Jacqueline Charles
jcharles@MiamiHerald.com
jcharles@MiamiHerald.com
Posted on Tue, Nov. 01, 2011
THIOTTE, Haiti -
Connoisseur Osier Jean steps into the sterile room, pauses and clears his mind.
With notebook and flavor
wheel in hand, he quickly turns to the task at hand – checking the quality.
He sniffs, slurps and
swirls, allowing his senses to take in the richness.
The liquid is not wine,
but caffeine rich Kafe Kreyòl, Haitian coffee. It is the country’s latest
effort to revive a once-flourishing industry that has been crippled by decades
of deforestation, political chaos and crises.
For years, bitter
poverty and plummeting coffee prices around the world have made it much more
profitable for farmers to chop trees for charcoal, and invest in cash crops,
rather than coffee cherries. Now, with coffee consumption up and a shrinking
supply of beans worldwide driving up prices, Haitian coffee is once again
becoming a hot commodity.
But the coffee renaissance
has its critics who wonder whether this revival, propped up by foreign aid, can
sustain itself after the money runs out.
“Our biggest resource is
our coffee,” said Archange Mardi, 51, a local farmer in Thiotte, a mountain
valley in the southeastern Belle Anse region where the lush landscape is lined
with shaded coffee trees growing in back yards, small gardens and family-owned
plots. “Before we didn’t understand; now we are beginning to.”
Farmers in Thiotte and
other coffee producing regions here are gaining access to new global markets,
like Italy and Japan, and fetching premium prices for their exported sun-dried
coffee.
Quality beans from Gwo
Chwal, a nearby mountain community known for producing one of Haiti’s best
coffee beans, once sold for $.30 a pound. Today, Japanese roasters are buying
it for $5.50.
“We have a demand that
we can never satisfy,” said Robinson Nelson, a local coffee grower and manager
of COOPCAB, a cooperative in Thiotte working with more than 5,000 coffee
farmers in southeastern, Haiti.
The success isn’t just
restricted to the southeast. Some 130 miles north, in the rural highland of
Port-de-Paix, a smaller but similar coffee cooperative is also growing. This
year, Café COCANO farmers are expecting to double exports of their organically
grown coffee – already available on the Internet and in Italian espresso shops
– to high end South Florida grocers.
“Haitian farmers can
produce great coffee as long as there is an export chain that works and that
can get them a fair price,” said Anthony Vinciguerra, director of St. Thomas
University’s Center for Justice and Peace, which has been working with the 300
families who comprise the northwest Haiti coffee growers’ co-op for the past
five years.
While the northwest
farmers have been aided by the South Florida university’s students – they
assist with everything from social media and marketing to finding new export
markets as part of class assignments – in Thiotte, farmers have benefitted from
the attention Haiti received after last year’s devastating earthquake.
Earlier this year, the
Clinton Bush Haiti Fund provided $1 million to Root Capital, a non-profit
social investment fund focusing on rural businesses in developing nations, to
help boost small businesses in Haiti. One of its first loans, $150,000, went to
COOPCAB, the Thiotte coffee growers. The money since has been paid back with
interest.
“Our mission is not
profits,” said Nelson, sitting inside the group’s headquarters where Jean, 46,
the region’s only professionally trained coffee taster, works with others who
dry the coffee beans, pack it in burlap bags and load it for shipment from Port-au-Prince.
“We are interested in
helping our planters improve their lives. There is a transformation happening.”
Said Fritz Francois,
COOPCAB’s president: “It is almost impossible to find someone today in Thiotte
cutting down a tree to make charcoal. Today, because coffee has a price, the
farmers are motivated and they are leaving the trees because to cultivate
coffee you need shade.’’
Still, there are
challenges.
Each year, coffee
speculators from the neighboring Dominican Republic come across Haiti’s porous
borders to smuggle in an estimated 120,000 bags of Haitian coffee, avoiding
Dominican taxes and paying desperate growers pennies on the pound.
“If you go to the
Dominican Republic, you may drink a coffee that is very good and most probably
that coffee is from Haiti, but you wouldn’t know it,” said Marcel Duret, a
former Haiti ambassador to Japan, working with COOPCAB to get its three
varieties of coffee into new markets.
Duret estimates that
Haiti loses $50 million annually to the illegal coffee trade. Money, he said,
that could “provoke drastic changes for the better in the lives of the coffee
growers.”
Not everyone views the
Dominicans, the biggest consumer of Haitian coffee, as the threat to growing
Haiti’s coffee economy.
Critics say growers and
exporters need to focus quality and quantity while the international community
needs to help create an economic model that focuses less on subsidies and more
on sustainability.
“Haitian farmers have
lost the long-term vision,’’ said Stephan Jean-Pierre, who has worked in
Haiti’s coffee industry as a consultant, exporter and roaster for years.
“They live on a
day-to-day basis, and waiting five years for a coffee tree to produce cherries
is too long. They are mining whatever trees there are today until they run out.”
While Thiotte farmers
may be reaping the success of the global coffee market, the cooperative model
is not the answer to the country’s “dangerously troubled” coffee industry,
Jean-Pierre said. Twenty years after the U.S. Agency for International Development
organized a group of coffee growers into the Fédération des Associations
Caféières Natives (FACN) co-op, and invested more than $10 million into helping
them produce and market a high-end brand of coffee known as Haitian Blue, all
it has to show for the effort is the copyrighted brand, existing on paper only.
“[The cooperatives] are
very sexy on paper but we you start digging you realize that without subsidies
they can’t survive,” Jean-Pierre said.
Haiti needs to
reorganize its entire coffee chain, said Jean Marc Ewald, production and
quality manager of REBO, one of three traditional Haitian coffee exporters that
remain.
“This is not the moment
to be exporting small batches of 30 bags, 40 bags for $5 and then there are
400,000 bags in here that are not being sold,’’ Ewald said. “The system they
are promoting will give a lot of money to just a few.”
If Haiti is to once
again become a thriving coffee market, the effort needs to be a national
project that begins with a massive tree planting campaign while convincing
farmers that there is a strong future in Haitian coffee.
“We have to reorganize
the whole chain, government has to get involved,” Ewald said. “We just need to
start planting again.”

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