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Coffee Shortages in Latin America Spells Trouble for US Consumers

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CARANAVI, Bolivia—On the shaded side of a jungle mountain, local coffee farmer Fernando Jordan points to a row of bushes loaded with clusters of red berries.

“If you plant one hectare of land here, it will cost you $20,000 to $30,000 dollars to actually produce coffee,” he told The Epoch Times.

Jordan’s words strike a chord and reflect one of several problems Latin America’s coffee growers face, including a significant spike in demand, supply chain issues, and high operating and transport costs.

The combination of factors has occurred in lockstep with recent production shortages due to poor harvests, particularly in Brazil, the world’s leading grower of the commodity.

Dwindling stockpiles and price hikes per cup made the world sit up and take notice in the first half of 2021 as Brazil struggled with the worst year for coffee productivity in decades.

Epoch Times Photo
Red coffee berries from an Arabica plant on April 20, 2022. (Cesar Calani/The Epoch Times)

Prolonged drought conditions in South America’s largest country have impacted the entire nation’s Arabica coffee crop since the end of 2020, meaning the 2021-2022 harvest season was going to be short even before other factors come into play.

During July last year, frost events also affected farmers’ crops in the Minas Gerais, Sao Paulo, and Parana growing regions of Brazil.

This translates into a shortfall of 13.6 million bags of coffee for the 2021-2022 season, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Coffee growers echo Jordan’s sentiments about the crippling high production costs in some Central American countries with high-income instability.

In Honduras, many farmers are giving up on turning a profit from the delicate plant to head north with other migrant caravans bound for the United States.

El Laurel is a village in northeastern Honduras where Maria Bonilla and her husband cling to the hope of squeezing a profit from their family’s coffee plantation.

“If I didn’t have my Mom, I would also go to the United States … nobody here is solvent,” Bonilla said.

She also admitted her four children had already left the farm and began the treacherous journey north toward the U.S. border, choosing the life of an undocumented migrant over the family’s struggling coffee farm.

Nearly 5 million people in the region depend on the coffee sector for survival, according to the Central American Integration System. However, waves of migrants have renounced their profession due to the business’ high cost, and low yield nature.

Epoch Times Photo
Fernando Jordan shows young coffee plants of the Arabica variety on April 20, 2022. (Cesar Calani/The Epoch Times)

Two years of pandemic supply chain disruptions and elevated transport costs also factor in, which shook the already volatile coffee industry further.

Sam MacCuaig of Keynote Coffee in the United Kingdom connects roasters to artisanal producers of “specialty, certified, and high commercial coffees” in different regions. He said the pandemic had a devastating effect on growers due to a heavy reliance on sea freight shipping.

“Thanks to COVID-19, the freight industry collapsed, and shipping companies reduced their capacities,” MacCuaig explained.

Overall, the global coffee industry is forecast to be down 8.5 million bags this season, which offsets the boost in the commodity exports from Vietnam, the world’s second largest bean producer by volume.

Coffee prices hit a 10-year high by December 2021. In a stroke of unfortunate timing, demand for the beverage reached its highest point in two decades as of March 15 this year.

While the resultant price inflation from skyrocketing demand and supply shortfalls doesn’t help consumers, Jordan said he’s able to sell his heirloom strain of coffee for a good price.

“What I grow is in very high demand due to its flavor. It commands a high price in the market. In Bolivia, you pay 100 bolivianos [$14.50] per kilo, but in U.S. markets, it could go for much more ,” he explained.

Jordan cultivates a strain of Ethiopian Arabica brought to Bolivia during colonial times by the Spaniards. It now grows in the fertile Yungas valley, situated on the opposite side of the Andes from La Paz.

Between the two mother strains of coffee, Arabica and robusta, most coffee fans prefer Arabica due to its lower acidity and complex flavor profile.

Epoch Times Photo
Fernando Jordan on his coffee plantation in the Yungas region of Bolivia on April 20, 2022. (Cesar Calani/The Epoch Times)

The highly sought after Geisha coffee, a type of Ethiopian Arabica strain that is cultivated in the Bolivian Yungas region, has a price tag of up to $110 per cup in cafes. At a 2018 auction, Geisha coffee beans from an artisanal grower in Costa Rica sold for $803 per pound.

However, it’s not just specialty blends seeing price hikes in U.S. stores.

Minneapolis area resident and coffee lover Misty Kaiser told The Epoch Times even big staple brands of coffee like Starbucks and Caribu have increased their prices.

“It’s across the board in normal stores too, like Target. It’s not just specialty roasters,” she said.

Since the end of 2019, Kaiser noticed a gradual increase in the Costa Rican blend she bought at a local twin city area roster. Though by the end of 2020, the price increase was obvious everywhere.

“The price per bag from the roaster went up nearly two dollars even before the pandemic.”

Noticeable demand increases began putting pressure on coffee growers in 2019, which arrived on the heels of historic droughts that impacted farmers in countries like Honduras and Brazil.

And the prices aren’t likely to go down anytime soon.

Colombia, which is the world’s second largest producer of washed mild Arabica beans, is already faltering on production this year.

As of March 2022, the number of bags produced is down 13 percent compared to the same time last year due to exceptionally heavy rains in the growing season.

In the past 12 months, Colombia’s total coffee output fell by 16 percent.

Jordan attributes part of this to a universal truth well known among his fellow growers: coffee is an extremely fragile plant.

The crop is highly susceptible to aggressive fungal infections and wild temperature swings, and also requires special conditions like high elevation and a lot of shade in order to grow properly.

Autumn Spredemann

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Autumn is a South America-based reporter covering primarily Latin American issues for The Epoch Times.



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