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Meet the Coffee Farmers We Buy from in Sumatra
The cooperative was founded in 1999 with the assistance of ForesTrade, a Vermont based company whose mission is to support sustainable agriculture, natural resource conservation, and socio-economic development through promoting the production and distribution of fair trade and organic certified products (www.forestrade.com). ForesTrade first visited Aceh in search of a good source for organic arabica coffee in 1997. The company found that many of the farmers there, although not certified organic, were already practicing organic farming techniques on their 2-3 acre plots, such as promoting ecological diversity through intercropping. ForesTrade hired its first field staff person, whose own shade-grown coffee plot was intercropped with mango, avocado, guava, banana and papaya, to train others in organic agriculture to help them become certified organic. Soon after the first several dozen growers passed an organic inspection, the incipient organization turned its energy onto forming the cooperative. The PPKGO cooperative then became certified fair trade in 2000 by Fair Trade Labeling Organization (FLO), and is currently certified organic by Skal from Holland and also by National Australian Sustainable Agriculture Association.
ForesTrade continues to be integral to the PPKGO's operation, providing critical financing, marketing internationally to buyers such as Peace coffee, training coop staff, and hiring locals to run operations such as processing, quality control and export. The company has also been instrumental in enhancing farmers' organic potential, including hiring staff to maintain growers' adherence to organic standards and providing farmers with compost at no cost, made from coffee pulp and manure. ForesTrade, which has also written grants for the coop to acquire office space and equipment and processing equipment, sees its partnership PPKGO as essential to the coop's long-term success. Also involved in the project is a third partner, a local family-owned coffee processor called Trimaju, currently processing the bulk of PPKGO's coffee. As volume continues to increase, the coop has slated a portion of its fair trade funds for building eight new satellite processing plants in eight member villages. The three partners split coffee sale proceeds, with the majority (67-70%) going to PPKGO farmers and the coop fund.
In spite political strife in the Takengon region where PPKGO farmers live, peace is a deep breath of the cool mountain air. Peace is playing percussion instruments, playing soccer and badminton, fishing, hunting, and prayer at a mosque. Peace is a visit to the lovely Laut Tawar Lake, flanked by soaring bluffs and deep caves. Peace is the region's nearness to the wildest national park in Indonesia, Gunung Leuser Park, which is a sanctuary for orangutans, elephants, rhinos, tigers, over 380 species of birds, and the biggest flower in the world, the Rafflesia. Peace is a 6-8 month long coffee harvest, bountiful from the organically nurtured rich volcanic soils where the plants grow. Peace is an interethnic community whose members stand in solidarity with each other. Peace is being able to support your family with the work you do.
Check out the January 2006 issue of Fair Grounds to read about our recent visit to PPGKO. |
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2801 21st Ave S #130, Minneapolis, MN 55407
Peace Coffee is a subsidiary of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade
Policy.