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Coffee conflict is brewing in Ethiopia
Katherine Dunn | May 06 2016 | Business Day
ADDIS ABABA — In the birthplace of coffee, a conflict is brewing over who gets Ethiopia’s best beans.
The government of this East African country wants hard dollars to build infrastructure, and so it has ambitious targets to increase coffee exports, capitalising on world-wide demand for its high-end arabica beans.
But Ethiopians, Africa’s top coffee consumers, want to keep the beans at home. With urban incomes rising, Ethiopian drinkers increasingly want better stuff.
“In most cases, the domestic price is higher than international prices,” said Fikru Amenu, an official at the Ethiopian Coffee and Tea Development and Marketing Authority, speaking at the World Coffee Conference here in March.
“We are just trying to convince (the traders) to export, because of the harder currency.”
The bean is believed to have originated in the Ethiopian region of Kaffa, discovered by a goat herder named Kaldi whose goats became energetic after eating the beans.
Coffee plays a key role in cultural and social life: around half of Ethiopia’s entire crop is consumed domestically, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
But it is also an economic lifeline: coffee is the country’s top export, and it raises up to a third of the country’s foreign exchange, the department says.
Ethiopia is counting on beefed-up coffee exports to fund projects, including a light-rail system in the capital and a dam on the Nile River.
In the financial year ending this July, the government hopes to increase the foreign exchange raised from coffee exports to about $880m, a jump of nearly 13% from last year, Mr Amenu says.
To do that, he says, traders will need to export at least 206,000 tons of beans, up 12% from the previous year, and shift some to higher-price specialty grades.
World prices for beans have fallen more than 10% over the past year.
The government already restricts the domestic market. Only lower-quality beans — broken or damaged by moisture or insects — can stay in Ethiopia. A coffee trader flouting the rules faces a fine of more than $2,000 and up to five years in jail.
The efforts have partly paid off for the government. The US Department of Agriculture forecasts exports this season could rise to record levels, while the effect of local restrictions could push consumption down slightly this year.
But Ethiopia has struggled to increase the overall harvest. Farmers are mostly small holders using basic agricultural methods. This season, the crop is expected to be nearly stagnant at 390,500 tonnes, according to the US Department of Agriculture forecast, although a drought due to El Niño could push production down.
To truly increase export volumes, Ethiopians would have to drink substantially less coffee.
It is a target many say is nearly impossible.
“If you tell an Ethiopian not to drink coffee, no one will listen to you,” says Wondwossen Meshesha, the operations manager at Tomoca Coffee, a family-owned roasting business and cafe chain famous for its macchiatos and fresh-roasted beans.
Five years ago, the 63-year-old company had just one café, a narrow shop in the central piazza in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital.
The business was roasting about a ton of coffee a day, says Mr Meshesha.
Now, Tomoca has six cafés dotted around Addis and roasts 10 times as much as it used to, he said.
“We needed to wait a long time for (Ethiopians) to develop their own purchase power,” says Mr Meshesha.
Over the past decade, Ethiopia has become one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, averaging more than 10% growth a year, according to the World Bank.
But the rapid growth has been accompanied by a crackdown on dissent and the country’s political opposition.
The economic growth has fuelled a proliferation of coffee shops in Addis Ababa and roadside coffee stalls outside the capital.
Demand for the beans is so strong that Ethiopians would drink all their own coffee if they could, says James Kanagwa, the Ethiopia country representative for Pan-African lender Ecobank.
“It isn’t in the interests of the government to encourage domestic consumption,” says Mr Kanagwa, sitting in his office overlooking several bustling construction sites.
“Where will the foreign currency come from if they have nothing to export?”
While demand for specialty coffee is creating a market for Ethiopian beans, the push to export also comes as coffee countries face steep competition.
Currency devaluations in the world’s largest arabica producers have pushed farmers to export beans.
Coffee exports in Brazil — the world’s biggest producer — hit record levels and pushed world prices down as the country’s currency fell more than 30% against the dollar last year.
Ethiopia is also competing against other African producers such as Kenya and Tanzania to export premium beans.
But people in those countries drink tea — and reserve their coffee for exports.
Without gains in production and with steady competition at home, Ethiopia’s answer may not be in exporting more coffee but simply charging more.
Some premium beans, sourced directly from farmers, can command three times the New York market price.
Those prices come with a set of standards not all farmers can meet and a workload not all can afford, says Takele Mammo, general manager of the Yirgacheffe Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union.
Mr Mammo says the union tries to focus on exports.
But even he says it is hard to suppress Ethiopian demand for the country’s best-tasting beans.
“If there was a chance of consuming coffee, the right coffee, Ethiopians would go for that,” says Mr Mammo. “If you tell my Mum not to drink coffee, (she will) choose not to eat.”