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Lighting the Path Forward: Inspiring Results from Our Nicaragua Pilot with CacaoNica

Thu, 01/22/2026 - 9:07am by Fred Schick

As we step into a new year, Quixote Center is proud to share a story of resilience, partnership, and tangible hope emerging from rural Nicaragua. In collaboration with CacaoNica, Green Empowerment, and PeaceWorks, we launched the Community Autonomy in Energy and Sanitation (ACES) pilot project in August 2025—an initiative rooted in a simple but powerful vision: that access to clean energy and dignified sanitation can transform lives.

In just five months, that vision became reality for cocoa-producing families in Waslala.

By December 2025, 40 families had experienced meaningful improvements in their daily lives—especially in health, dignity, and productivity. For communities long underserved by basic infrastructure, these changes were nothing short of transformative.

CacaoNica itself is a testament to what collective action can achieve. Founded 25 years ago by 69 smallholder farmers, the cooperative was born out of a shared commitment to improving life for cocoa-growing families in Nicaragua’s Northern Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region. This region, part of the country’s dry corridor, faces increasing climate uncertainty, making farming both difficult and unpredictable.

Despite these challenges, CacaoNica has grown to 372 members today, providing technical training, organizational support, and access to international markets. The cooperative now exports Rainforest Alliance–certified cocoa to Europe, allowing members to earn $1.20 per pound—nearly one-third more than the non-certified price. Achieving and maintaining this certification, however, requires ongoing improvements in soil management, sanitation, and monitoring practices.

This is where ACES stepped in.

Clean Energy, New Possibilities
Because most CacaoNica members live on remote, scattered farms beyond the reach of the electric grid, access to electricity had long been out of reach. Through the ACES pilot, 40 families received 200kW photovoltaic solar systems. For the first time, their homes can stay lit after sunset. They can charge their cellphones. They can now consistently use soil quality and humidity tools, essential for meeting certification standards. Reliable, clean energy not only improved living conditions but also increased productivity and expanded what families could imagine for their futures.

Dignity Through Sanitation
Sanitation was equally urgent. Many households lacked properly constructed latrines, leading to soil contamination that directly affected both family health and cocoa quality. With homes located within the cocoa fields themselves, the risks were constant. The installation of 31 new latrines dramatically improved health conditions and restored dignity—especially for women and children. While nine families were temporarily delayed due to budget adjustments and local price fluctuations, they are prioritized for the next project cycle.

Stronger Communities, Stronger Cooperatives
Beyond infrastructure, the pilot strengthened something just as vital: community cohesion. Producers deepened their sense of belonging and commitment to CacaoNica, while cooperative staff gained valuable hands-on experience in technical training and project implementation. Working side by side fostered trust, collaboration, and a shared sense of purpose—laying the groundwork for long-term sustainability.

Quixote Center is inspired by what this partnership has already achieved. Next month, we look forward to visiting Waslala to meet directly with the families and CacaoNica staff whose lives and work are being reshaped by ACES. We are eager to listen, learn, and continue supporting a cooperative that is emerging as a regional model for sustainable, high-impact social change.

Together, we are proving that when communities have the tools they need, they can light their own path forward.

CacaoNica, Latrines, Solar Energy
Quest for Peace Nicaragua
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Alfred Wirz (not verified)

Sun, 01/25/2026 - 5:07am

Dear Quixote Team,

I am realizing solarpump projects in Haiti, DomRep, Cuba and Ecuador and I propose to cooperate also in Nicaragua to equip farmers families,communities  and cocoa/banana etc producers (cooperativas) with mobile (superficial) solarpumps for drinkingwater, sanitation and irrigation. As hydrogeologist with many years experience in the humanitarian sector I have also contact to (fairtrade) cocoa farmes in Ecuador and DomRep. Please let me know whether Quixote Center and your partners are interested in such a collaboration.

Thanks for your interest ans short reply. For more informations please send a message to frewisis@bluewin.ch

best regards

Fredy Wirz

Quisqueya projectcoordinator, Switzerland   

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Fred Schick

Program Manager

Fred is the Program Manager at the Quixote Center. Over the past 17 years he has worked for 6 different nonprofits

  • Read more about Fred Schick
Quixote Center
Promoting Justice, Seeking Peace

Mailing address:
PO Box 1950, Greenbelt, MD 20768

info@quixote.org
301-699-0042

For media inquiries contact Kim Lamberty at kim@quixote.org

Mission Statement

The Quixote Center dismantles oppressive systems and structures so that vulnerable people are empowered to become the artisans of their own destiny. Inspired by liberation theology, we do this through sustainable development, U.S. policy reform, economic justice, and educational initiatives.
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