November 24, 2013
Phung
Thi Huu is embracing the global movement toward sustainable coffee two decades
after she first planted the crop and brought her family out of poverty.
“Coffee
changed my life,” said Huu, a diminutive 53-year-old farmer with calloused
hands and weathered skin in the coffee-rich Dak Lak province. “The future is
brighter.”
She’s
among thousands of Vietnamese farmers who benefited from coffee, which enabled
her to expand her modest farm, buy family members motorbikes and provide her
grandchildren with opportunities. Vietnam, the world’s biggest producer of the
robusta variety used in instant drinks, wants to profit from the sustainable coffee
movement led by Nestle SA and Mondelez International Inc. to guarantee the
environmentally farmed and traceable coffee sought by Western consumers.
“Consumers
want to feel good about the coffee they are drinking,” Francesco Tramontin,
European director of sustainability at Mondelez, the world’s second-largest
coffee maker after Nestle, said by phone. “They expect big buyers like us to
take action. We also need to secure the right quality of coffee.”
Mondelez,
which makes Gevalia, Kenco and Grand Mere, said all beans used in its European
coffee brands will meet sustainability standards set by certifying bodies such as
Rainforest Alliance Inc. and 4C by 2015. Nestle has committed to buy more than
180,000 metric tons of certified beans worldwide by 2015, Hans Joehr, the
company’s global head of agriculture, said in an e-mail.
Higher Prices
“Roasters
want all the coffee to be sustainable,” said Nguyen Duc Tuan Vinh, managing
director of trader Nedcoffee Vietnam Ltd. “That’s the message.”
Nestle,
Mondelez and others are offering farmers in the Central Highlands coffee belt
free training and higher prices for certified beans, said Flavio Corsin,
Vietnam manager for IDH Sustainable Trade, a foundation that develops farming
programs and partners with companies including DE Master Blenders 1753 NV and
Tchibo GmbH. Nestle has trained about 40,000 coffee farmers, Joehr said.
Farms
are certified by independent groups and must follow procedures, including water
use, wildlife conservation and labor protection, said Corsin. Beans can be
traced back to individual farms, he said.
A
Rainforest Alliance report in May showed streams were healthier on
certified coffee farms in Colombia and growers adopted best practices at a
higher rate while productivity gains meant net revenue more than doubled at
some plantations.
Price Pressure
The
adoption of certified coffee in Vietnam comes as bean prices slumped 35 percent
from a March high to 29,600 dong ($1.40) a kilogram on Nov. 7, the lowest since
October 2010 and threatening farmers’ income, data
from the Dak Lak Trade & Tourism Center show. The price was 32,400 dong on
Nov. 22.
Adopting
sustainable farming in Vietnam could boost production among individual farmers
by 10 percent and incomes by 30 percent on average, according to IDH. While
certified beans earn farmers only about 500 dong more, the revenue gains come
from increased productivity and reduced costs, said Corsin.
Dak
Lak, Vietnam’s largest coffee-producing province that accounts for almost a
third of the nation’s harvest, is adopting new farming practices. The province
is dotted with small coffee farms linked by rutted, muddy roads shared by
scattering chickens and families bouncing along on motorbikes.
“Two,
three years ago, almost no one was doing this,” said Huynh Van Phuoc, a farmer
whose coffee beans are piled in neat rows on his cement driveway, a new drying
process that produces more flavorful coffee. “Farmers can improve their brand
with better quality coffee. We want prices to be steady so our lives are
stable.”
Standardization Need
The
certified coffee movement is still a work in progress that needs
standardization, said Corsin. Not all certified coffee is produced the same way
because of different guidelines used by certification bodies, he said. A
certification may not guarantee adoption of the best sustainable practices
because growers may not be using the latest scientific methods to minimize environmental
effects, he said.
There’s
also concern that the costs of complying with new standards could create a
market barrier for small farms, the International Coffee Organization said on
its website about sustainability programs.
“A high
degree of uncertainty still exists as to whether the benefits of participation in
a specific scheme outweigh the costs,” it said.
Production Increase
Certified
coffee production rose to 660,000 tons in the 2012-2013 crop year from 330,000
tons a year earlier, according to Vinh. Vietnamese farmers reaped 1.5 million
tons of beans in 2012-2013 and 1.65 million tons in 2011-2012, according to
Bloomberg historical surveys. Those numbers show certified beans account for
about 44 percent of total production, compared with 20 percent a year earlier.
At the
pace now, more than 80 percent of Vietnam’s coffee will be grown on a
sustainable basis by 2020, said Corsin.
Growers
like Huu are optimistic the new methods will improve their lives more. Since
she adopted environmentally-friendly farming in 2011, her costs have dropped
while production and bean quality have improved, said Huu.
“I
can’t really get more land because it’s very limited, so I have to learn how to
boost yields,” she said. “Back in the old days, we just had enough to eat and
we had to ride bicycles. With sustainable practices, our lives will be even
better.”
----
To contact Bloomberg News staff for this
story: John Boudreau in Hanoi at jboudreau3@bloomberg.net; Diep Ngoc Pham in Hanoi at dpham5@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this
story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net
Wow-I can not TELL you how pleased I am to have found your site. I just clicked on "Next blog" and there you were. Thanks for all this fab info. I'll bookmark you right now!
ReplyDelete