I bought my first batch of Arabicas Blue Mountain Gold
coffee online from Papua New Guinea last year, after sampling the product when
I was working in Port Moresby. I was impressed by the flavour, but was also
attracted by the story of how this fine variety of coffee - first planted in
PNG in the 1930's from seeds imported from Jamaica - is
grown mainly by farmers with small plots of coffee trees, using traditional
farming methods.
It is not clear to what extent the farmers actually benefit at
present from marketing telling that story, but there must be potential for
them to obtain greater rewards in future if the combination of a good story and
a product of consistently high quality leads to growth of demand for their
output.
Before spending a couple of weeks in PNG recently I told
people who asked why I was planning to have a holiday in such a dangerous place
(please see my last post for an attempt to put those risks in perspective) that
one of my reasons for visiting was to see where my coffee came from. As things
happened, I didn’t actually get to see where my coffee came from, but I did see
a coffee plantation near Goroka. The fruit shown in the photo will turn red
over the next few weeks before being ready for harvest.
I also had the opportunity to visit a processing facility in
Goroka and to learn a little about the industry from the manager of the firm.
He has asked me not to give him any publicity because his firm does not sell
directly to the public and gains no benefit from any time he spends showing tourists
around. I was fortunate to arrive on his doorstep just as he was about to show
his operation to a group of bank officials and to be allowed to tag along.
It was interesting to
see the effort required for quality control, particularly in order to give
purchasers of organic coffee (usually grown on small holdings) a high quality
product. For example, quality is better when care is taken to only pick ripe
fruit and to ensure that beans are properly dried in the sun. If the beans are
not dry when they come to the mill they have to be dried using equipment such as that shown
below.
The factory tour ended with a coffee tasting which
demonstrated large differences between various grades and blends of coffee.
During my PNG holiday I also visited Madang and had the
opportunity to see cocoa being grown. The Madang Resort hotel organised for me
a trip to Hobe, a small village not far from Madang. I spent an hour or so with
Joel Lalek on his cocoa farm.
Joel described himself as a subsistence farmer, but his cocoa
activity looked fairly commercial to me. His crop is fermented and dried by his brother using the
equipment shown below.
Joel buys seedlings from the Cocoa Coconut Research Institute (CCRI). The photo below shows seedlings at the Stewart Research Station, CCRI.
The research manager of the Stewart Research Station explained
to me the origins of PNG cocoa and the aims of the current breeding program. PNG
cocoa is based on the Trinitario variety, often used in high-quality dark
chocolate. Unfortunately, the variety is susceptible to cocoa pod borer, which
has devastated harvests in PNG during the last decade. One of the aims of the
breeding program is to provide greater resistance to this pest. Meanwhile,
farmers in some areas have had considerable success in controlling pest outbreaks
through pruning and sanitation practices e.g. burying diseased pods.
A question I was turning over in my mind during my PNG visit
is why I haven’t found the same opportunities to obtain single source chocolate
based on PNG cocoa as I have to purchase PNG coffee. It would be good to be able
to find a regular supplier of high quality dark chocolate with a PNG village
story attached to it.
It seems likely that better opportunities to buy single
source PNG chocolate might arise in future. People who live in the US can
already buy chocolate made from PNG beans from Tejas Chocolate. Perhaps the partnership
between Cadbury Australia and Monpi Cocoa Exports will eventually provide
similar opportunities to Australians.
It would be nice to be able to end this article with some optimistic
observations about the opportunities for better returns for coffee and cocoa
farmers in PNG arising from the increasing demand of consumers in high income
countries to be told the story behind the food and beverages they buy. I have
not found any research which would provide a solid basis for such optimism, but
I have not spent much time searching the relevant literature. All I can offer at
this stage is a glimmer of hope.
It is indisputable that many consumers like to know the
story behind some of the products they buy. Wine comes to mind as a prime
example. Yet, in recent years we have seen a trend toward commodification of
wine sales in supermarkets, with the use of hidden labels and own-brands. That trend is presumably meeting a demand for a product of reasonable quality at a
relatively low price. The trend toward commodification may continue for some
time, but when people are buying high quality wine they will still look for a
label which tells the story of when, where and how it was produced. I guess the
pattern of demand is fairly similar for coffee and chocolate.
The characteristics of farming in PNG typically meet a range
of the interests and concerns that people are likely to have when they want to
know the story behind the products they buy. The fact that the varieties of
coffee and chocolate grown in PNG are at the high quality end of the market
certainly provides a basis for positive stories. The fact that chemicals are
rarely used by village farmers helps to meet some consumer concerns about
health and environmental impacts. Telling a story about village farming can
also be consistent with marketing arrangements which help meet the concerns that many consumers have about remuneration for farmers.
Most importantly, the stories that PNG farmers can tell are intrinsically interesting because their lives are so different from those lived by most people in high-income countries.
So, dear reader, when you buy coffee and chocolate do you want to know the story about the people who produced the beans?
So, dear reader, when you buy coffee and chocolate do you want to know the story about the people who produced the beans?
Enjoy the Wholesale Coffee http://javatimescaffe.com/
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