Coffee |
NESTLE Zimbabwe is
looking at reviving coffee estates in the Eastern Highlands through
contracting small-scale farmers, sources familiar with the development
have said.
The company, a unit
of the world's largest food and beverage firm, Swiss-based Nestle
Global, is looking into the wider scope of the re-development of the
coffee industry in Zimbabwe.
"Coffee fits well
into a wider range of Nestle products and it is an area that Nestle
Zimbabwe is looking at; possibly reviving the estates in the eastern
highlands," said one source.
"As such, some
preliminary studies are being done; obviously to determine the model
that could be used to resuscitate the industry. It is a project that has
involvement of other stakeholders such as the Agriculture Marketing
Authority and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe."
Nestle Zimbabwe
spokesperson Mr Farai Munetsi had not responded to questions sent to him
by the time of going to print yesterday. The country used to be the
home of Africa's richest coffee belts, as climatic conditions favored
production of the high value crop.
The Eastern
Highlands regions of Chipinge, Chimanimani, Honde Valley, Mutare and
Mutasa used to house a number of plantations famous for super
high-quality coffee, slowly sun-dried with deep fruity flavours.
In the '90s, Zimbabwean coffee was exported to high price markets such as the UK, US, Japan and Netherlands.
At peak, the
country produced 14 664 tonnes of the commodity, in the 90's, according
to a study by the United States Agency for International Development,
but in recent years production levels have gone down to below 500
tonnes.
Three years ago,
stakeholders came up with a medium term plan that sought to revive
coffee production in the country, targeting to boost income for over 50
000 farmers. Funding, it is reported, was to come from both the private
sector and foreign investors.
It was hoped that
the new strategy -- which would involve the continued maintenance of
existing plantations, the procurement of around 11 500 acres of new land
for coffee production and developing current infrastructure -- would
revitalise the industry.
But after a number
of successive droughts, poor irrigation infrastructure and inadequate
funding; combined with a lack of general expertise in the sector
following agrarian reform, Zimbabwe has seen production of coffee
significantly declining.
At some point, the
crop, the world's second most traded commodity, used to be the country's
fifth largest foreign currency earner, according a report by the World
Coffee Press.
No comments:
Post a Comment