Kuwait Times

In El Salvador, coffee farmers turn to bourbon after blight

-

NEW YORK: For Alberto Ferracuti, a coffee grower in El Salvador, bourbon really does grow on trees. Ferracuti and many other farmers in the Central American country have turned to specialty coffee trees - identified by fanciful names such as bourbon, geisha and pacas - in hopes of reviving a local industry devastated by crop disease just a few years ago.

The trees produce some of the world’s highest quality coffee, beans with distinctiv­e tastes prized by consumers in the United States and elsewhere who are willing to pay up for top-drawer coffee. Specialty coffee can earn farmers more than twice what they make selling standard varieties. The result is that El Salvador, though a small producer by size, has one of the world’s most diverse coffee crops. This year, El Salvador harvested about 740,000 bags, roughly 1 percent of what Brazil, the world’s biggest producer, will produce.

But specialty coffee accounts for a rapidly increasing share of its production, giving it an outsized role in the high-end coffee market. Last year, specialty coffee made up about 65 percent of its exports, a figure expected to rise to 80 percent by 2025, according to Salvadoran Coffee Council data.

The strategy comes with a shot of risk: The trees are highly susceptibl­e to the very crop disease, roya, that cut El Salvador’s harvest by 60 percent four years ago. And the threat remains, with four new strains of roya just identified in neighborin­g country Honduras, a U.S. attache reported last month. “Some people think we’re crazy to pursue this,” said Ferracuti, whose family farms 75 hectares (185 acres) in central and western El Salvador.

Elsewhere in Latin America, where 60 percent of the world’s beans are grown, many farmers have avoided specialty trees and reduced their crop diversity. Instead, they have concentrat­ed on planting trees bred to increase yields and resist roya. An air-borne fungus, roya thrives in warm and wet conditions, latches onto leaves and eventually damages or kills trees. An outbreak that hit production in the 2013/2014 crop year, the worst on record, cut coffee output in Central America by 10 percent. El Salvador was among the hardest hit, and has yet to fully recover.

Ferracuti and farmers like him aim to keep their trees safe from future roya outbreaks through a combinatio­n of improved husbandry and increased fertilizer and fungicide use.

Some said they are planning to replant trees every 10 to 12 years, rather than let them stand for decades, which is typical on many farms. This is potentiall­y costly, but young trees have a better chance of fighting off the blight, they said.

Milk chocolate and citrus zest

The global dollar-denominate­d benchmark coffee price for commercial grades of arabica beans, known as the “C” market , has hovered around $1.20 per pound the past year. That is about the same actual price that the coffee garnered in the 1980s, and is close to the cost of production in some mountainou­s countries such as El Salvador. The cost of production is higher on steep hillsides, where crops must be harvested by hand. —Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait