Colombia's Cacao Renaissance

Colombia's transformation from conflict zones to cacao farms — fine flavor varieties, peace-driven agriculture, and the growing specialty market.

Colombiafine flavorpeacespecialtySouth America

From Coca to Cacao

Colombia's cacao story is inseparable from its history. Following decades of armed conflict and coca cultivation, cacao has emerged as a legitimate alternative crop in former conflict zones. The Colombian government, international development organizations, and private companies have invested heavily in cacao as a pathway to peace and economic stability.

The ICCO classifies 95% of Colombian cacao as "fine flavor" — one of the highest rates in the world. This quality distinction creates a price premium that makes cacao competitive with illicit crops in terms of farmer income.

Growing Regions

RegionVarietiesNotes
SantanderCriollo, TrinitarioOldest cacao region, traditional farming
Tumaco (Nariño)Criollo-typeFormer conflict zone, now specialty cacao
AraucaNative varietiesEmerging region, wild cacao genetics
HuilaCriollo, TrinitarioHigh-altitude, complex flavor profiles
MetaVariousPost-conflict agricultural development

Colombia's geographic diversity — from Pacific lowlands to Andean foothills to Amazon basin — creates an unusually wide range of terroir conditions for cacao, producing distinct flavor profiles across regions.

The Fine Flavor Advantage

Colombian cacao is prized for:

  • Complex fruity notes — red berries, stone fruits, citrus
  • Floral aromatics — sometimes compared to Ecuadorian Nacional
  • Mild tannins — less astringent than West African cacao
  • Honey-like sweetness in the pulp

This extends to the fruit pulp. Colombian cacao pulp tends to be aromatic and complex, potentially making it excellent material for premium cacao juice — though commercial juice production from Colombian cacao is still in its early stages.

Development Programs

Several programs support Colombian cacao farmers:

  • USAID cacao development — funding farm establishment in post-conflict areas
  • Luker Chocolate's Cacao for Peace — connecting smallholders to premium markets
  • Casa Luker Foundation — technical assistance and community development
  • Colombian government crop substitution — incentives for coca-to-cacao transition

These programs have helped increase Colombian cacao production from roughly 40,000 tonnes in 2010 to over 70,000 tonnes today, with quality improvements tracking alongside volume growth.

Cacao Juice Potential

Colombia's cacao sector has not yet developed significant cacao juice production, but the conditions are favorable. The country's fine-flavor cacao, growing processing infrastructure, and international development support create an opportunity for juice companies willing to invest in origin processing.

The farmer income impact of adding juice production to existing cacao operations could be particularly meaningful in Colombia, where many farmers are still establishing their farms and looking for ways to maximize returns from young trees.