IBM Studies Cocoa Genes to Safeguard Chocolate Supply
By Melita Marie Garza
June 26 (Bloomberg) -- International Business Machines Corp. is working with candy maker Mars Inc. and the U.S. government to study the genetic code of cocoa trees to safeguard the world's chocolate supply.
Closely held Mars, the maker of M&M candies and Snickers bars, and the U.S. Agriculture Department will sequence the entire cocoa genome, deciphering the plant's biological map. IBM will analyze the results using Blue Gene, the world's second- fastest supercomputer, the company said today in a statement.
Political unrest and plant diseases in Africa, home to two- thirds of cocoa production, have driven up prices more than 50 percent in the past year. Cocoa trees in Africa and Asia have become increasingly stunted from fungus, insects and drought, triggering supply shortfalls.
``Mars is trying to improve the reliability of the cocoa supply and IBM is looking for new ways to market its Blue Gene supercomputer power,'' said Lora Cecere, an analyst for AMR Research in Boston. IBM can apply the same tools to other food staples falling short of demand, such as corn, she said.
Sequencing the genome will let scientists isolate hardier plant types that can withstand fungal strains, boring insects and the drier environments created by drought and global warming, said Ajay Royyuru, a senior computational manager at IBM, the world's biggest computer-services company.
The five-year project will help the more than 6.5 million family farmers -- most of them in Africa, South America and Asia -- who depend on cocoa, according to Armonk, New York-based IBM. IBM spokeswoman Jenny Hunter declined to reveal the value of the company's contract with Mars.
`Not Just Science'
``This is not just science for the sake of science,'' said Royyuru. ``This is IBM making an impact in markets way beyond what we would traditionally look at.''
Cocoa demand will outpace supply by 29,000 tons this season, Fortis Bank said June 6, up from a prior forecast of 6,000 tons. The bank expects a 21,000-ton shortfall for the 2008-09 season, a third straight annual deficit.
Mars wants to ``help accelerate the traditional breeding programs that will improve cocoa trees, yield higher quality cocoa and increase farmers' economic livelihood,'' Howard-Yana Shapiro, global director of plant science for Mars, said.
The U.S. Agricultural Research Service will make the results publicly available, he said.
via Bloomberg.com