Projects

UKRI GCRF Trade, Development and the Environment Hub (2019-2025)

icmc

The UKRI GCRF Trade, Development and the Environment Hub studies how different systems of trade have affected biodiversity from a biophysical, social, political and economic point of view, and seeks to trace the impact of the trade throughout supply chains - from supplier to consumer countries via trading companies. As well as feeding into public policy advice, this research will help companies understand their products’ true environmental impact all the way back to the raw materials. The Hub will work closely with international and regional trade bodies, charities and corporate partners to design targeted recommendations for the public policy and corporate spheres, ensuring impact of the research and creating sustainable change. Within this global project, WUR implements a component on understanding where are trade-offs, risks and opportunities for biodiversity and livelihoods from the development of cocoa and oil palm in the Congo Basin.

Contact persons: Marieke Sassen and Ken Giller

CocoaSoils (first phase: 2018-2022)

LC

In the CocoaSoils project (www.cocoasoils.org) Wageningen works with public and private partners around the world to improve our understanding of cocoa nutrition. The project, which formally started in 2018 and runs at least until 2022, aims to improve the efficiency and sustainability of cocoa production by focusing on the Integrated Soil Fertility Management (ISFM). The ISFM approach in CocoaSoils proposes a stepwise intensification of cocoa production, combining improved varieties, canopy management and pest/disease control with targeted fertilizer applications complemented by (re-)use of locally available (organic) nutrient sources and appropriate intercrops/shade trees. To be able to provide good ISFM recommendations for farmers, it is necessary to have a good understanding of the roles of the different nutrients in the cocoa tree, the physiological responses of the cocoa tree to these different nutrients, and the nutrient requirements of the cocoa trees (how much, what type, how and when to apply it). This knowledge is not yet available, and therefore the partners of the CocoaSoils project will set up Core Trials. These are long-term trials of at least two hectares, where fertilisers are applied in different quantities and combinations, and responses in yield will be carefully measured. In addition to the Core Trials, smaller trials (Satellite Trials) will be set up in farmers’ fields to test a limited number of fertiliser combinations and see the effects on yield under field conditions. Based on the results from these two types of trials, ISFM recommendations will be developed and will be delivered to the farmers in order to achieve better yields and improve the sustainability of cocoa production. Within the CocoaSoils project, the Plant Production Systems Group, the Crop Systems Analysis Group, and the Earth Observation and Environmental Informatics group collaborate on the topics of data collection, management and analysis and on the supervision of four PhD students (The four PhD students (Lucette Adet, Paulina Asante, Deo-Gracias Hougni and Urcil Kenfack Essougong) who work on different aspects of cocoa cultivation.

Project output (general):

Posters CocoaSoils Forum 2020:

Posters CocoaSoils Forum 2019:


Contact persons: Ken Giller and Ekatherina Vasquez Zambrano

WOTRO Cocoa (2017-2021)

WOTRO logo

Wageningen University, IITA Ghana, CNRA Ivory Coast and Mondelez UK conduct research in the NWO-WOTRO funded project (W08.250.305): Cocoa crop improvement, farms and markets: a science-based approach to sustainably improving farmer food security in Ghana and Ivory Coast. The project started in 2017 and is projected to end in 2021. Within the overarching project, four PhD students conduct their research on different themes. One PhD project by Ambra Tosto is on the effect of pruning in relation to fertilization and shading, at CNRA research station in Divo and Barry Callebaut station in Tiassalé, Ivory Coast. A second PhD, Faustina Obeng Adomaa, investigates fit of service delivery by companies to smallholders' realities in Ghana. A third research theme, by Eva Goudsmit, is about nutrient distribution over cocoa tree organs depending on seasonality, fertilization, pruning and shade. Finally, Jiska van Vliet does research on scenarios of price and productivity increase to assess the possibilities for smallholders to achieve a living income. 

Project output:


Contact person: Maja Slingerland and the PhD rearchers mentioned above