Kenyan coffee farmers ignorant of new export system
Growing coffee for 20 years has not lifted 60-year-old Maina Kimondo from poverty.
So fine talk of a new marketing system that could boost earnings fails to raise a spark in his eye.
Despite putting in many hours daily to tend his 100 coffee trees, meager pay has condemned the old man to wearing a shirt with a threadbare collar and patched trousers.
In years past, he and farmers in his village say they have received very little money, or none at all, for coffee sold through a central auction in the capital Nairobi.
Once they were told that their coffee had been stolen and on another occasion, that it had sunk with a ship en route to buyers overseas. Both times, there was no payment.
But in a move to improve their lot, Kenya has published rules to govern direct sales between farmers and overseas buyers. The change is intended to put more money into farmers' pockets by cutting out a long string of middlemen.
Many farmers, however, are ignorant of what the new marketing system portends for them, and those who have an inkling are skeptical.
"I will only believe it when I see the money," Kimondo told Reuters while tending coffee trees laden with unripe berries near Mount Kenya, on a chilly, rainy day.
Growing coffee for 20 years has not lifted 60-year-old Maina Kimondo from poverty.
So fine talk of a new marketing system that could boost earnings fails to raise a spark in his eye.
Despite putting in many hours daily to tend his 100 coffee trees, meager pay has condemned the old man to wearing a shirt with a threadbare collar and patched trousers.
In years past, he and farmers in his village say they have received very little money, or none at all, for coffee sold through a central auction in the capital Nairobi.
Once they were told that their coffee had been stolen and on another occasion, that it had sunk with a ship en route to buyers overseas. Both times, there was no payment.
But in a move to improve their lot, Kenya has published rules to govern direct sales between farmers and overseas buyers. The change is intended to put more money into farmers' pockets by cutting out a long string of middlemen.
Many farmers, however, are ignorant of what the new marketing system portends for them, and those who have an inkling are skeptical.
"I will only believe it when I see the money," Kimondo told Reuters while tending coffee trees laden with unripe berries near Mount Kenya, on a chilly, rainy day.
Under the new system, farmers can bypass the auction to sell more directly to roasters abroad, but must still use the services of a marketing agent. These agents cannot be licensed without proof that they have access to overseas markets. They must also provide a bank guarantee to protect farmers' money.
The old auction will still be held as usual in case any farmers choose to stick with it.
"We will use whatever system works best for us," said Moses Nderitu, chairman of the Giakanja Farmers Cooperative Society.
Unlike many cooperative groups in the district, Giakanja already has a copy of the rules governing the structure.
POOR AND UNINFORMED
But Nderitu admits that most of the 1,400 farmers in his society have no clue what the direct sales entail. "We don't have the knowledge to explain it to them but before we sell their coffee, we will get experts to explain," he said.
Most Kenyan coffee farmers, poor and uninformed, are usually the last in getting the proceeds of the coffee sold. Many are semi-literate, making them easy prey for unscrupulous agents.
Although debate over the new, so-called "second window" marketing system has raged for a while in coffee circles and newspaper commentaries, many farmers have only a distant idea that it could earn them more.
For coffee farmer Albert Mugo, growing the cash crop is a necessary evil. The earnings are too little to sustain his family, but he has few alternatives.
Under the new system, farmers can bypass the auction to sell more directly to roasters abroad, but must still use the services of a marketing agent. These agents cannot be licensed without proof that they have access to overseas markets. They must also provide a bank guarantee to protect farmers' money.
The old auction will still be held as usual in case any farmers choose to stick with it.
"We will use whatever system works best for us," said Moses Nderitu, chairman of the Giakanja Farmers Cooperative Society.
Unlike many cooperative groups in the district, Giakanja already has a copy of the rules governing the structure.
POOR AND UNINFORMED
But Nderitu admits that most of the 1,400 farmers in his society have no clue what the direct sales entail. "We don't have the knowledge to explain it to them but before we sell their coffee, we will get experts to explain," he said.
Most Kenyan coffee farmers, poor and uninformed, are usually the last in getting the proceeds of the coffee sold. Many are semi-literate, making them easy prey for unscrupulous agents.
Although debate over the new, so-called "second window" marketing system has raged for a while in coffee circles and newspaper commentaries, many farmers have only a distant idea that it could earn them more.
For coffee farmer Albert Mugo, growing the cash crop is a necessary evil. The earnings are too little to sustain his family, but he has few alternatives.
today.reuters.com
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