One of the books I'm working through during the break is The Oil Palm Complex. It was an airport find that turns out to be quite informative, with more parallels to #coffee than I thought. Here are some snippets from it (a thread) #PalmOil
As with a lot of the rest of the world, “...the rate of growth of the rural population [in Indonesia] has become negative.” but almost half of the population is still rural. p. 9
“In much of Indonesia people remain highly dependent on rural, land-based, even subsistence-oriented livelihoods, hence the arrangements for incorporating them in (or excluding them from) oil palm developments are crucial to reducing rural poverty.” p. 10
As with coffee farming, diversification is often recommended: “A diversified household with other farm and non-farm activities can cope with the upfront costs of oil palm development.” p. 32
In palm oil as well as coffee, farmers can play the commodity game and/or the quality game and both tree crops suffer the same general problem for smallholders in Indonesia; low-quality plant stock and inefficient fertilization usage:
“... the majority of poor villagers continued to plant low-yielding trees and made little improvements in crop practices (especially fertilizer use), thus limiting the pro-poor spin-offs.” P. 104
A lot of the coffee farmers I've encountered use composted manure to fertilize and this is good for the environment but in most cases needs to be supplemented with precise agrochemicals. When used thoughtfully, the damage to the environment can be minimized.
Another parallel to coffee is the need to treat the farm as a business by keeping accurate books, tracking costs, developing marketing strategies, etc. Business training and business connections for farmers can go a long way:
“When farmers develop oil palm plots independently and market their fruit directly to free-standing buyers and mills, they face the difficulty of obtaining access to capital, planting material, fertilizers, and marketing networks without outside tutelage.” p 115
Aside from the parallels to coffee and how informative it is on an entire ag industry, the book is quite depressing when you read about the social, environmental, and economic impact of palm oil in the region. Twice now I've had to set the book aside and read something else.
But the authors do a very good job of taking an objective look at the pros and cons of such a consequential crop that has the potential to make or break an entire country and impact the entire world. I've only scratched the surface of all the issues discussed. A recommended read!
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It is currently estimated that about 75% of Nigerian coffee drinkers drink instant coffee. Instant coffee is typically made from the lowest quality coffee available, meaning low prices for producers.
In order to encourage greater money flow around local coffee consumption, local businesses developed the Lagos Coffee Festival (LaCoFe), which aims to educate both consumers and producers of the efficacy of quality.
I'm an introvert, so my life is social distancing. I'm a pro at this shit.
On today's docket: updating two old Arduino projects (removing my dependence on Strings—if you know, you know) and starting a new project for school; a soil temperature and capacitance monitor. 🤓
Day 4: This phase of these projects is always a challenge for me: getting the whole circuit semi-permanent yet easily worked with, i.e., easily disassembled. Sometimes I am really happy with the end-product and others I just want it done. This is becoming the latter.
Yes, that’s gratuitous use of hot glue to stabilize a rather ugly way to connect jumper cables. I usually use male bits on the board but I am low on components and I haven’t found the necessary stores here in Bali yet. 🤷♂️
I disagree with the implication that some dastardly villain is forcing bad #coffee on the locals:
“The coffee that remains is the stuff that wasn’t good enough to export and sell, so by design the locals drink the lower quality coffee." buff.ly/35YvVYo
Quality coffee normally fetches more money in the export markets of a producing country versus the local markets. The reasons vary but boil down to things like 'who values the quality?', 'who can afford the higher prices?', 'where are the markets to supply said quality?', etc.
There are well-developed markets for quality coffee in places like the US and Europe, where there is both a willingness and ability to pay for quality. However, coffee is mostly produced in relatively poorer countries that lack a willingness and/or ability to pay for quality.
Competition for #smallholders is only going to get worse: "Vegebot is the first robot that can identify and harvest iceberg lettuce — bringing hope to farmers that one of the most demanding crops for human pickers could finally be automated. " osc.is/2LkO0rH
With the progression Brazil is making in industrialized, mechanized #coffee farming, robotic coffee pickers are an inevitability. That means that farming operations that have technical and business savvy will easily outproduce small holders and price them out of the game.
This is already happening and the industry is recognizing it. Some of the proposed solutions (such as subsidizing production), in my opinion only address symptoms but not the underlying problem: coffee farming is quickly becoming a more technologically advanced business.