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Eliminating Hunger in Coffee-Growing comunities

Avatar Posted on: 2015-02-26 12:00 AM
When specialty coffee buyers visit coffee bean farmers, they usually want to taste the coffee for the flavor nuances, discuss price differentials, volumes, and delivery months. They don’t usually ask whether the kids are going hungry.

Keurig Green Mountain, Inc. (Keurig) doesn’t want to leave that question unasked anymore. And the company is not alone.

In the rolling hills of Jinotega, Nicaragua, Keurig’s Colleen Popkin, senior manager in sustainability focusing on supply chain outreach, joined peers from Starbucks, the Specialty Coffee Association of America, Farmer Brothers, Counter Culture Coffee, and Mercy Corps. Together they hiked narrow, muddy paths to a remote village where farmers have been growing some of the most exquisite coffee beans for generations.

The group – by chance entirely women – represents some of the world’s biggest coffee brands and leading NGOs. Calling themselves the Coalition for Coffee Communities, they’ve been meeting regularly since 2012 to use their collective weight and expertise in a quest to make hunger in coffee-growing communities around the world a thing of the past.

When they reached the village, mud on their boots, they set to work evaluating how families are faring, and whether the projects that the coalition is funding are actually making a difference to help coffee farming families deal with seasonal hunger. And if not, how do they improve upon those efforts?

Knowing that farmers like those in Jinotega are struggling with seasonal hunger motivates Popkin and her peers. Many farmers in the region find their harvests are too small to support their family for a full year and are dealing with a complex intersection of climate change, weak local government, few options for financial credit, and limited agriculture extension services. It’s a set of problems too big for any one company to tackle alone.
That’s why the coalition formed, despite their competition in consumer markets back at home.

“There’s so much need, and there’s not enough resources within one company to address it,” said Popkin. “Keurig tries to look at what we can do to directly support our suppliers within our own supply chain, either through our business practices or through targeted investments. Then we look for partners to extend our reach.”

“Each company came to the Coalition for Coffee Communities a little differently, each getting to the point where we believed we should work together to try to address the challenge of food security,” Popkin continued. “The coalition lets us think a bit bigger picture than just our direct suppliers, and think about the sustainability of the industry as a whole, addressing some of those larger issues together.”

In Nicaragua, the coalition has partnered with Mercy Corps and Aldea Global, an association of smallholder farmers launched by Mercy Corps in 1992. The association has grown substantially, today working with 2,200 farming families and 12 cooperatives, generating a loan portfolio of $2.4 million for its members to borrow and expand their farms and small businesses.

But climate change has sped the pace of problems, spreading diseases like the dreaded “coffee leaf rust,” which has wiped out coffee trees at an alarming clip across Central America.
“The regions that have been hit hard by coffee leaf rust are traditional sources of supply for us – "we’ve invested resources in strengthening local organizations, invested in long-term supplier relationships, and invested in social and environmental programs,” said Popkin. “We feel a responsibility to support them to get through the crisis.”

Digging a little deeper behind the question of hunger, Popkin explained that families have begun to lose some of their traditional ways of farming, which often included food production. They’ve increased their reliance on coffee income, and on external inputs like chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Homogenizing the shade trees and varietals they plant also increases their risk. One major pest could wipe out an entire farm.
“Organizations like Mercy Corps want to capture the value in those traditional ways of farming, like producing compost, using native tree cover, and intercropping,” she said.

The group is working with farmers to bring back some of those traditional practices, but with a new spin –adding an extra source of income wherever possible, like intercropping bananas and citrus trees.
Keurig’s dialogue with its suppliers is truly two-way, says Popkin. Days before the visit to Aldea Global, Popkin attended one of the company’s “Intercambio” events in Guatemala, a gathering that brings together all of its suppliers from an “origin region.”

At the gathering, the Keurig procurement team can discuss the growth of the company, the direction it’s headed, and share updates on quality standards. Suppliers can talk through challenges they experienced during the previous harvest and share their expectations of Keurig.

“That conversation is an important part of understanding our supply chain better,” Popkin said. “And the transparency shapes our business practices in such a way that has a mutual benefit.”
As for the coalition, Popkin explained that it will look quite different in a year. Building on its beginnings as a tight-knit group of companies and associations piloting ideas focused on food security, the group plans to become “a hub for thought leadership, investment, and action.”

“Food security will still be at the heart of this work, but we’ll expand our thinking more broadly to encompass other systemic vulnerabilities and risks that coffee farming families are facing,” she said.
“We want to crowd in as many people and resources as we can to address these challenges.”
 
 
 
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