Skip to main content

IFC Set to Fund Coffee Training for Kenyan Farmers

Brian Adero. Nairobi
East African Standard via All Africa

September 13, 2007

The World Bank's private sector lending arm has set aside Sh14m to train Kenyan farmers on how to produce specialty coffees.

Once local liquorers are certified as specialty graders, farmers will be better placed to market their coffee directly to specialty roasters.

Speaking during the opening of a training programme sponsored by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), Dr Peter K Michori, chairman Coffee Board of Kenya, said the inaugural sales of specialty coffee will be launched in early February, next year.

The five-day course ends on Saturday. Quality Institute will test and certify qualified cuppers as Q-graders during the second training session in November.

The course has attracted 20 chief and senior liquorers from commercial marketing agents and dealers.

Michori says that Kenyan coffee enjoys a competitive edge due to its high quality, despite making up only one per cent of the world's coffee.

"When Kenya coffee is subjected to specialty grade assessment methods and certified, it will fetch better prices in the international market," he said.

The training is part of a joint project between IFC, Coffee Board of Kenya and Coffee Research Foundation to link specialty coffee market buyers with producers via the direct sales window.

Michori says the project is also providing technical assistance to 100 coffee factories to produce specialty grade coffee for the inaugural sales in February next year.

In addition, the project will train coffee producers on marketing and quality management, and support the Specialty Coffee Growers Association of Kenya to develop a strategic plan and a website to market members' coffee.

The grading system, developed by the Specialty Coffee Association of America (SCAA) defines standards for cup quality and is a highly effective method for identifying quality coffees. The graded coffee will be marketed via a web-based portal run by the Coffee Quality Institute, described in a format known as Q-certificates. Coffee Quality Institute was founded by SCAA in 1996 to advise farmers on producing specialty coffee.

Michori asked farmers to put more effort in ensuring that they produce high quality coffee as Kenyan coffee is recognised world over owing to the good soils.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ethiopian Coffee & Tea Authority Relaxes Coffee Export Restrictions

  Ethiopian Coffee & Tea Authority Relaxes Coffee Export Restrictions  Addis Fortune November 14, 2020 Coffee traders can now send all grades of coffee beans to the global market, in contrast to the previous law that allowed them only to export the top four grades of coffee, according to a new directive issued by the Ethiopian Coffee & Tea Authority. Farmers and exporters can also directly ship the beans without going through the trading floors of the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange (ECX). The new scheme allows fifth grade and under grade (UG) coffee beans, which up until now have only been supplied to the local market, to be exported. Coffee quality experts at respective regional offices of the Authority will determine the grade of the coffee. The Authority at its head office issues permits to the exporters every year, while regional offices are delegated to grant export permit to farmers who have at least two hectares of farmland. The Authority sets standard prices on a...

Climate-hit Ethiopia shifts coffee uphill

Caffeine high? Climate-hit Ethiopia shifts coffee uphill Elias Gebreselassie Thomson Reuters Foundation June 3, 2018 HAMBELA, Ethiopia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Few countries take coffee as seriously as Ethiopia - and that’s not only because it prides itself as being the source of the prized Arabica bean. But rising temperatures and worsening drought linked to climate change are now hitting production - and fixing that may require moving many Ethiopian coffee fields uphill, experts say. Aside from its cultural value, coffee is Ethiopia’s single largest source of export revenue, worth more than $860 million in the 2016-2017 production year. But coffee-growing areas in eastern Ethiopia have seen the average temperature climb 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) over the past three decades, according to the Environment, Climate Change and Coffee Forest Forum (ECCCFF), an Ethiopian non-governmental organization. That has caused stronger drought ...

The saga of the Starbucks-Ethiopia affair

Note :   The most recent developments on Starbucks vs. Ethiopia are listed below: January 9, 2012:  Has trademarking doubled Ethiopian farmers' income?   January 5, 2012:   Starbucks to showcase use of a QR code to trace Organic Ethiopia Sidamo® Coffee   ========= "When two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers. When the same two elephants make love, the grass still suffers." - derivative of an old African saying Life, before and after the agreement, remains unaffected for farmer Gemede Robe, the icon of the Starbucks vs. Ethiopia dispute. He lives in the Borena zone of the Oromia region, one of the many coffee growing zones of the country. (Photo: Courtesy of Oxfam America) By Wondwossen Mezlekia May 31, 2010 The coffee trademark dispute between Starbucks and Ethiopia officially ended exactly three years ago. In June 2007, the giant coffee chain and the government of Ethiopia declared their agreement "to work together to license...