free Chocolate on Valentine's Day and Year-Round

Many of the exploited workers in the cocoa industry live in poverty, sometimes making less than $2 a day.

Sophie Hirsh - Author
By

Feb. 5 2024, Updated 12:52 p.m. ET

Person holding box of chocolates
Source: iStock

We would argue that a bar of chocolate tastes better when it comes from a certified ethical supply chain than from a supply chain filled with slave labor and environmentally destructive practices. Unfortunately, there’s a good chance that some of your favorite chocolate companies are using these unethical practices.

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Of course, the chocolate problem does not solely focus on the consumers — the problem lies with the industry itself. The corporations that source cocoa beans from places that utilize slave labor or child labor, as well as the people running these unethical farms, need to change.

Fortunately, plenty of chocolate companies are taking conscious steps to ensure their cocoa and chocolate are ethical, fair-trade, and sustainable! We’re sharing all the basics you need to know about the cocoa industry and a quick and easy guide to shopping for ethically sourced, fair-trade chocolate.

What is fair-trade chocolate?

Person holding a cacao plant split in half.
Source: iStock

Fair-trade chocolate is chocolate made from cocoa beans that either the manufacturer or, even better, a third party certification group, promises was sourced under ethical and fair policies.

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Here’s how to know if a chocolate brand is ethical.

There are several ways to vet a chocolate brand’s ethics. One is to look on a website with an ongoing list of ethical chocolate companies, such as Slave Free Chocolate, The Good Shopping Guide, Fairtrade America, and Fair Trade Certified.

Another way is by looking at the individual chocolate bar’s wrapper or the brand’s website for certification labels and logos. A few to look out for are Fair Trade Certified, Fair for Life, and Rainforest Alliance Certified Cocoa.

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You can also check out the FAQ section of a brand’s website to see if it addresses the sourcing process behind its chocolate; if no information is present, you can contact the company with your questions through their website or on social media.

A company simply claiming its chocolate is ethically sourced — or even a company having a certification or two on its packaging — does not necessarily mean its supply chain is completely free of injustice. Try to always do your research before making a purchase.

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Here are some ethical, fair-trade chocolate brands.

Fortunately, many delicious chocolate companies have pledged that they use fair-trade cocoa to make their chocolate. Here is a list of some brands that have made this pledge, as adapted from lists compiled by Slave Free Chocolate, The Good Shopping Guide, Fair Trade Certified, and Fairtrade America:

  • Aloha Feels Chocolate
  • Alter Eco
  • Amano Chocolate
  • barkTHINS
  • Beyond Good
  • Cacao Medium
  • Chocolate Tree
  • Choklat
  • Choquiero Chocolate
  • Chuao Chocolatier
  • COCO Chocolate
  • Dandelion Chocolate
  • Dark Forest Chocolate
  • Divine Chocolate
  • The Endangered Species
  • Grocer's Daughter
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  • Green & Black’s
  • Island Sharks 
  • Kashi
  • KIND
  • Kirkland
  • LARABAR
  • Little Secrets
  • Lily’s Sweets
  • Maverick Chocolate 
  • Mayan Monkey Mijas
  • Montezuma's
  • Plamil
  • River-Sea Chocolate 
  • Sappho Chocolates
  • Seed & Bean
  • Sweet Impact Chocolate 
  • Taza Chocolate   
  • Theo Chocolate
  • Trader Joe’s
  • Traidcraft 
  • Truffle Pig Chocolate 
  • UnReal
  • Valrhona Chocolate
  • VIVA CACAO! 
  • Wei of Chocolate 
  • Wunder Workshop
  • The Xocolate Bar   
  • Xocolatl Small Batch Chocolate 
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What chocolate brands use child labor or slave labor?

Two men cut cocoa fruits on a mat of leaves.
Source: Getty Images

Workers cut cocoa fruits at at Paineiras Farm from M. Libanio's Group about 150 km from Ilheus, Bahia Brazil.

According to a report by The Washington Post, in the early 2000s, Mars, Nestlé, and Hershey (major brands responsible for a wide variety of popular chocolates) all pledged to quit using cocoa harvested by children. However, when the newspaper contacted those three companies in 2019, none were able to claim that their supply chains did not use slave labor.

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“I admit that it is a kind of slavery,” one cocoa farmer told the newspaper, speaking about the boys who work for him, who make about $4.50 each week. “They are still kids and they have the right to be educated today. But they bring them here to work, and it’s the boss who takes the money,” he added, noting that the boys' salaries should be $9 each per week, but their boss takes about half of that.

For more companies that purportedly exploit their laborers to harvest cocoa, check out lists by The Good Shopping Guide and Green America for their input.

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What is wrong with the cocoa and chocolate industry?

Three young men carrying sacks of cocoa.
Source: Getty Images

Workers who come from Burkina Faso carry sacks of cocoa to a truck June 28, 2001 in Petit Tieme, Ivory Coast.

So, why do we need to worry about purchasing fair-trade chocolate at all?

Issues in the cocoa harvesting industry, 70 percent of which is in West Africa, are widespread. According to Fairtrade America, many workers in the cocoa industry live in poverty, sometimes making less than $2 a day. Due to the effects of the climate crisis, cocoa farms are already experiencing soil erosion, new weather patterns, and lower crop yields, which leads to reduced income for workers, which leads to food insecurity and poverty.

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Child labor is widespread in the cocoa industry, as is slavery and human trafficking, and workers are sometimes subject to forced labor while living in dangerous conditions. Additionally, gender inequality is rampant in areas with cocoa farms, and women are often discriminated against in the industry. 

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Child abuse and deforestation are two major issues in the cocoa industry.

A group of NGOs — Mighty Earth, Be Slavery Free, Green America, Freedom United, and Fair World Project — are banding together to demand justice for laborers and the planet in the cocoa industry. The groups have identified child labor and environmental devastation as two of the central issues of the cocoa industry, and together, they are challenging a leaked report on such topics by the research institution NORC at the University of Chicago

The NGOs claim that the report contains outdated information about child labor in the cocoa industry. The report estimates that there are currently about 2.1 million children working in the industry, but the NGOs argue that there has been an estimated 15 to 20 percent increase in child labor in West Africa as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which the report does not account for.

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Person cutting a cacao fruit off the tree.
Source: Getty Images
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Perhaps more interestingly is that the NGOs obtained a leaked document from the World Cocoa Foundation, a trade organization that represents 80 percent of the global cocoa and chocolate market and has about 100 member companies, including major corporations like Cargill, Ghirardelli, Godiva, Hershey, Nestle, Mars, Mondelez, Starbucks, and Unilever.

The document included strategy recommendations for how corporations should respond to the leaked report once it was officially published, urging them to boost PR efforts about the cocoa industry addressing child labor, rather than guiding or putting pressure on companies to actually address child labor. “It seems that the cocoa industry is more interested in public relations than real solutions for kids, farmers, or forests,” said Etelle Higonnet of Mighty Earth.

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In response, the NGOs are calling for chocolate companies and traders to: push for laws protecting human rights in the industry, pay cocoa farmers living incomes, ramp up “child labor monitoring remediation programs,” and reduce the use of toxic pesticides and other chemicals that harm the environment and people in the industry. 

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How can we end injustice in the cocoa industry?

Pods growing on a cocoa tree.
Source: Getty Images

You can start fighting injustice in the cocoa industry by making your chocolate habit as ethical as possible. Look for chocolate with fair-trade certifications on its label and transparency about the company’s supply chain on its website. Consider taking your ethical chocolate consumption habits a step further by consuming vegan chocolate, so you can avoid exploitation of animals in addition to people.

You can also help end abuse in the cocoa industry by writing to your favorite chocolate companies and demanding that they start improving the ethics of their cocoa supply chains.

This article, originally published on Oct. 14, 2020, has been updated.

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