EBOLA FAT PEOPLE RIOT ALERT: Ebola threatens chocolate

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Ebola threatens chocolate

tumblr_lsk1xv2jN61r4p16go1_500.gif


By BILL TOMSON | 10/12/14 7:05 AM EDT
POLITICO


Ebola is threatening much of the world’s chocolate supply.


Ivory Coast , the world’s largest producer of cacao, the raw ingredient in M&Ms, Butterfingers and Snickers Bars, has shut down its borders with Liberia and Guinea, putting a major crimp on the workforce needed to pick the beans that end up in chocolate bars and other treats just as the harvest season begins. The West African nation of about 20 million — also known as Côte D’Ivoire — has yet to experience a single case of Ebola, but the outbreak already could raise prices.



The world’s chocolate makers have taken notice.


The World Cocoa Foundation is working now to collect large donations from Nestlé, Mars and many of its 113 other members for its Coca Industry Response to Ebola Initiative. The initiative hasn’t been publicly unveiled, but the WCF plans to announce details Wednesday, while at its annual meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, on how the money will fuel Red Cross and Caritas Internationalis work to help the infected and staunch Ebola’s spread.


Morristown, N.J.-based Transmar Group, an international cocoa supplier, already has pledged $100,000, and Mars has indicated its support, too.


“As a member of the WCF and a supporter of the CocoaAction strategy, Mars is pleased to see the industry coming together to help organizations on the ground in the prevention and eradication of the Ebola virus,” the company said in a statement provided to POLITICO. “We look forward to the WCF partnership meeting in Copenhagen next week where we will learn more about the industry effort.”


Ivory Coast, which produces about 1.6 million metric tons of cacao beans per year — roughly 33 percent of the world’s total, according to data from the United Nations Food Agricultural Organization — closed its borders in August to Guinea and Liberia. More than 8,000 have been diagnosed with Ebola and nearly 4,000 have died in those two countries and Sierra Leone. Next to Ivory Coast is Ghana, the world’s third-largest producer of cacao beans — 879,348 metric tons per year — or 15 percent of the world’s total.


Tim McCoy, a senior adviser for the WCF, said signs that Ivory Coast residents already are concerned were immediately obvious during his last trip to the country in September.


“Going into meetings where … you always shake hands and often times, with men and women, you do the cheek kiss thing … They weren’t doing that,” McCoy said.


The market is worried, too. Prices on cocoa futures jumped from their normal trading range of $2,000 to $2,700 per ton, to as high as $3,400 in September over concerns about the spread of Ebola to Côte D’Ivoire, noted Jack Scoville, an analyst and vice president at the Chicago-based Price Futures Group. Since then, prices have yo-yoed down to $3,030 and then back to $3,155 in the past couple weeks.


“There are still some fears out there,” he said, and stressed new concerns that there may not be enough labor to bring in what’s expected to be another strong harvest this year. Ivory Coast farms traditionally rely on migrant workers from Guinea and Liberia to bring in the crops.


Meanwhile, Zurich, Switzerland-based Barry Callebaut — the chocolate industry’s largest player with a major presence in Ivory Coast - is reaching out to employees at its two cocoa processing plants in the country and as many farmers as it can to educate them on how to avoid getting sick and spreading the disease, according to spokesman Rafael Wermuth.


Callebaut’s state of the art Cocoa Horizons truck has been trundling through the dusty back roads of the Ivory Coast for a year and half now, helping educate farmers on how to increase yields and even entertain children with cartoons played on a massive fold-out screen. But the epidemic has added such new urgency, that Callebaut employees now take time out from their presentations to show the best ways to avoid contracting Ebola.
http://www.politico.com/story/2014/...stry-africa-effects-111809.html#ixzz3FwiPnQHT

Simple precautions to avoid getting infected and the virus that is spread through bodily fluids are widely known in more urban settings, but Callebaut is taking the message to the remotest of rural villages. To keep yourself protected, the Mayo Clinic advises frequent hand washing, avoiding “bush meat” because the virus can be present in wild animals, not handling corpses, and limiting person-to-person contact.
Other international companies with big investments in West African cocoa production are also investing in Ebola education, too.


Nestlé, the world’s largest food company and the maker of Baby Ruth and Crunch bars, is working both in and out of the infected countries.


”We have taken measures to educate all our staff in Central and West Africa on the virus and the best ways to prevent against it whilst encouraging them to share this information with their families and communities,” a company spokeswoman said. “We are closely monitoring the situation in conjunction with the relevant authorities and following their recommendations with regards to the movement and regrouping of people. We are supporting the needy in some affected zones due to the lack of food and potable water.”


The chocolate giants don’t have to look too far for an illustration of the danger that threatens the Ivory Coast.


Callebaut doesn’t have any facilities in the three West African countries at the center of the outbreak, but the company earlier did buy beans from middlemen that acted as the go between for farmers and processors, Wermuth said. That stopped recently when Callebaut lost contact with the sellers, Wermuth said.


Ebola has wreaked havoc on the populations and health care systems of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and it’s also completely disrupted agriculture production and distribution, Juan Lubroth, the FAO’s chief veterinary officer, told POLITICO.


In the countries’ efforts to block the movements of people to limit the spread of the disease, governments have set up roadblocks and limited traffic, a strategy that has also isolated and shut down farming operations, he said.


“The land has not been tilled to plant,” he said. “So we’ve missed several aspects of the planting season for crops over the last several months. The next crop will not be ready. We won’t have one and we see a food crisis already.”
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Of course ANY reason is a good one to raise the price.

Owner brought home a bag of chocolate from Lindt-Sprungli who are local to us and have a "factory store."

It was on the front seat of his pickup with the window open.

Was.

Long neck.

Do I need to draw you a picture?

Dobbin
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
There is likely to be a shortage, but if the worst of the out-of-control epidemic stays in Africa I imagine it might be possible to plant new plantations in the areas where Cocoa was first grown (aka North and Central parts of Latin America) but if it really goes seriously world wide - well I think chocolate will just be rare for awhile, but I also think the world will have other issues.
 

workerbee

* Winter is Coming *
I'm not worried.... We have a pretty decent backup supply.

But if I *DO* run out I'll go harvest the damn stuff myself...... Ebola be damned.....I needs my precious!
 

Genevieve

working on it
will there be a headline about skinny bitches rioting because theres no exlax?

probably not.

un-%ucking-beliveable

this thread just re-enforces what I keep telling my husband about this board and the members lol
thank you all for being predictable and following thru every time
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
There is likely to be a shortage, but if the worst of the out-of-control epidemic stays in Africa I imagine it might be possible to plant new plantations in the areas where Cocoa was first grown (aka North and Central parts of Latin America) but if it really goes seriously world wide - well I think chocolate will just be rare for awhile, but I also think the world will have other issues.

BZZZTTTT WRONG.

It will mean a total quarantine on all products and people emanating from the infected regions. Including, soon enough, the US and much of Europe.
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
BZZZTTTT WRONG.

It will mean a total quarantine on all products and people emanating from the infected regions. Including, soon enough, the US and much of Europe.
You got me wondering, why would a group who want's a global government isolate nations? Would they? Perhaps if they can spread ebola to all countries, the people will join in a united front to "fight" ebola? Money and manpower will be tossed into a global kitty (which will be raided by the globalists) along with the worlds top scientists; think tanks will group together to fight a common enemy. Werner vonBraun said TPTB planned for a global emergency to happen in order for the people to demand a solution by surrendering their freedoms and rights, but said it would be fake aliens.

If I wanted to take down a strong nation, infecting them with Ebola would be part of a multi pronged plan. Allow it to anchor itself in the nation and keep people in the dark so they continue their routines, where Ebola will contaminate as many surfaces as possible unhindered, weaken the people with sickness, do it in fall and winter where the cold allows the virus to live a long time outside of the body, and cut heating to homes would be a good start.

Barak Hussein Ebola cut the number of coal plants in the past year IIRC, and last winter was one of the worst in recent memory, energy systems were strained to the max, and now there are even less power plants to cover demand. Couldn't have been part of the plan, though. He had excellent reasons for destroying yet more industry and energy sources. The positive side is, while you've got no heat this winter, the fever of Ebola will keep you warm.
 

oops

Veteran Member
SERIOUSLY????...John...that alert line is less than funny...I thought better of you...guess not...:(
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
SERIOUSLY????...John...that alert line is less than funny...I thought better of you...guess not...:(

Get a sense of humor.

For real though, what does it really freaking matter?

50% of this nation is dead soon and I DON'T INTEND to be one of them.
 

spiralbinder

Agrarian Separatist
There is no requirement her for political correctness, and there should not be. That being said, I can still state I found the title to be rude and stupid. I don't think he should take it down; he has a right to say what he wants, just like I do.
 

L.A.B.

Goodness before greatness.
Dry humor, dark chocolate humor... Get it while you can, both the chocolate, the humor, and the light hearted laughter where you find it. Because that ratcheting feeling in the back of your mind, is the approach of the apex of the roller coaster ride before us in one manner or another.

A long walk
A piece of chocolate
And someone you love, or the memory thereof

Cherish the good times
Endure with a sense of humor until the end
 

Sleeping Cobra

TB Fanatic
Thankfully i really don't eat much chocolate. Not even once a month. Now if it was Gummy Bears then i would panic. I love Gummy Bears. LOL
 

SAPPHIRE

Veteran Member
Thanks for info, JG.............I too thought the title a bit rude, but hey, it would be more appropriate to call the more-than-chubby kids I see at pool as HFCS kiddies..........lots of labels available....

Since many candies are on special due to Oct. 31............STOCK UP.................COCOA TOO..............
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
Because I am one of those fatties that does not want to live in a world without chocolate, I saw the writing on the wall weeks ago and stocked way way up on baking chocolate.
 

Bumblepuff

Veteran Member
Get a sense of humor.

For real though, what does it really freaking matter?

50% of this nation is dead soon and I DON'T INTEND to be one of them.



Obama-clouds-ver-White-House-640x600-1.jpg


"I WANT YOU TO HAND OVER ALL OF YOUR CHOCOLATE, FOR I AM THE GREAT
CHOCOLATE MESSIAH AND HOLD ALL POWER OVER AMERICANS! I SAY UNTO
YOU THAT MY OBEDIENT SERVANTS SHALL NEVER BE DEPRIVED OF THEIR
DELICIOUS HERSHEY BARS AND CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES! UPON PENALTY OF
DIETING I DEMAND THAT YOU RELINQUISH THE SWEET DARK TREASURES
STASHED IN YOUR KITCHENS, PANTRIES, BUNKERS AND HIDDEN IN YOUR SOCK
DRAWERS! YES, I KNOW ABOUT THAT, TOO! DID YOU THINK YOU COULD HIDE
THE BEST FROM YOUR SUPREME GODIVA EMPEROR? YOU FOOLISH USELESS
EATERS!
THE NSA HAS BEEN MONITORING YOUR ABUSIVE SWEET TOOTH, AND
IT SHALL NOT COME TO PASS THAT YOU HOLD YOUR CHOCOLATE CANDY UNTIL
IT MELTS IN YOUR HANDS, FOR IT MUST MELT IN THE MOUTHS OF MY BELOVED
FOLLOWERS! AND AFTER MY POLICE HAVE CONFISCATED YOUR CHOCOLATES,
YES, EVEN THE UGLY WHITE CHOCOLATE COVERED CLUSTERS WITH UNKNOWN
FILLINGS, YOU SHALL WORK ON GOVERNMENTAL PLANTATIONS TO GROW MORE
COCOA BEANS TO REPLACE THOSE YOU CONSUMED WITH THE GUSTATORY LUST
OF YOUR FEVERISH WHITE PASSION! AND WILLY WONKA WILL COMMAND HIS
SPEAR-CHUCKING OOMPA-LOOMPAS TO KICK YOUR PUTRID LILY WHITE ASS IF
THEY CATCH YOU NIBBLING THE CHOCOLATELY FRUITS OF YOUR HARD LABOR!
AND THIS HALLOWEEN GIVE YOUR CHOCOLATES TO MY TRICKSTERS! SO BE IT!"

 

Bullwinkle

Membership Revoked
Black market chocolate!
How much will those ladies pay for a candy bar?
Psst Lady?! $20 for a Snickers bar. How many do you want?

Or is it a marketing ploy to sell chocolate at Halloween time?
Are sales slow?
 

LSV

Contributing Member
Because I am one of those fatties that does not want to live in a world without chocolate, I saw the writing on the wall weeks ago and stocked way way up on baking chocolate.

Well, we hit the right time of year, because with Halloween soon and the Christmas holidays soon after, there is a plethora of chocolate and chocolate baking supplies right now! I have been trying to stock up too, although the more I have around the more I eat :P
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
They just eat more. And in more creative fashions. Have you ever seen the chocolate fountain at a Golden Corral? They growl at you.

wow talk about stereo typing! Actually I eat less chocolate than my skinny friends...


...hmmm now that I think about it maybe this is the problem, I'm NOT eating enough chocolate!
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
There is likely to be a shortage, but if the worst of the out-of-control epidemic stays in Africa I imagine it might be possible to plant new plantations in the areas where Cocoa was first grown (aka North and Central parts of Latin America) but if it really goes seriously world wide - well I think chocolate will just be rare for awhile, but I also think the world will have other issues.

I'm not worried about it because the very best chocolate doesn't even come from Africa it comes from a place in Colombia in some huge canyon that rivals our grand canyon, not far in off of the Peruvian border. Apparently it is t here that the elusive white caocao beans are raised and is where Lindt gets their famous oober expensive chocolate from.
 

steve graham

Veteran Member
I seriously needed this chuckle today....love it!




Obama-clouds-ver-White-House-640x600-1.jpg


"I WANT YOU TO HAND OVER ALL OF YOUR CHOCOLATE, FOR I AM THE GREAT
CHOCOLATE MESSIAH AND HOLD ALL POWER OVER AMERICANS! I SAY UNTO
YOU THAT MY OBEDIENT SERVANTS SHALL NEVER BE DEPRIVED OF THEIR
DELICIOUS HERSHEY BARS AND CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES! UPON PENALTY OF
DIETING I DEMAND THAT YOU RELINQUISH THE SWEET DARK TREASURES
STASHED IN YOUR KITCHENS, PANTRIES, BUNKERS AND HIDDEN IN YOUR SOCK
DRAWERS! YES, I KNOW ABOUT THAT, TOO! DID YOU THINK YOU COULD HIDE
THE BEST FROM YOUR SUPREME GODIVA EMPEROR? YOU FOOLISH USELESS
EATERS!
THE NSA HAS BEEN MONITORING YOUR ABUSIVE SWEET TOOTH, AND
IT SHALL NOT COME TO PASS THAT YOU HOLD YOUR CHOCOLATE CANDY UNTIL
IT MELTS IN YOUR HANDS, FOR IT MUST MELT IN THE MOUTHS OF MY BELOVED
FOLLOWERS! AND AFTER MY POLICE HAVE CONFISCATED YOUR CHOCOLATES,
YES, EVEN THE UGLY WHITE CHOCOLATE COVERED CLUSTERS WITH UNKNOWN
FILLINGS, YOU SHALL WORK ON GOVERNMENTAL PLANTATIONS TO GROW MORE
COCOA BEANS TO REPLACE THOSE YOU CONSUMED WITH THE GUSTATORY LUST
OF YOUR FEVERISH WHITE PASSION! AND WILLY WONKA WILL COMMAND HIS
SPEAR-CHUCKING OOMPA-LOOMPAS TO KICK YOUR PUTRID LILY WHITE ASS IF
THEY CATCH YOU NIBBLING THE CHOCOLATELY FRUITS OF YOUR HARD LABOR!
AND THIS HALLOWEEN GIVE YOUR CHOCOLATES TO MY TRICKSTERS! SO BE IT!"

 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I'm eating chocolate while reading this thread. :)

John galt - the title really shouldn't say fat people. It should say Women riot alert! What kind of crazy man wants to live in a world where us women can't get our chocolate fix?
 

yellowlabz

Veteran Member
I would like to apologize for finding humor in it -- I wasn't trying to insult anyone -- I could see myself growling if someone came near MY chocolate.
 
Last edited:

AzProtector

Veteran Member
Now this is serious.
Mrs AZP eats peanut M&M's to maintain balance 1 specific week every month.
I'm screwed.

I wonder how much a semi of those would cost....hmmm...
Ebola threatens chocolate

tumblr_lsk1xv2jN61r4p16go1_500.gif


By BILL TOMSON | 10/12/14 7:05 AM EDT
POLITICO


Ebola is threatening much of the world’s chocolate supply.


Ivory Coast , the world’s largest producer of cacao, the raw ingredient in M&Ms, Butterfingers and Snickers Bars, has shut down its borders with Liberia and Guinea, putting a major crimp on the workforce needed to pick the beans that end up in chocolate bars and other treats just as the harvest season begins. The West African nation of about 20 million — also known as Côte D’Ivoire — has yet to experience a single case of Ebola, but the outbreak already could raise prices.



The world’s chocolate makers have taken notice.


The World Cocoa Foundation is working now to collect large donations from Nestlé, Mars and many of its 113 other members for its Coca Industry Response to Ebola Initiative. The initiative hasn’t been publicly unveiled, but the WCF plans to announce details Wednesday, while at its annual meeting in Copenhagen, Denmark, on how the money will fuel Red Cross and Caritas Internationalis work to help the infected and staunch Ebola’s spread.


Morristown, N.J.-based Transmar Group, an international cocoa supplier, already has pledged $100,000, and Mars has indicated its support, too.


“As a member of the WCF and a supporter of the CocoaAction strategy, Mars is pleased to see the industry coming together to help organizations on the ground in the prevention and eradication of the Ebola virus,” the company said in a statement provided to POLITICO. “We look forward to the WCF partnership meeting in Copenhagen next week where we will learn more about the industry effort.”


Ivory Coast, which produces about 1.6 million metric tons of cacao beans per year — roughly 33 percent of the world’s total, according to data from the United Nations Food Agricultural Organization — closed its borders in August to Guinea and Liberia. More than 8,000 have been diagnosed with Ebola and nearly 4,000 have died in those two countries and Sierra Leone. Next to Ivory Coast is Ghana, the world’s third-largest producer of cacao beans — 879,348 metric tons per year — or 15 percent of the world’s total.


Tim McCoy, a senior adviser for the WCF, said signs that Ivory Coast residents already are concerned were immediately obvious during his last trip to the country in September.


“Going into meetings where … you always shake hands and often times, with men and women, you do the cheek kiss thing … They weren’t doing that,” McCoy said.


The market is worried, too. Prices on cocoa futures jumped from their normal trading range of $2,000 to $2,700 per ton, to as high as $3,400 in September over concerns about the spread of Ebola to Côte D’Ivoire, noted Jack Scoville, an analyst and vice president at the Chicago-based Price Futures Group. Since then, prices have yo-yoed down to $3,030 and then back to $3,155 in the past couple weeks.


“There are still some fears out there,” he said, and stressed new concerns that there may not be enough labor to bring in what’s expected to be another strong harvest this year. Ivory Coast farms traditionally rely on migrant workers from Guinea and Liberia to bring in the crops.


Meanwhile, Zurich, Switzerland-based Barry Callebaut — the chocolate industry’s largest player with a major presence in Ivory Coast - is reaching out to employees at its two cocoa processing plants in the country and as many farmers as it can to educate them on how to avoid getting sick and spreading the disease, according to spokesman Rafael Wermuth.


Callebaut’s state of the art Cocoa Horizons truck has been trundling through the dusty back roads of the Ivory Coast for a year and half now, helping educate farmers on how to increase yields and even entertain children with cartoons played on a massive fold-out screen. But the epidemic has added such new urgency, that Callebaut employees now take time out from their presentations to show the best ways to avoid contracting Ebola.
http://www.politico.com/story/2014/...stry-africa-effects-111809.html#ixzz3FwiPnQHT

Simple precautions to avoid getting infected and the virus that is spread through bodily fluids are widely known in more urban settings, but Callebaut is taking the message to the remotest of rural villages. To keep yourself protected, the Mayo Clinic advises frequent hand washing, avoiding “bush meat” because the virus can be present in wild animals, not handling corpses, and limiting person-to-person contact.
Other international companies with big investments in West African cocoa production are also investing in Ebola education, too.


Nestlé, the world’s largest food company and the maker of Baby Ruth and Crunch bars, is working both in and out of the infected countries.


”We have taken measures to educate all our staff in Central and West Africa on the virus and the best ways to prevent against it whilst encouraging them to share this information with their families and communities,” a company spokeswoman said. “We are closely monitoring the situation in conjunction with the relevant authorities and following their recommendations with regards to the movement and regrouping of people. We are supporting the needy in some affected zones due to the lack of food and potable water.”


The chocolate giants don’t have to look too far for an illustration of the danger that threatens the Ivory Coast.


Callebaut doesn’t have any facilities in the three West African countries at the center of the outbreak, but the company earlier did buy beans from middlemen that acted as the go between for farmers and processors, Wermuth said. That stopped recently when Callebaut lost contact with the sellers, Wermuth said.


Ebola has wreaked havoc on the populations and health care systems of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, and it’s also completely disrupted agriculture production and distribution, Juan Lubroth, the FAO’s chief veterinary officer, told POLITICO.


In the countries’ efforts to block the movements of people to limit the spread of the disease, governments have set up roadblocks and limited traffic, a strategy that has also isolated and shut down farming operations, he said.


“The land has not been tilled to plant,” he said. “So we’ve missed several aspects of the planting season for crops over the last several months. The next crop will not be ready. We won’t have one and we see a food crisis already.”
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
I'm eating chocolate while reading this thread. :)

John galt - the title really shouldn't say fat people. It should say Women riot alert! What kind of crazy man wants to live in a world where us women can't get our chocolate fix?

NS, if I don't get my once every several months of Peanut Butter M&M's with a cold Heiny, I'm going to be pissed too. I'm look at how to grow it here in Florida sans Ebola infected farmers. :eek:
 

maric

Short but deadly
Um John, buddy, you know I like you but I'll be dipped! (in chocolate would be good :lol: ) I weigh 110 pounds and I LOVE my chocolate! So only fat chicks? HA! I think not!

~thinks to self. dang men have 2 heads and not a brain in either of em~
 

amarilla

Veteran Member
If I had seen this thread 2 days ago, I would have bought more cocoa and chocolate when I was at Trader Joe's while traveling...

A
 
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