blockchain<\/a> to create price transparency all the way up to farm gate. To help our customers make sense of the numbers, we will present them in the context of Trabocca\u2019s contribution to a living income, which is the amount of money the farmers require for a decent standard of living in their region.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nWhat is Trabocca\u2019s purpose behind this initiative?
<\/strong>\u201c<\/strong>At Trabocca, we\u2019ve always focused on quality and paid our producers a premium for high quality coffee. We brought the first organic and Fairtrade certifiers to Ethiopia. But was that enough? Are producers of high-quality coffee able to earn a living income for their family? A coffee farmer\u2019s income is a function of the price they receive per kilogram, multiplied by their production volume and minus their cost of production. What if we turn that formula around, and use a living income for the farmer as the starting point of the price calculation? As a trial, we selected a group of farmers and used that exact approach to determine the price we pay for their coffee.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nSome of the poorest people in the world are subsidising our coffee.<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
What drives you to change the coffee sector from the inside?
<\/strong>\u201cI came in touch with the coffee industry through my wife\u2019s family. She\u2019s Jamaican by birth. Her grandfather was a coffee farmer in the Blue Mountains. Even though my own background was in tech, coffee seemed so much more appealing. At first, my dream was to become a farmer, but instead I became a coffee roaster and later a coffee trader. During the last ten years I\u2019ve witnessed too much poverty among coffee farmers. Especially nowadays, with coffee prices at the lowest point in fifteen years in real terms, coffee farmers in most countries are making a loss on every bag of coffee they sell. In other words: some of the poorest people in the world are subsidising our coffee. We need to act now if we want to avoid losing the next generation of coffee farmers.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nCan you explain a bit about the coffee crisis to readers from outside the coffee sector?
<\/strong>\u201cIn a nutshell, the price that farmers receive depends on supply and demand. Due to increased production in Brazil, prices have collapsed. Farmers in many countries do not have the option to switch to other products, especially since a coffee tree takes five years to bear fruit, and they might have made long term investments. So, the mechanism of supply and demand is not functioning properly to regulate prices in the coffee sector.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nIn coffee it is all about trust. A lot of brands say: \u2018Our consumers trust us. They know we pay a good price.\u2019 Why the need for blockchain?
<\/strong>\u201cI disagree with you. I see a lack of trust with consumers. And I don\u2019t disagree with them. Coffee growers produce a semi-finished product. They don\u2019t produce export-ready coffee. In the case of Ethiopia, they produce freshly harvested coffee cherries that are processed by multiple actors along the value chain. Before the coffee reaches the consumer, it goes through so many different hands that there\u2019s no transparency left. Even inside the industry we often do not know exactly what the growers received for their coffee. We do not know if they were able to generate a living income.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nBefore the coffee reaches the consumer, it goes through so many different hands that there\u2019s no transparency left.<\/em><\/h2>\n\n\n\nHow do your supply chain partners react to this initiative?
<\/strong>\u201cThe local partner we selected for this project is a larger farm that also buys and processes coffee cherries from small-scale coffee farmers that grow their coffee in the same area. He is already paying an above-average price to his outgrowers, but we want to use the traceability platform to generate irrefutable proof that these small-scale farmers are being paid the promised price to contribute to a living income.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nAnd how do the small-scale farmers adopt the new way of working?
<\/strong>\u201cThere are plenty of challenges. One being the lack of technology on the ground. In the farmer group that we\u2019ve selected for the first trial, only one out of three farmers has access to a cell phone. Our original plan was to use mobile payments to capture proof of payment digitally, but it turns out we have to take a low-tech approach for now, asking farmers for fingerprints to verify that they received the payment.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nThe coffee will be available from Spring 2020. Will your customers \u2013 coffee roasters \u2013 also be involved in this initiative?
<\/strong>\u201cWe will ask the coffee roasters that buy the coffee from us to pay a small premium for the traceability information. Although all the farmers that participate in this project will be paid the same price, we will sell part of the coffee with access to the transparency tool and part of it without. We want to validate the assumption that customers are willing to pay slightly more for transparent coffee. It\u2019s up to the coffee roasters to determine the sales price they charge their customers \u2013 the consumers.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\nIf we jump a year ahead, where will Trabocca be standing?
<\/strong>\u201cMy dream is to end poverty among coffee farmers. For now, I hope to learn from this pilot and use the learnings to improve our pricing-model so we can scale it up to other regions. Can we include agricultural workers in the transparency model? Or can we add a premium for climate effect? There\u2019s so much to do!\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n