The 10-year-old is rocking a machete at Ghana’s cocoa farm, which feeds the global chocolate giant. After decades of industry commitments, more than 1.5 million children work elsewhere on conditions that make it illegal.
Swiss blockchain company Fedrok AG and Ghana’s agribusiness farmer Ghana have launched a pilot designed to help child labour prevent the supply chain of cocoa and palm oil. This initiative will create a system aimed at marrying Fedrok’s “Green Proof” blockchain and Farmright’s deep credibility among farmers in Ghana, transparent, tampering and most importantly scalable.
The initiative covers issues that have persisted despite years of industry commitment. Ghana produces around 20% of the world’s cocoa, but the survey continues to find young children working in dangerous situations on supplier farms.
All employment contracts are permanently recorded on Fedrok’s blockchain. Independent surprise audits are recorded with digital signatures and timestamps. Anonymous community tips are stored in places that cannot be erased. Most importantly, farms that prove that they are not children’s workers will win a “seal” of blockchain verification that allows them to access premium buyers who are willing to pay more for ethically sourced cocoa. Rather than a top-down mission, this economic reward is something that can make this initiative filled with others sustainable.
“It’s not enough to just tell farmers to do better.” explained Randy Boaitey, founder of Farmright Ghana. “We’re making sure we actually pay for better.” However, the long-term viability sees farmers deliver clear benefits to the necessary initial investments in technology. This includes biometric scanners, training, and a reliable internet connection in remote locations.
This is because regulations are coming, whether they like companies or not. European Union’s deforestation regulations will promptly require businesses to prove that their supply chains are free of human rights violations or environmental damage. Future corporate sustainability due diligence directives will further expand these requirements. Companies caught up in child labour in chains face massive fines and market exclusion. Nestlé, Mars and Mondeles are all open to stop child labour from the supply chain. However, progress was slow and difficult to verify.
The system utilizes the Layer-1 blockchain from FedRok, an EVM compatible blockchain optimized for high-frequency ESG data logging. In addition to handling multiple compliance frameworks, the infrastructure is integrated with existing authentication systems.
FedRok takes a different approach than most crypto companies. Instead of engaging in speculative trading, they concentrate solely on environmental and social impacts. CEO Blazdell calls him a “systems engineer” rather than a “Crypto Antrepreneur.”
The company’s “Green Proof” consensus mechanism rewards blockchain activities driven by renewable energy. Their FDK tokens link chain activities to measure environmental impacts by reflecting certified carbon outcomes. FedRok has earned ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 accreditation and has applied for membership in VQF, a FINMA-recognized self-regulatory organization (SRO) under Switzerland’s AML Act. This compliance-first approach is aimed at clients from institutions who require verifiable sustainability qualifications.
“We’ve been fighting for organic, sustainable agriculture for a long time.” Boaitey said. “Now we have the tools to prove fairness to the world.”
Ghana represents one front of Fedrok’s global expansion. In India, the company is partnering with TechXearthSpace on its underground CO2 isolation project. In Papua New Guinea, the T4G pay platform allows indigenous landowners to receive verified payments for mangrove restoration. Madagascar pilots the Trash For Trash program that turns community recycling into tradeable digital assets.
For Ghana’s cocoa industry, the experiment represents a test of whether technology can succeed in places where traditional surveillance has failed. The plan includes partnerships with government ministries and certification bodies. Shoppers may immediately scan the QR code to confirm that they came from a child-like farm where the chocolate was confirmed. The country’s 800,000 farms employing it could potentially have access to premium markets and carbon financing if the system proves scalable.
If successful, the model could extend beyond Ghana to other cocoa-producing regions in West Africa and to additional crops where child labour remains endemic. Blockchain infrastructure is designed to be replicated across different countries and regulatory frameworks.
Whether this will ultimately solve the problem that resisted decades of corporate promises remains to be seen. Traditional surveillance has failed because it is expensive, rare and easy to operate. On-chain records are constant and tampered with. The cost driver is field verification and ensures that bad data cannot be entered in the first place.
Children working at Cocoa Farm in Ghana have heard many promises before. This time, the verification system is not trust-independent. It runs with mathematics, encryption, and economic incentives that make children more profitable than exploiting.
Hopefully the chocolate may end up taste sweeter.