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Food and Drinks
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Cocoa growing in Hong Kong tried as climate change raises prices for chocolate makers

  • Climate change is pushing up prices of cocoa beans, key ingredient of chocolate, yet also makes growing them in Hong Kong more viable

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Cocoa beans harvested in 2023 by Arron Liu, founder of bean-to-bar brand Chocobien Chocolate, from cacao trees he planted in Hong Kong. Photo: Chocobien Chocolatier.
Kylie Knott

Hong Kong chocolate makers Gavin Chan and Whitney Yip are digging deep into an industry they have grown to love since founding Gamma Craft Chocolate in 2018.

On a plot of land in Tai Po, in Hong Kong’s New Territories, the couple are growing cacao trees, the evergreens whose seeds, also known as cocoa beans, are used to make chocolate.

“We have about 30 cacao trees on a 3,000 sq ft [280 square metre] piece of land that range in age from three to nine months,” Chan says.

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It is a long-term project. Cacao trees take about five years to mature and produce cacao pods in which cocoa beans are housed. The trees grown by Yip and Chan are at the fragile seedling stage. For now, protecting them from flooding, typhoons and snails is a priority.

Hong Kong chocolate makers Gavin Chan and Whitney Yip founded Gamma Craft Chocolate in 2018. Photo: Kylie Knott
Hong Kong chocolate makers Gavin Chan and Whitney Yip founded Gamma Craft Chocolate in 2018. Photo: Kylie Knott
Chan and Yip are growing cacao trees on a plot of land in Hong Kong’s New Territories. Photo: Gamma Craft Chocolate
Chan and Yip are growing cacao trees on a plot of land in Hong Kong’s New Territories. Photo: Gamma Craft Chocolate

They are not the only ones who are nurturing home-grown cocoa beans.

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