From Pod to Bottle

The cacao juice supply chain — from farmer to factory to consumer. Processing locations, logistics challenges, and the concentrate vs fresh juice trade-off.

supply chainlogisticsconcentrateprocessingdistribution

The Supply Chain Challenge

Cacao grows exclusively in tropical regions within 20 degrees of the equator, but most cacao juice consumers live in Europe, North America, and East Asia. Bridging this gap — moving a perishable fruit product from remote tropical farms to distant retail shelves — is the central challenge of the cacao juice industry.

Farm Level

The journey begins on cacao farms in West Africa, South America, and Southeast Asia. Smallholder farmers (who produce 80-90% of the world's cacao) harvest pods by hand and must process them quickly.

For cacao juice specifically, the time constraint is severe: pulp must be separated from beans within 24-48 hours of harvest, before spontaneous fermentation changes the flavor profile.

Processing Models

Three distinct models have emerged:

Origin Processing

Companies like Koa and bevCacao process pulp at or near the farm level in Ghana. Advantages: maximum freshness, direct farmer relationships, shorter supply chain. Challenges: infrastructure investment in rural areas, quality control, power reliability.

Concentrate-and-Ship

Some producers extract juice at origin, then concentrate it (removing water) for economical shipping. The concentrate is reconstituted at the destination market. This is how Cabosse Naturals supplies many of its B2B customers.

Frozen Pulp Export

Other companies freeze the raw pulp for export to processing facilities in consuming countries. Pacha de Cacao follows a version of this model, working with Ecuadorian cacao pulp processed for European distribution.

Product Formats

FormatShelf LifeUse CaseCost
Fresh juice (HPP)30-45 daysRetail DTCHighest
Pasteurized juice60-90 daysRetail distributionHigh
Frozen pulp12-18 monthsProcessing, food serviceModerate
Concentrate12-24 monthsB2B ingredient, reconstitutionModerate
Powder24+ monthsSupplements, food manufacturingLowest per unit

The Economics

The economics of cacao juice are intertwined with chocolate production. Since farmers already grow cacao for bean sales, the pulp represents an additional revenue stream — not a replacement for bean income.

This changes the cost equation. The pulp was previously a zero-value waste product. Even modest prices for pulp extraction create new income for farming communities while generating a premium product for consumers in developed markets.

Timeline

From harvest to consumer, the fastest path takes about one week:

  1. Day 1 — harvest and pod opening
  2. Day 1-2 — pulp separation and pressing
  3. Day 2-3 — pasteurization and bottling
  4. Day 3-7 — cold chain distribution to retail

For concentrated or frozen products, the timeline stretches to weeks or months but gains shelf life and distribution flexibility in return.

The industry continues to innovate on logistics. New preservation technologies and processing equipment are making it increasingly feasible to deliver high-quality cacao juice to global markets while maintaining the nutritional profile that makes it valuable.