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Tanzania: Robusta Coffee Prices Up by 70%

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Tanzania: Robusta Coffee Prices Up by 70%

(3 Minutes Read)

The price of Robusta has increased by 70 per cent per kilogramme this season, which will make farmers laugh all the way to the bank. This is due to the fears that excessive dryness in Vietnam could damage the crop and curb global production. Vietnam is the world’s largest producer of Robusta coffee beans

This marks the highest price of Robusta since 2008 when the current form of the futures contract started trading. Tanzania Coffee Board (TCB)’s Kagera Regional Manager Mr Edmond Zani explained that Robusta price is holding strong and the futures on the International Commodities Exchange (ICE) have reached a 16-year high.Due in part to its resilience in increasingly hostile growing conditions, Robusta production is catching up with Arabica, whereas it was once a 70/30 split in favour of Arabica. Robusta is now approaching 50 per cent of all coffee produced globally.

The price of Robusta on the International Commodities Exchange (ICE) reached USD 3,750 per metric tonne, marking the highest price Robusta fetched since 2008, when the current form of the futures contract started trading.The selling of coffee directly from the farms has been banned. Coffee regulations in Tanzania are undergoing major changes to improve farmers’ incomes and extend their role in the supply chain, says Zani. During the recent auction held on June 27, Kyaitoke AMCOS in Bukoba sold 17,595 kgs of robusta coffee at 5,102/- a kg.

The government in collaboration with other stakeholders including TCB, cooperative unions, Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TACRI), Café Africa Tanzania and the private sector is implementing a five-year strategic plan aimed to increase coffee production from 78,000 metric tonnes to 300,000 metric tonnes come 2025.The plan goes in hand with producing 20 million improved coffee seedlings each year. The increase of coffee production in the region has a positive impact on farmers’ livelihoods and the national economy.

During the past three years coffee production in Kagera increased from 52,000 tonnes during 2019/20 to 78,300 metric tonnes during 2022/23 enabling the farmers to pocket about 96.4bn/-. The selling of coffee directly from the farms has been banned. Coffee regulations in Tanzania are undergoing major changes to improve farmers’ incomes and extend their role in the supply chain, according to Zani.

Read Also:

https://trendsnafrica.com/tanzanias-effort-to-increase-coffee-production/

https://trendsnafrica.com/tanzanias-coffee-production-increases-by-20/

The government in collaboration with other stakeholders including TCB, cooperative unions, Tanzania Agricultural Research Institute (TACRI), Café Africa Tanzania and the private sector is implementing a five-year strategic plan aimed to increase coffee production from 78,000 metric tonnes to 300,000 metric tonnes by 2025. During the past three years coffee production in Kagera increased from 52,000 tonnes during 2019/20 to 78,300 metric tonnes during 2022/23 enabling the farmers to pocket about 96.4bn/-.