JM Social Icons

    1,000 coffee farmers earn 50% more from direct sales to Korea

    coffee exports

    By George Munene

    About 1,000 coffee farmers from the Kipkelion Coffee Co-operative Society are set to earn Sh103 million from the direct sale of 134.4 metric tons of coffee directly to South Korea.

    The graded AA coffee cherry was sold without going through brokers and fetched the farmers Sh116 a kilogram, 56 per cent more than the Sh76 eaned at the Nairobi coffee auction.

    “For the first time in Kenya’s history, smallholder coffee farmers have done a complete vertical integration of the coffee value chain, displacing the predatory brokers and other greedy intermediaries who have denied us direct access to the market,” read a statement from the society’s chairperson, Samuel Marindany.

    Related News: Coffee pulping cost effective way for smallholder farmers to raise earnings

    Related News: 37 year expert sets up 2 acre coffee farm as perfect retirement plan

    The export deal was arrived at during the Coffee Expo held in Korea's capital Seoul in July last year. The farmers from several coffee cooperatives in Kericho, Bomet, and Nandi counties were able to strike a deal with a South Korean buyer.

    A presidential task force appointed in March 2016 reviewed the entire coffee chain and identified areas in its production to marketing that required reforms. 

    These have led to reforms such as The Coffee Exchange Regulations, 2020 that allow coffee farmers who were previously forced to go through independent brokers.to own brokerage firms and directly sell their cherry.

    Related News: Kenya to increase coffee exports to South Korea

    During the flagging off of seven coffee containers for direct sale to South Africa last month, Kericho Governor Paul Chepkwony pointed out; "The power to earn is now wholly in farmers' hands. The market liberalisation will cushion farmers who labor the most from predatory brokers.”

    Comments powered by CComment

    Editor's Pick

    All News

    Powered by mod LCA

    Sign Up

    Sign up to receive our newsletter
    FarmBiz Africa © 2020