Cocoa Crunch Is Most Painful in Europe as New Rules Bite

  • London futures’ premium over New York cocoa has surged
  • New EU deforestation rules are exacerbating supply fears

A farmer arranges cocoa beans in Kwabeng, Ghana. Poor harvests in West Africa have sent global futures soaring to unprecedented highs.

Photographer: Paul Ninson/Bloomberg
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Surging cocoa prices are being felt most in Europe, the world’s biggest chocolate consuming region, as new sustainability rules threaten to exacerbate a shortage of beans.

Poor harvests in West Africa have sent global futures soaring to unprecedented highs. But fears are mounting that the European Union’s incoming regulations — aimed at stopping products that destroy forests from being sold in shops — will make it even harder for the bloc’s top chocolate makers to secure supplies as consumption holds up.