Coffee
growers are combating a killer fungus and rock-bottom pay.
November 9, 2013
LIMA, Peru
— Are you paying a fair price for your latte every morning?
More
than fair, you might think, given the occasional criticisms that Starbucks, the
world’s most popular specialty coffee retailer, is too expensive.
But try
telling that to the farmers in Latin America who grow most of the world’s
premium java and, in many cases, are not even making ends meet.
Current
rock-bottom prices for coffee beans — below cost for many of the region’s
growers — and a crushing outbreak of coffee leaf rust, a fungus that slashes
harvests, are making their lives a misery.
Although
the picture is uneven, from the lush fields of Chiapas, in southern Mexico, to
the Andean foothills, many growers are caught in the pincer.
The
problem is at its most intense in Mexico, Central America and Peru, which
together produce roughly 30 million 132-pound sacks a year of arabica, the
beans used in top-end coffees.
“It is
a disaster. This has just deepened the poverty,” says Eliseo Condor, of
Mountain Coffee exporters, which groups together 600 small growers in the
Chanchamayo region of central Peru.
The yellowish
fungus eats leaves, causes unripe coffee beans to fall and can kill off swaths
of trees. Although the reasons for the latest unprecedented outbreak are
unclear, some suspect climate change.
Rust
cut Mountain Coffee’s 2013 harvest from 30,000 sacks to 22,000. That’s despite
the company’s farmers using fungicide and fertilizer — measures that have
increased production costs by 10 percent.
Meanwhile,
they are earning an average $175 per sack for their certified organic, fair
trade and rainforest-friendly beans, when their breakeven price is $180.
Yet
Mountain Coffee’s farmers, most of whom have just an acre or two of coffee as
their only source of income, may be among the lucky ones.
By
growing certified coffee and having annual contracts for most of their harvest
with eight regular buyers, in Europe and the United States, they are largely
buffered from the worst effects of the coffee crisis.
Through
the company, they also have access to expert assistance to deal with the rust
blight and improve their productivity.
But for
most small growers, that is not the case. Condor says many of his farmers’
independent neighbors have seen plants die.
Eduardo
Montauban, who heads the Peruvian Chamber of Coffee and Cacao, says up to 30
percent of the country’s annual harvest — roughly 1 million sacks — has been
lost.
And the
ICO says Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean have this year lost a further
2.7 million bags — with the financial hit estimated at more than $1 billion.
A
double shot
Meanwhile,
the current spot price of around $110 per sack for non-certified arabica does
not cover costs for most farmers. For that, Montauban estimates, it would need
to hit $130 in the short-term and $160 for long-term sustainability.
Outside
of Brazil and Colombia, the double whammy of low prices and rust is similar in
much of Latin America.
“Most
growers in Guatemala are in real trouble. Coffee simply isn’t viable at current
prices,” says Iliana Martinez, general manager of that country’s Esquipulas
coffee cooperative.
Production
costs in the Central American nation are around $115 a sack for uncertified
arabica, she adds, $5 less than the current spot price.
She
expects many smallholder farmers to end up switching to more profitable crops —
or even emigrate to the US.
“Those
who do survive will only be able to do so because they can control labor
costs,” she adds.
On
larger farms, where seasonal workers harvest the coffee, smaller harvests due
to rust have cost jobs. Guatemala, Central America’s No. 2 arabica exporter,
has shed 72,500, according to national growers association Anacafe.
Neighboring
El Salvador is also cutting tens of thousands of the temporary laborers who
handpick the reddish-brown fruit.
The low
prices are in part the result of a global glut, including increased production
in Brazil and Colombia, according to Mauricio Galindo of the ICO, which
supports the global coffee industry and promotes price stability.
Both
nations’ growers have been hit by low prices but unlike in other parts of Latin
America were more proactive in preparing for the rust blight, including even
developing hybrid strains of coffee that are more resistant to it.
As a
result, Brazil now produces some 50 million sacks a year — although about
one-fifth of that is robusta, used for some lower-quality blends and instant
coffee — when previously that amount represented a peak harvest.
Meanwhile
in Colombia, the biggest exporter of top-end arabicas, production has recovered
from recent lows of 7 million sacks a year and in 2013 hit 10 million.
Thanks
to their improved production plus higher yields in Vietnam, there's a
10-million-bag global surplus this year and the forecast for 2014 is 4.5
million bags, Galindo says.
The
picture is further complicated by growing global demand, especially from new
markets such as China and India. Meanwhile, even the mature US market has grown
3 percent over the last year.
But
that growing demand hasn’t been strong enough to keep prices from sinking.
Coffee
is a notorious boom-and-bust crop. The last bad crisis hit when Vietnam burst
on the bean scene in the 1990s, flooding the market with cheap robustas and
thrusting many Latin American growers into poverty.
That
situation helped propel the “fair trade” movement and prompted Starbucks to
start its own good-practices system.
According
to Galindo, around just 10 percent of the cost of a cup in a cafe or restaurant
in Europe or the US is for the beans, with the rest being spent on other
overhead such as rent or labor.
That
means paying growers, say, 30 percent more could translate to roughly a 3
percent increase in the price for the consumer — assuming roasters and other
middlemen in the import-export process agreed to pass on the revenues.
Yet in
competitive markets, even such a small rise could lose customers.
“It is
tricky. On the one hand you would like to pass on more money to the farmers but
on the other you don’t want to harm demand,” Galindo says.
Montauban
adds: “It is not about whether the prices are fair or not. This is a commodity
and those are the prices that the market sets.”
As for
Starbucks, the company buys directly from growers, mainly smallholders in Latin
America, and stresses that it pays them above-market rates while providing
technical support, including farmer support centers which offer services such
as soil analysis.
Although
the company won’t divulge pricing information, a Starbucks spokesman said the
idea of charging customers more in order to pass the proceeds onto farmers was
“provocative and interesting.”
For
Condor though, the issue is whether Mountain Coffee can even sell everything it
currently produces, with many buyers concerned about rust’s effect on quality
of the beans that are harvested.
This
year, the company was forced to sell a quarter of its certified beans at much
lower non-certified rates, he says.
“We
don’t even know if anyone will want to buy our organic coffee next year,” he
adds. “This is no way to run a business.”
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