Tucked away in the hills just outside Mubende town is Kaweri
Coffee Plantation, a 2,512 hectare (6,207 acres) operation that is arguably
Uganda’s best kept secret.
In the late 1990s the
German company Neumann Kaffe Gruppe (NKG) was looking to start a robusta
plantation. After assessing several options in South America, Asia and Africa they
settled on Uganda.
“Uganda was chosen partly because it is part of the Greater Congo
Basin, which is where the robusta coffee has its origins,” said Kaweri Coffee
Plantation managing director Etienne Steyn.
NKG, which accounts for one in every ten kilogrammes of
world coffee demand, got land in Mubende and set about setting up a plantation
to rival similar operations in Brazil and Mexico.
Planting of 1800
hectares of coffee was completed between 2001 and 2004.
“All coffee nurseries within the district, and as far as
Mbarara, were exhausted to meet the required number of seedlings needed for
planting”. We now have our own nurseries,” Steyn said on a recent tour of the
plantation.
There are currently about 1.8m trees on the plantation on
1650 hectares, now under coffee. Another 685 hectares (27% of the farm) is
occupied by natural highland rain forest and is fast becoming a sanctuary for
all sorts of wildlife – serval and civet cats, bush babies, vervet and colobus monkeys,
various antelopes such as Reedbuck, duiker and bush buck, many rare species of
butterflies and many species of birds.
"Steyn said that the plantation, which harvested its first crop in 2005, is set to produce 2,500 tons of coffee this season. This means Kaweri will account for two in every hundred bags of coffee produced in Uganda, the largest single producer of coffee in the country...
According to the Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA)
there are about half a million coffee farmers in Uganda.
But Kaweri is not only the single highest coffee producer in
Uganda but may also have the highest productivity per unit area than any other
operation in the country.
According to Steyn the farm’s productivity is about 2.2 tons
per hectare compared to the national average for the robusta of half a ton per
hectare.
Better farming methods and the judicious use of research are
at the heart of these high productivity numbers at Kaweri.
“Every month we take leaf samples and send them to UK for
analysis, in addition annually we take soil samples for analysis in Brazil.
From these we are able to determine accurately what fertilisers and other inputs
we have to apply in different parts of the farm,” Steyn said.
The farm does not however employ irrigation as there are no
streams or surface water on the farm and in 2013, Geophysical surveys showed no
underground water was available for irrigation purposes.
Kaweri markets a washed robusta and has the largest wet
processing plant on the continent with a capacity to process 350 tons of coffee
cherry daily.
Internationally Kaweri has distinguished itself as having
produced a robusta coffee that is traded by name: Colobus (Screen 18), Turaco
(Screen 15) and Reed Buck (Screen 12) coffees, which allows the farm to command
a premium over and above the normal prices.
Kaweri does not employ the use of outgrowers although it
employs at least 600 people throughout the year and up to 3000 during the peak harvest
period of six months.
“During harvesting we often exhaust all the available labour
around the farm and have to go further afield to hire workers to harvest the
crop,” Steyn said.
The nature of the robusta tree is such that it is unlikely
that mechanised harvesting will replace manual labour, so for the duration of
the 99-year lease NKG has on Kaweri we can expect that it will continue to
serve as a source of employment throughout the year.
Beyond creating jobs for people in the area, Kaweri supports
the surrounding communities and the farm has drilled eight boreholes, built a new primary school
in nearby Kitemba village and has helped in transferring know-how to local
coffee farmers.
“Support activities include the establishment of extension
services, development of professional farmer organisations, capacity building
on value addition processes and market access as a result they are today marketing
in bulk directly to exporters – cutting out the middleman and getting paid
more,” Steyn said.
"Steyn, himself a former coffee farmer in Zimbabwe said, it would an uphill task for local farmers trying to replicate the scale of the $20m (sh52b) Kaweri plantation....
Speaking from his experience in Zimbabwe he said commercial
farmers have little support in Uganda.
“We had farmer associations in every district which provided
extension services, lobbied for our interests, facilitated in warehousing. In
addition there were agricultural banks whose services were structured taking
into account the industry and its nuances,” Steyn said.
Despite a compensation case that is still winding its way
through the courts and hangs over the project like a dark cloud, the farm’s
target is to achieve production of 3,500 tons a season.
Industry players are genuinely impressed by what is
happening in Kaweri.
“It’s a massive, well run operation and is a good story of
what can be done in this country. Its just sad we don’t have a local testimony
like that,” said Andrew Rugasira, founder and Chairman coffee processor Good
African Coffee.
Neumann company are nothing but an evil company who are behind the abuse of eviction, beatings, rape, robbery, starvation, and murder of the Uganda people just for profit for investors. Bribing the Uganda government the police and army to get rid if people on their own land. Disgraceful company whis coffee beans should be boycotted world wide and the CEO,S jailed for life for knowing and promoting this murderous behaviour.
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