FEATURE STORY

Support to coffee farmers awakens development in rural Sao Paulo, Brazil

September 25, 2013


Image

With the new harvester, Luís Carlos "Japao" Bassetto (left), his cousin Carlos Alberto, and the cooperative they work at will be able to sell more coffee to fair trade wholesalers.

Mariana Ceratti / World Bank

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • 8,000 rural families reach for bigger markets thanks to a project that gives them access to finance and technical assistance.
  • Another 14,000 milk, honey and vegetables producers will be benefited over the next two years.
  • Local coffee producers are improving their harvest and increasing their export of fair-trade certified grains.

New and old ways of coffee farming meet as cousins Carlos Alberto and Luís Carlos “Japao” Bassetto face the camera. The screen in their hands was used many years ago to clean the coffee cherries.  Behind them, there is a brand new mechanical harvester that does the job of 80 people.

The photo was taken in Pratania, western Sao Paulo, where most of the 5,000 population make a living from agriculture.

Here, the technology helps the Bassetto family – and another 113 associated farmers – gain ground in the coveted fair trade market. The cooperative where they work at, founded in 2004, produces around 7,000 coffee bags a year. The best grains are sold to coffee shops in the United States, Switzerland and New Zealand.

“With the mechanical harvester, we can sell up to 70% of our produce (from the current 50%) to fair trade coffee wholesalers,” says Luís Carlos. “They require a wide set of social and environmental standards, but also ensure fair payment.”

The vehicle was purchased with the help of a World Bank initiative that enables Sao Paulo small farmers to improve access to markets. Nowadays it benefits 8,000 families and another 14,000 will be reached until late 2015.

Better yields

So far, the project has supported not only coffee farmers, but also honey, milk, grains, vegetable and fruit producers. They are now able to learn modern, sustainable farming techniques; make sure their produce meets safety standards – so that they can be served in public school meals, for example –; and purchase equipment.

“Coffee crops demand a lot of manpower, which the region lacks these days,” says Claudio Vivan, technical director at the state Rural Development Office in Botucatu, which provides support to Pratania small farmers. “In addition, the yields are much lower when the fruit are picked up manually. With the mechanical harvester, farmers can wait until the fruit is perfectly ripe, and reap it much faster.”

Brazil is among the world’s largest coffee producers and consumers. And particularly in Sao Paulo, coffee farming has leveraged development between the 1940s and 1970s. Local road and urban infrastructure blossomed thanks to the economic growth of these years.

However, farmers have struggled with bad weather, pest outbreaks, and the decline in global coffee prices over the following years. As a result, many of them were discouraged, either opting for different crops or quitting their farms.


" My grandfather would love to see many of his relatives coming back to these fields and dreaming big again "

Luís Carlos "Japao" Bassetto

Coffee farmer

“The overall performance of the agriculture sector in the State of Sao Paulo is impressive. However, this success masks mixed results when it comes to incomes and market opportunities for family farmers, who represent the majority (80%) of production units in the State. Close to 40% of family producers live with less than two minimum wages,” says Marianne Grosclaude, project manager at the World Bank.

“Agricultural development has also led to the degradation of natural resources. We believe it is therefore very important to support small producers in their efforts to become more competitive while reducing the impact of the sector on the environment,” she adds.

Bearing fruit

This and other initiatives gave Bassetto and other local farmers the strength to move forward. Brazil’s public entrepreneurship support service (Sebrae), for example, helped the cooperative getting the fair trade certification in 2008.

“But for two years we didn’t sell a single certified coffee bag, which was very sad; our efforts began to bear fruit only from 2010 on,” ‘Japao’ recalls. “Now we can even afford a collective health insurance plan.”

They also aim at building a tasting room where specialists and buyers will be able to try the coffee before the bags are finally purchased.

“Japao” believes his Italian grandfather Giocondo Bassetto, who started the coffee business in Pratania back in 1896, would be proud: “He would love to see many of his relatives coming back to these fields and dreaming big again.”


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