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How Brazil and Vietnam are tightening their grip on the world's coffee

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SAO JOAO DA BOA VISTA, Brazil (Reuters) - A towering machine rumbles through the fields of Julio Rinco’s farm in the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo, engulfing whole coffee trees and shaking free beans that are collected by conveyor belts in its depths.


This automatic harvester is one of several innovations that have cut Rinco’s production costs to a level that few who use traditional, labor-intensive methods can match.

With increasing use of mechanization and other new technologies, the world’s top two coffee producers, Brazil and Vietnam, are achieving productivity growth that outstrips rivals in places such as Colombia, Central America and Africa.

They are set to tighten their grip.

A plunge in global coffee prices in recent months, to their lowest levels in 13 years, has begun to trigger a massive shake-out in the market in which only the most efficient producers will thrive, according to coffee traders and analysts.

Rival producers elsewhere in the world are increasingly likely to be driven to the margins, unable to make money from a crop they have grown for generations. Some are already turning to alternative crops while others are abandoning their farms completely.

Such shifts are almost irreversible for perennial crops like coffee, as the decision to abandon or cut down trees can hit production for several years.

“Brazil and Vietnam have had consistent increases in productivity, other countries have not,” said Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, citing advances in mechanization, selective crop breeding techniques and irrigation technology.

In Colombia and Central America, coffee is typically grown on hillsides where mechanization is more difficult, and hand-picking cherries has kept production costs relatively high. The African sector, meanwhile, is dominated by small-scale farmers often unable to raise the capital needed for new techniques.

Rinco bought his harvesting machine for around 600,000 reais ($155,600) and is paying the agricultural supplies company with coffee, delivering 400 bags a year over four years. This kind of bartering is common in Brazilian farming.

One such machine in Brazil replaces dozens of people in the field. Even with financing and fuel bills, farmers and machine manufacturers say there is a reduction of 40% to 60% on harvesting costs.

“Beyond the lower costs, it made my life less complicated,” said Rinco, relieved at no longer having the grueling task of hiring suitable pickers every year for the harvest at his farm in the Sao Joao da Boa Vista area.

“People don’t want to pick coffee anymore, they go to town to find something else to do.”

Brazil and Vietnam now produce more than half the world’s coffee, up from less than a third 20 years ago, and the proportion is rising, U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates show.

Leading producer Brazil alone accounts for over a third of global supply. In a clear sign of increased efficiency, it reported a record crop of 62 million bags last year and is expected to produce another record in 2020, the next on-year in the country’s biennial production cycle - despite the fact the coffee-planting area has been falling for the last six years.

Vietnam is also regularly setting production records while, by contrast, in Colombia the largest ever crop was harvested in the early 1990s and in Guatemala nearly two decades ago, USDA data shows.

In countries such as Guatemala and Honduras, growers who are increasingly abandoning farms are swelling the ranks of migrants trying to enter the United States.

BOOM IN BRAZIL

Average yields in Brazil have risen sharply over the last decade with figures from the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization showing an increase of more than 40% to about 1.5 tonnes per hectare. Vietnam has also seen yields rise from already strong levels, climbing about 18% to around 2.5 tonnes.

Colombia did show some growth, about 12%, but remains well behind at about 1 ton per hectare while in Central America there was a decline of around 3% to a meager 0.6 tonnes.

Businessman Alexandre Gobbi and two partners decided to enter coffee farming in Brazil four years ago. They bought an area in Sao Sebastião do Paraíso, in the main producing belt in Minas Gerais state, and sought out state-of-the-art tech.

Today, his farm has equipment including an underground dripping irrigation system with artificial intelligence, considered the world’s most advanced.

“It does almost everything by itself. Reads humidity levels, tells me when to add water and fertilizer and by how much,” he told Reuters, pointing to the digital panels in his control room.

With the system, plus other equipment including harvesters, he has doubled average yields to around 60 bags per hectare, and can make a profit even with current low prices.

Arabica coffee futures on ICE Futures U.S. KCc2, the most widely used global benchmark for coffee prices, fell in May to 87.60 cents per lb, the weakest level since September 2005.

Prices have since recovered slightly but remain at a level where few producers outside Brazil and Vietnam can make money.

VARIETY IN VIETNAM
Arabica beans, which provide a smoother and sweeter taste, constitute nearly two-thirds of the world’s coffee. More bitter and stronger robusta beans largely make up the rest of global supply, much of them hailing from Vietnam.


https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...their-grip-on-the-worlds-coffee-idUSKCN1VC079
 
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Technology is the future. I think countries as Columbia and Indonesia with low industrial capacity should plant other crops. More palm oils.


@Marine Rouge @Indos
 
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Technology is the future. I think countries as Columbia and Indonesia with low industrial capacity should plant other crops. More palm oils.


@Marine Rouge @Indos

I think we can plant anything, the problem is that most of the farmer in Indonesia are not companies. Indonesia still have massive land like in Kalimantan and Papua, so I think the future is still bright. Until so far we are still using a traditional way, and I think we should follow Brazil and Vietnam step.

Talking about coffee, Indonesia is the fourth largest producer in the world and large part of the production are exported

Indonesia produced an estimated 660,000 metric tons of coffee in 2017.[1] Of this total, it is estimated that 154,800 tons were slated for domestic consumption in the 2013/2014 financial year.[2]
 
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Technology is the future. I think countries as Columbia and Indonesia with low industrial capacity should plant other crops. More palm oils.


@Marine Rouge @Indos

Technology is the future indeed. Especially with palm oil being increasingly used as fuel. I think countries with low industrial capacity like Vietnam should plant other crops. More palm oil.

I think we can plant anything, the problem is that most of the farmer in Indonesia are not companies. Indonesia still have massive land like in Kalimantan and Papua, so I think the future is still bright. Until so far we are still using a traditional way, and I think we should follow Brazil and Vietnam step.

Talking about coffee, Indonesia is the fourth largest producer in the world and large part of the production are exported

Indonesia produced an estimated 660,000 metric tons of coffee in 2017.[1] Of this total, it is estimated that 154,800 tons were slated for domestic consumption in the 2013/2014 financial year.[2]

It is appalling how the poor and dumb viets always try to compare themselves with Indonesia. Dont try to talk sense to Viets, they are too dumb to digest basic infos.
 
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I think we can plant anything, the problem is that most of the farmer in Indonesia are not companies. Indonesia still have massive land like in Kalimantan and Papua, so I think the future is still bright. Until so far we are still using a traditional way, and I think we should follow Brazil and Vietnam step.

Talking about coffee, Indonesia is the fourth largest producer in the world and large part of the production are exported

Indonesia produced an estimated 660,000 metric tons of coffee in 2017.[1] Of this total, it is estimated that 154,800 tons were slated for domestic consumption in the 2013/2014 financial year.[2]
Indonesia production stagnates since ages. There must be a reason. We start by zero but I think we will overtake Brazil in 10 years. Very hard for you to catch up, if ever. Good luck.

http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.ft.com%2Fftdata%2Ffiles%2F2015%2F10%2FVietnam_is_the_world_second-largest_coffee_producer_-column_chart-ft-web-themelarge-600x419.png
 
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Indonesia production stagnates since ages. There must be a reason. We start by zero but I think we will overtake Brazil in 10 years. Very hard for you to catch up, if ever. Good luck.

http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.ft.com%2Fftdata%2Ffiles%2F2015%2F10%2FVietnam_is_the_world_second-largest_coffee_producer_-column_chart-ft-web-themelarge-600x419.png

After I read it further, Indonesia coffee producers are mainly state owned companies. The companies are huge and not only produce coffee but other plantation as well, so I think they are not as efficient and ambitious as private companies who has focused production, but the fourth biggest producer is not something bad I think.
 
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Indonesia production stagnates since ages. There must be a reason. We start by zero but I think we will overtake Brazil in 10 years. Very hard for you to catch up, if ever. Good luck.

http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.ft.com%2Fftdata%2Ffiles%2F2015%2F10%2FVietnam_is_the_world_second-largest_coffee_producer_-column_chart-ft-web-themelarge-600x419.png

Thanks for your concern, mechanized is a thing. Maybe our coffee prod is stagnating for decades, because simply we dont focused there. But we still hold many commodities at our grips, not one but many. Just like cassava, palm oil, coconut, cocoa, rubber, rice, cloves, cinnamon and so on
 
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After I read it further, Indonesia coffee producers are mainly state owned companies. The companies are huge and not only produce coffee but other plantation as well, so I think they are not as efficient and ambitious as private companies who has focused production, but the fourth biggest producer is not something bad I think.
Indonesia sugar industry still use machines dated back to the Dutch. Mechanization in rice growing and harvesting is non existent. State companies tend to stick to status quo, to the past. They won’t have a place in the future when countries as Vietnam and Brazil make great progress in productivity.

Thanks for your concern, mechanized is a thing. Maybe our coffee prod is stagnating for decades, because simply we dont focused there. But we still hold many commodities at our grips, not one but many. Just like cassava, palm oil, coconut, cocoa, rubber, rice, cloves, cinnamon and so on
Only palm oil. Other commodities are not so great. Palm oil is under threat by the EU. You know it.
 
. . . . .
Indonesia sugar industry still use machines dated back to the Dutch. Mechanization in rice growing and harvesting is non existent. State companies tend to stick to status quo, to the past. They won’t have a place in the future when countries as Vietnam and Brazil make great progress in productivity.


Only palm oil. Other commodities are not so great. Palm oil is under threat by the EU. You know it.

You know nothing, about other commodities either. Sugar industry is long dead in Java (where the Dutch left almost all of the equipment here) because simply there is rapid industrialization in Java, made Java not ideal anymore as the central of sugar industry and plantation. Indonesia government relocating most of farming and plantation toward out of Java area like Sulawesi, Papua and Kalimantan. Need time to adjust those new estates until production commence at commercial scale.

Indonesia is much industrialized compared to your whole swamp jungle. Here small farmer can own their hand tractor or other large machines, most made in Indonesia

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For coffee, farmer here prefer other commodities with higher yields


Coffee


Coffee is an important beverage in most societies around the globe. Not only for consumers' delight of drinking it but also for its economic value for the coffee bean producing and exporting countries (such as Indonesia). By some this product, made from roasted beans of the coffee plant (flowering plant of the Rubiaceae family), is called the world's "second most legally traded commodity" in human history.

Coffee that is sold on the world market is usually a combination of roasted beans of two botanic types: arabica and robusta. The difference between these two types mainly lies in its taste and the level of caffeine. Arabica beans, more expensive on the world market, have a milder taste and contain approximately 70 percent less caffeine than robusta beans.

The subtropical and equatorial regions provide good conditions for coffee to be grown. Therefore, countries that dominate the world's coffee production are found in South America, Africa, and Southeast Asia.

Coffee is a traded commodity on major futures and commodity exchanges, most importantly in London and New York. Below, are two tables that indicate the top five coffee producing countries and the top five coffee exporting countries.

Top 5 Coffee Bean Producers in Crop Season 2016-2017:

1. BRAZIL
2. VIETNAM

55,000,000 25,500,000
3. COLOMBIA
55,000,000 14,500,000
4. INDONESIA
55,000,000 11,491,000
5. ETHIOPIA
55,000,000 6,600,000

Top 5 Coffee Bean Exporting Countries in 2016-2017 Season:


1. BRAZIL
2. VIETNAM

34,500,000 23,200,000
3. COLOMBIA
34,500,000 12,800,000
4. INDONESIA
34,500,000 6,891,000
5. HONDURAS
34,500,000 5,589,000
in bags of 60 kilogram
Source: International Coffee Organization


COFFEE IN INDONESIA
Domestic Production, Export and Consumption of Indonesian Coffee

Indonesia is among the world's top coffee producing and exporting countries. Most of production constitutes the lower quality robusta type. Indonesia is also famous for having a number of specialty coffees such as 'kopi luwak' (known as world's the most expensive coffee) and 'kopi Mandailing' (see below). Regarding agricultural commodities, coffee is Indonesia's fourth-largest foreign exchange earner palm oil, rubber and cocoa.

Coffee was introduced to the archipelago by the Dutch who initially planted coffee trees around their stronghold of Batavia but quickly expanded coffee production to the Bogor and Sukabumi regions in West Java in the 17th and 18th century. Indonesia proved to have a near ideal climate for coffee production, hence plantations were soon established on other parts of Java and on the islands of Sumatra and Sulawesi.

Today, Indonesia's coffee plantations cover a total area of approximately 1.24 million hectares, 933 hectares of robusta plantations and 307 hectares of arabica plantations. More than 90 percent of total plantations are cultivated by small-scale growers who own relatively small plantations of about 1-2 hectares, each. Contrary to competitors such as Vietnam, Indonesia does not have big coffee plantations and therefore encounters more difficulties to safeguard stable production volumes and quality, hence its output loses some competitiveness on the international market.

As mentioned above, and similar to regional coffee giant Vietnam, the bulk of Indonesia's coffee bean production consists of the lower-quality robusta type. The higher quality arabica beans mostly come from South American countries such as Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador and Costa Rica. As such, the bulk of Indonesia's coffee exports (roughly 80 percent) consist of robusta beans. Exports of processed coffee are only a small fraction of total Indonesian coffee exports.

Provinces that account for most of Indonesia's coffee production are:

ROBUSTA
1
. BENGKULU (SUMATRA)
Arabica
a. Aceh (Sumatra)
2. SOUTH SULAWESI
Arabica
b. North Sumatra
3. LAMPUNG (SUMATRA)
Arabica

Coffee-Plantation-Areas-Indonesia-Aceh-Sumatra-Sulawesi-Indonesia-Investments.png


Starting from the 1960s, Indonesia has shown a small but stable increase in domestic production of coffee. However, according to data from Statistics Indonesia, the size of coffee estates in Indonesia are in decline as farmers have shifted their focus to products from the oil palm (such as crude palm oil and palm kernel), rubber and cocoa which all have higher yields on the international market. Coffee estates - or parts of such estates - have thus been transformed into plantations of other commodities.

In 2012, approximately 70 percent of Indonesia's total annual coffee bean production was exported, mainly to customers in Japan, South Africa, Western Europe and the USA. However, as Indonesia's domestic consumption of coffee has been growing, exports have declined. Coffee consumption in Indonesia rose by a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 7.7 percent in the years 2011-2014. Still, at 1.0 kilogram (2014 data), per capita consumption of coffee remains low in Indonesia.

https://www.indonesia-investments.com/business/commodities/coffee/item186
 
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You know nothing, about other commodities either. Sugar industry is long dead in Java (where the Dutch left almost all of the equipment here) because simply there is rapid industrialization in Java, made Java not ideal anymore as the central of sugar industry and plantation. Indonesia government relocating most of farming and plantation toward out of Java area like Sulawesi, Papua and Kalimantan. Need time to adjust those new estates until production commence at commercial scale.

Indonesia is much industrialized compared to your whole swamp jungle. Here small farmer can own their hand tractor or other large machines, most made in Indonesia

View attachment 575458 View attachment 575459 View attachment 575460 View attachment 575461 View attachment 575462 View attachment 575463 View attachment 575464 View attachment 575465 View attachment 575466 View attachment 575467 View attachment 575468 View attachment 575469 View attachment 575470 View attachment 575471 View attachment 575472

For coffee, farmer here prefer other commodities with higher yields


Coffee


Coffee is an important beverage in most societies around the globe. Not only for consumers' delight of drinking it but also for its economic value for the coffee bean producing and exporting countries (such as Indonesia). By some this product, made from roasted beans of the coffee plant (flowering plant of the Rubiaceae family), is called the world's "second most legally traded commodity" in human history.

Coffee that is sold on the world market is usually a combination of roasted beans of two botanic types: arabica and robusta. The difference between these two types mainly lies in its taste and the level of caffeine. Arabica beans, more expensive on the world market, have a milder taste and contain approximately 70 percent less caffeine than robusta beans.

The subtropical and equatorial regions provide good conditions for coffee to be grown. Therefore, countries that dominate the world's coffee production are found in South America, Africa, and Southeast Asia.

Coffee is a traded commodity on major futures and commodity exchanges, most importantly in London and New York. Below, are two tables that indicate the top five coffee producing countries and the top five coffee exporting countries.

Top 5 Coffee Bean Producers in Crop Season 2016-2017:

1. BRAZIL
2. VIETNAM

55,000,000 25,500,000
3. COLOMBIA
55,000,000 14,500,000
4. INDONESIA
55,000,000 11,491,000
5. ETHIOPIA
55,000,000 6,600,000

Top 5 Coffee Bean Exporting Countries in 2016-2017 Season:


1. BRAZIL
2. VIETNAM

34,500,000 23,200,000
3. COLOMBIA
34,500,000 12,800,000
4. INDONESIA
34,500,000 6,891,000
5. HONDURAS
34,500,000 5,589,000
in bags of 60 kilogram
Source: International Coffee Organization

COFFEE IN INDONESIA
Domestic Production, Export and Consumption of Indonesian Coffee

Indonesia is among the world's top coffee producing and exporting countries. Most of production constitutes the lower quality robusta type. Indonesia is also famous for having a number of specialty coffees such as 'kopi luwak' (known as world's the most expensive coffee) and 'kopi Mandailing' (see below). Regarding agricultural commodities, coffee is Indonesia's fourth-largest foreign exchange earner palm oil, rubber and cocoa.

Coffee was introduced to the archipelago by the Dutch who initially planted coffee trees around their stronghold of Batavia but quickly expanded coffee production to the Bogor and Sukabumi regions in West Java in the 17th and 18th century. Indonesia proved to have a near ideal climate for coffee production, hence plantations were soon established on other parts of Java and on the islands of Sumatra and Sulawesi.

Today, Indonesia's coffee plantations cover a total area of approximately 1.24 million hectares, 933 hectares of robusta plantations and 307 hectares of arabica plantations. More than 90 percent of total plantations are cultivated by small-scale growers who own relatively small plantations of about 1-2 hectares, each. Contrary to competitors such as Vietnam, Indonesia does not have big coffee plantations and therefore encounters more difficulties to safeguard stable production volumes and quality, hence its output loses some competitiveness on the international market.

As mentioned above, and similar to regional coffee giant Vietnam, the bulk of Indonesia's coffee bean production consists of the lower-quality robusta type. The higher quality arabica beans mostly come from South American countries such as Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador and Costa Rica. As such, the bulk of Indonesia's coffee exports (roughly 80 percent) consist of robusta beans. Exports of processed coffee are only a small fraction of total Indonesian coffee exports.

Provinces that account for most of Indonesia's coffee production are:

ROBUSTA
1
. BENGKULU (SUMATRA)
Arabica
a. Aceh (Sumatra)
2. SOUTH SULAWESI
Arabica
b. North Sumatra
3. LAMPUNG (SUMATRA)
Arabica

Coffee-Plantation-Areas-Indonesia-Aceh-Sumatra-Sulawesi-Indonesia-Investments.png


Starting from the 1960s, Indonesia has shown a small but stable increase in domestic production of coffee. However, according to data from Statistics Indonesia, the size of coffee estates in Indonesia are in decline as farmers have shifted their focus to products from the oil palm (such as crude palm oil and palm kernel), rubber and cocoa which all have higher yields on the international market. Coffee estates - or parts of such estates - have thus been transformed into plantations of other commodities.

In 2012, approximately 70 percent of Indonesia's total annual coffee bean production was exported, mainly to customers in Japan, South Africa, Western Europe and the USA. However, as Indonesia's domestic consumption of coffee has been growing, exports have declined. Coffee consumption in Indonesia rose by a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 7.7 percent in the years 2011-2014. Still, at 1.0 kilogram (2014 data), per capita consumption of coffee remains low in Indonesia.

https://www.indonesia-investments.com/business/commodities/coffee/item186
Ok but why your Gdp remains stagnant for a decade if progress is made in mechanization? Vietnam Gdp would be on par with RoK if we had enjoyed such long peace period.
 
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