The International Fine Cocoa Innovation Centre (IFCIC) will support the development of a niche fine cocoa industry in the Caribbean. It will create a model that showcases innovations along the cocoa value chain from bean to bar, provides training at each segment, and offers services to promote business growth. The IFCIC will integrate agriculture, processing, research and commercialization to transform the region's cocoa sector in a sustainable way. It aims to become a showpiece demonstrating advances in productivity, quality certification, small-scale manufacturing, and more.
Vision for Change (V4C) project supported by Mars Chocolate works with farmers to rejuvenate cocoa plantations and diversify them. Project is involving women. http://www.worldagroforestry.org/events/cocoa-farming
Papua New Guinea Agritourism Policy Setting Workshop 2019
Policy setting for Improved Linkages Between Agriculture, Trade and Tourism:
Strengthening the Local Agrifood Sector and Promoting Healthy Food in Agritourism
Workshop organised by the Government of Papua New Guinea
in collaboration with and Pacific Community, CTA, PIPSO, IFAD and SPTO
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 27-28th May 2019.
Vision for Change (V4C) project supported by Mars Chocolate works with farmers to rejuvenate cocoa plantations and diversify them. Project is involving women. http://www.worldagroforestry.org/events/cocoa-farming
Papua New Guinea Agritourism Policy Setting Workshop 2019
Policy setting for Improved Linkages Between Agriculture, Trade and Tourism:
Strengthening the Local Agrifood Sector and Promoting Healthy Food in Agritourism
Workshop organised by the Government of Papua New Guinea
in collaboration with and Pacific Community, CTA, PIPSO, IFAD and SPTO
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, 27-28th May 2019.
Barry Callebaut's Chocolate Sustainability Report 2014/15Barry Callebaut
Sustainability report documents Barry Callebaut’s progress in making cocoa and chocolate more sustainable
- Launched Cocoa Horizons Foundation and sustainable HORIZONS cocoa and chocolate products
- 159,000 tonnes of sustainable cocoa sourced – up 21% compared to previous year
- Over 70,000 farmers trained in better farming practices
A digital flavour map introducing Central American cacao and it's characteristics.
Developed by our consultants and the companies participating in our project.
Outlook Conferences is pleased to welcome you all for "International Conference and Expo on Food Technology and Probiotics" which will be held in Montreal, Canada during June 15-16, 2020. Food-Technology-2020 offers good opportunities for the researchers and delegates to exchange new ideas, and to establish research and/or business links, as well as to build a global partnership for potential collaboration. We honestly hope that the conference will help advance knowledge in relevant scientific and academic fields.
Theme: "Focusing Plant-Based Proteins for manufacturers of useful Food Technology and Probiotics"
Sustainable cocoa in the Dominican Republic - ForestFinanceCIFOR-ICRAF
Presentation at the Global Landscapes Forum on 6 June 2016, in London, UK during the Dragon's Den session. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
Sunjeh Raja - ICCA Dubai Launches AED 1 Million Culinary Scholarship AwardElliegoward
Sunjeh Raja, Director and CEO of ICCA presented the initiative saying, “The ICCA Dubai AED 1 Million Culinary Scholarship Award is the culmination of a vision we have had since we first opened our doors 10 years ago. It is a vision that could only be achieved with complete support from the industry and our strategic partners. This programme will completely change the lives of 30 underprivileged chefs a year, while simultaneously boosting the industry with fresh, skilled resources and thereby helping take things to the next level.”
Barry Callebaut's Chocolate Sustainability Report 2014/15Barry Callebaut
Sustainability report documents Barry Callebaut’s progress in making cocoa and chocolate more sustainable
- Launched Cocoa Horizons Foundation and sustainable HORIZONS cocoa and chocolate products
- 159,000 tonnes of sustainable cocoa sourced – up 21% compared to previous year
- Over 70,000 farmers trained in better farming practices
A digital flavour map introducing Central American cacao and it's characteristics.
Developed by our consultants and the companies participating in our project.
Outlook Conferences is pleased to welcome you all for "International Conference and Expo on Food Technology and Probiotics" which will be held in Montreal, Canada during June 15-16, 2020. Food-Technology-2020 offers good opportunities for the researchers and delegates to exchange new ideas, and to establish research and/or business links, as well as to build a global partnership for potential collaboration. We honestly hope that the conference will help advance knowledge in relevant scientific and academic fields.
Theme: "Focusing Plant-Based Proteins for manufacturers of useful Food Technology and Probiotics"
Sustainable cocoa in the Dominican Republic - ForestFinanceCIFOR-ICRAF
Presentation at the Global Landscapes Forum on 6 June 2016, in London, UK during the Dragon's Den session. For more information go to: www.landscapes.org.
Sunjeh Raja - ICCA Dubai Launches AED 1 Million Culinary Scholarship AwardElliegoward
Sunjeh Raja, Director and CEO of ICCA presented the initiative saying, “The ICCA Dubai AED 1 Million Culinary Scholarship Award is the culmination of a vision we have had since we first opened our doors 10 years ago. It is a vision that could only be achieved with complete support from the industry and our strategic partners. This programme will completely change the lives of 30 underprivileged chefs a year, while simultaneously boosting the industry with fresh, skilled resources and thereby helping take things to the next level.”
TCI 2016 Foodtech Brainport: where agrofood meets new technology
IFCIC Brochure
1. THE NEW FACE OF THE
COCOA
BUSINESS
INTERNATIONAL
FINE COCOA
INNOVATION
CENTRE (IFCIC)
IFCIC will support the development of a niche, branded,
value-added Caribbean cocoa industry by creating a
model nexus that
• showcases innovations along the value chain for a
successful bean-to-bar model.
• encourages value addition through intermediary
manufacturing support or product diversification
through incubator services.
• provides apprenticeship training at every segment
of the value chain.
• offers a range of ‘knowledge services’ to propel
private sector investment and growth.
• creates a museum and visitor centre that links to
cocoa-based agro tourism development.
• cultivates a supportive environment to nurture
business development.
THE NERVE
CENTRE OF A
BILLION
DOLLAR
INDUSTRY
The cocoa industry is an almost 100 billion dollar industry,
poised to grow by another 20% over the next decade. According
to World Cocoa Foundation between 40-50 million people
depend on cocoa for their livelihood.
While most of the cocoa in the global market is traded as ‘bulk
cocoa’ there is a small but emerging segment of the market
referred to as ‘fine’ or ‘flavour cocoa’ which fetches a significant
premium price, often 3-4 times that of bulk cocoa. Consumers
in this higher end of the market segment are becoming more
selective, demanding better quality, advanced standards of food
safety and origin-specific flavours with quality certification and
traceability, and are prepared to pay higher prices for products
that meet these sophisticated standards. Many countries in
the Caribbean are already regarded as exclusive fine cocoa
producers; which offers an opportunity to build a niche fine
cocoa industry.
The International Fine Cocoa Innovation Centre (IFCIC), the
nucleus of the Caribbean cocoa industry’s development
established under an EU/ACP Science and Technology funded
project, is the brainchild of The UWI Cocoa Research Centre
and its partners.
www.ifcic.centre
2. A 21ST CENTURY
COCOA INDUSTRY
The International Fine Cocoa Innovation Centre hopes to
become a showpiece to the world by building a bean-to-bar
model. Centred on the cutting-edge science and technology,
it will be based on a triple helix university-private sector-
government partnership approach and a complementary
push-pull strategy driving productivity improvements on one
end while supporting value-added product development and
market innovations at the other end.
It will showcase advances that will result in
• Productivity enhancements that will push cocoa
production closer to its potential yield of 8,000 kg per ha.
• Creative solutions to reduce cocoa’s production cost
through mechanisation.
• Improved technologies to monitor and enhance cocoa
quality, certification and traceability.
• Small-scale manufacturing and value addition solutions.
• Product diversification, branding and niche marketing
opportunities.
• Growth of new business clusters around the cocoa
sector.
BUILDING ON A
STRONG HERITAGE
Trinidad and Tobago
• One of the first countries with a rich legacy of cocoa
cultivation on a plantation scale for export.
• The country of origin of Trinitario cocoa, a fine flavour
bean with a range of flavour notes.
• Recognised internationally for its fine cocoa quality.
• Home to the oldest and most successful breeding
programmes and one of the world’s most prestigious
cocoa research centres.
The UWI Cocoa Research Centre
• An 85-year-old tradition of international cocoa research
and technology dissemination.
• Custodian of the largest and most diverse cocoa
collection in the world, the International Cocoa
Genebank, Trinidad (ICG,T).
• Poised to shape IFCIC as the UWI Cocoa Research
Centre’s main outreach and knowledge centre.
SUPPORTING
VALUE-ADDED
PRODUCT
DEVELOPMENT
AND MARKET
INNOVATIONS
An 85-year-old
tradition of
international
cocoa research
and technology
dissemination
3. A multi-purpose fine cocoa innovation centre is set for
completion in 2017. It will house a modern model pilot cocoa
orchard, a fine chocolate and couverture factory, teaching
theatres, incubators, a restaurant kitchen and labs and a fine
cocoa museum and visitor centre.
The IFCIC: Triple Helix Model
Envisioned as a triple helix of university-industry-government
relationships, the IFCIC project will harness the comparative
advantages and innovations in building an industry that
will provide a viable diversification option for Trinidad and
Tobago and the Caribbean, and a blueprint for development
and transformation of other sectors in the Caribbean. By
transforming the Caribbean’s fine cocoa sector, IFCIC will
ensure the sustainability of this region’s cocoa and pioneer a
contemporary approach for food crop security in the Caribbean.
For the first time ever, an innovation centre will integrate
agriculture, food processing, research and commercialisation
for a single food crop – cocoa. The pilot IFCIC facility will
showcase innovations along the entire value chain, from
production and processing to small-scale manufacturing,
product development and marketing.
IFCIC is ambitious, achievable and revolutionary. It will
embrace scientific and technological knowledge and research
to revolutionise the value chain - production, processing,
manufacturing and marketing. It will be a creative environment
that nurtures local, regional and international collaboration,
public and private sector investment.
It will work with stakeholders in Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica
and the wider Caribbean region wherever fine cocoa is grown
and be a resource for
• Rural cocoa farmers – individuals and co-operatives.
• Regional chocolatiers.
• Academic research institutions.
• Caribbean governments.
• Private companies involved in commercialisation and
innovation.
PROPOSED IFCIC FACILITY
A multi-purpose fine
cocoa innovation centre
is set for completion in 2017.
4. Model Pilot Cocoa Orchard
IFCIC will test and showcase methods to maximise cocoa
yields, and reduce cost of production through improvements
in orchard design and plant architecture, internal drainage
and irrigation, fertility and pest management, mechanisation,
shade management and pollination efficiency.
Model Cocoa Post-Harvest Processing Facility
This post-harvest processing facility will handle between
30-900 kg of wet cocoa with mechanised pod cracking;
demonstrate different cocoa fermentation systems and solar
cocoa drying systems and illustrate best practices in cocoa
processing and quality management.
Chocolate and Couverture Factory
The chocolate factory will showcase innovations in small-
scale manufacturing to support intermediary value-addition by
farmers or farmer groups and linkages with the international
fine cocoa industry. Three chocolate processing lines with
flexible capacity will allow multiple product development and
product streams.
Incubators
IFCIC will support new product and business development
(for e.g. confectionary, beverages, health and beauty aids
sectors) by providing a well-equipped incubator facility and
complementary services for Small and Medium Enterprises
(SMEs) to rent, learn, experiment and fine-tune their start-
up operations with minimal investment risk. The incubator
will promote further evolution of the local fine cocoa sector
through its provision of technical, business, logistical and
market support to small businesses that will form part of the
industry’s present or future value-added supply chain. It will
also house a sensory facility, quality control and certification
centre to support market development.
Restaurant, Kitchen and Laboratory
Catering to students and professionals in the food and beverage
industry – chefs, restaurateurs, bakeries, and chocolatiers,
this facility will offer practical chocolate-making courses as
well as other courses to inspire new products and recipes that
can help sustain Caribbean tourism.
Chocolate Academy
This will provide a wide range of training opportunities from
short courses and educational programmes to apprenticeships
on any value segment aimed at building human capacity in the
art and skill of conceptualising creative new cocoa derivative
products including cocoa-based cuisine, confectionaries,
beverages, nutraceuticals and cosmetics.
Fine Cocoa Museum and Visitor Centre
Another element aimed to bolster cocoa-based agro tourism in
Trinidad and Tobago is IFCIC’s Fine Cocoa Museum, which will
trace the evolution of the cocoa sector in Trinidad and Tobago
and the unique role of the twin-island Republic in global cocoa
history. Visitors will travel along the cocoa value chain from
bean-to-bar, enjoy interactive mini-chocolate tempering and
molding and have the opportunity to take away memorabilia,
literature, chocolate and other products sold in the Museum’s
gift shop
PARTNER WITH US
The IFCIC project is led by The UWI Cocoa Research Centre
in partnership with the Cocoa Industry Board, Jamaica,
Newer Worlds, UK and the Caribbean Fine Cocoa Forum, with
additional support being sought from government and private
sector agencies. To discover more about this pioneering
project and its partnering opportunities, contact us at
The UWI Cocoa Research Centre
Sir Frank Stockdale Building
The University of the West Indies
St Augustine Campus
Trinidad and Tobago
Tel: 868-662-2002 ext 82115
Email: pumaharan@sta.uwi.edu
Website: www.ifcic.centre
BUILDING BLOCKS OF IFCIC