Coffee Boom Expected as Kenyan Farmers Reap Big
After having to grapple with depreciating coffee returns exacerbated by erratic weather patterns over the past three years, coffee farmers will be smiling all the way to the bank this year owing to
After having to grapple with depreciating coffee returns exacerbated by erratic weather patterns over the past three years, coffee farmers will be smiling all the way to the bank this year owing to
As Kenyan coffee farmers decry the government’s failure to remunerate them accordingly for their input in the well-capitalized industry, one Kenyan has taken it upon himself to ensure that they are well paid
Kenyan coffee farmers should not expect a boom from recent high prices, thanks to long-term deals they signed. The high prices have been occasioned by Colombia — the world second biggest producer of
Kenya coffee production has dropped for two consecutive years, pushing the country further behind Africa’s top producers of the commodity whose price has rebounded in the international market. Latest International Coffee Organisation (ICO) data
When global coffee prices slumped in 2008 and the processing factories in her area collapsed due to mismanagement, Linet Nekesa, a single mother of five, was among the smallscale farmers who lost their