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(vo) the wells fargo active cash card — earn 2% cash back on what you want. like a chic velvet party dress. the perfect petal pink lipstick. vintage earrings with a mysterious history. and...2% cash back on what you need. like a first-rate lint brush. the wells fargo active cash credit card. that's real life ready. >>> it's rare to find someone who doesn't love chocolate. but there is something about one of our favorite treats you may not know. i its key ingredient comes from places that that don't always benefit from our obsession. seth doane has a report that's bittersweet. >> your house is here. >> yes, here. work is here. >> reporter: kim addison is on a culinary and culture mission to change our perception of chocolate. >> we think switzerland, belgium, france. but never ghana, never cote d'ivoire. those are the two largest producers of cocoa in the world. how are we not known for our chocolate? >> reporter: she is trying to change that with 15 employees working from this modest space in the african nation of ghana. what was this building before it was a chocolate factory? >> it was actually my parents' first house. >> reporter: kim and her sister priscilla, ghanaions who grew up in america around the world, trying to keep some of the profits from the $100 billion chocolate industry here. they started their own company '57 chocolate. >> '57 chocolate is short for 1957, which was giannis' independence. but it's not just about ghana free from colonial rule. it's more about the spirit behind ghana independence. as africans, we can do this. >> reporter: as a business woman, she is motivated by some numbers that don't make sense to her. two-thirds of the world's cacao, the raw ingredient roasted and used to make chocolate, is grown in the african nations of cote d'ivoire or ivory coast and ghana. yet africa produces just 1% of the world's chocolate. the biggest chocolate makers are in the u.s. and europe. which is where most of the money goes, too. chocolate's story is certainly not all sweet. there are continuing issues of trafficking children to work on plantations for little or no pay. an issue that touches even u.s. consumers. a new lawsuit alleges customs and border protection ignored evidence that child labor was involved in harvesting cocoa for major u.s. candymakers. the agency told us it cannot comment on pending litigation. today the department of labor estimates 1.5 million children still work illegally on cocoa plantations. we visited cocoa country to see where the problems start and to understand some possible solutions. cracking open the pods to extract the sweet, slimy bean, which at this stage has a flavor like lychee fruit. i saw you eating a few of them earlier. while there are perks, high pay is not among them. do you feel like you make enough money to have a decent living? >> no, no, no. >> reporter: the average cocoa farmer in ghana earns less than $2 a day, and it's labor intensive work. once the cocoa is collected, it's left to ferment under banana leaves for about seven days. and then it's laid out in the sun to dry. steven has been farming cocoa for 14 years and says he barely breaks even. at the end do you buy chocolate bars? >> i don't buy chocolate. when we have, i better use it to buy heavy foods rather than chocolate. >> reporter: you don't make enough money to afford chocolate? >> yeah. >> reporter: that's a bitter reality dutch chocolate maker tony's chocolonely is confronting. >> nobody needs chocolate. it's unacceptable in something that's a luxury, a gift, that people accept that there is extreme poverty at the beginning of the supply dhan. >> reporter: he led sustainability programs for tony's chocolonely until last month. the company's name nods to its lonely place in this fight against exploitation. >> the two main problems are illegal labor and -- and both of them are driven by poverty. what our program aims to do is help farmers enable -- earn a living income. and with that we take away the root cause of the issues in cocoa. >> reporter: they took us to see schools they help support. a common way many big chocolate companies claim to be giving back. but he is underlining this what he called charity is not enough. boosting real incomes is essential. he says the price most chocolate companies are paying for raw cocoa here, a price set by the government, is too low compared to what farmers need to live. >> we calculate how big the gap is between the government's price and living income price and pay that gap as an extra premium. >> reporter: for the spring, the premium was $63 hire than what set by the government. meaning tony paid double for each bag of beans. tony's implemented a tracing system to follow the beans through their supply chain. >> so knowing that to be responsible for whatever happens to your beans, to help you to do that. >> reporter: can you calculate how many chocolate bars you can make from a bag like this of cocoa? >> yeah, that's a good question. really depends on the type of chocolate. so a dark chocolate bar would contain more cocoa than a milk chocolate bar. on average, a tony's bar three to 500 bars from one bag. >> reporter: three to 500 bars. but farmers are getting just $80 for each of these bags of cocoa. >> it's still only a small fraction of the price. there is no chocolate company will go bankrupt on that. it means the world of difference for farmers. >> after it is dried -- >> reporter: you start smelling the chocolate? >> yeah. >> reporter: one of the farmer cooperatives selling to tony's. >> my parents were doing. >> reporter: how about your grandparents? >> did, too. >> reporter: wow. their parents? >> they, too. >> reporter: so your great, great parents, grandparents, parents? all cocoa farmers? >> yes. >> reporter: now you? >> yes. >> reporter: she said she used some of the extra money tony's paid to make a capital investment. she needs a second job. >> at first i don't have a machine. now i have this machine to sew. >> reporter: because you got extra money from tony's? >> yes. >> reporter: working through these cooperatives, tony's tries t build the relationships needed to identify and root out problems. right on the bar it says, we exist to end modern slavery in illegal child labor in the chocolate industry. it's a goal, but not a guarantee. >> we can't do this on our own. we have to develop a model that is replicable and scalable to all other chocolate companies to do the same as we do. >> reporter: if i buy this piece of chocolate, can you guarantee there is not child labor involved? >> to so if you buy chocolate from tony's chocolonely you know we search for it. >> reporter: search but can't promise it's not part of the chain somewhere? >> and we find child labor, we are transparent. it's good we find it. that's the start of solving it. >> reporter: next year the ghana government is raising the price to combat smuggling, illegal mining and, of course, child labor. at '57 chocolate, kimlberly is trying her own way to keep more profits in ghana through controlling the production of chocolate. >> adding value to that cocoa in country, consuming it in country, and then also making it available globally. >> reporter: but there are challenges you'd probably never think of in this cocoa-producing country. there is the melting heat, inconsistent electricity and problems finding raw materials like sugar and milk. still, addison joins a handful of other small companies working to cultivate and profit from the growing taste for chocolate here. the prominent black leaders in ghana and independence figures featured on their bars are a reminder of the spirit and potential of this place. >> there is so much value here on the continent. where there are problems, there are huge opportunities, and what we're doing at '57 we see a problem with something as small as the cocoa bean and we have turned it into an opportunity. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ the l'or b barista cofoffee and esprpresso systetem. now w brewing pepeet's coffe. this is american infrastructure. megawatts of power, rails and open road, and essential services of every kind. all running on countless invisible networks, making it a prime target for cyberattacks. but the same ai-powered security that protects all of google also defends the systems running america's infrastructure. for these services. for the 336 million of us living here. ♪ hehe hits his s mark -—centerer stage—and is crushed byby a baby grandnd piano. yoyou're r replacing m me? 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