How Nestlé increased cocoa yields by 32%

Nestlé released its half-year results for 2024 on 25 July, emphasising the achievements of its income accelerator programme.

In its first 18 months, Nestlé’s programme has increased cocoa yields of participating farmers by almost a third (32%) largely through adopting pruning practices and other sustainable farming strategies.

Thinking beyond price

“With our programme, we made the conscious decision to think beyond price and focus on direct cash incentives,” says a spokesperson for Nestlé.

The company created its income accelerator programme based on its work with the Nestlé Cocoa Plan. The programme aims to help close cocoa-farming families’ living income gap and reduce the risk of child labour and has so far supported more than 10,000 families in Côte d’Ivoire with plans to expand to Ghana later this year.

The plan focusses on encouraging cocoa-farming families to engage in positive practices in four areas: school enrollment, good agricultural practices, agroforestry activities, and diversified incomes.

How pruning boosts productivity

From a practical perspective, Nestlé is working with farmers to encourage regular pruning of diseased or degraded branches on cocoa trees. With a commercial lifespan of approximately 25 years, from the first year after planting, cocoa trees benefit from annual pruning which improves cocoa pod yields and helps limit crop disease and loss.

Shade and fruit tree planting has also formed part of Nestlé’s agricultural strategy that is successfully impacting the resilience of cocoa crops.