Coffee Bean Producers Around The
World
From its
origins in Ethiopia, where the main coffee production is still
from wild coffee tree forests, coffee consumption has spread
throughout the world. But because of its requirement for ample
sunshine and rain, the plants from which beans are produced
grow only in tropical or sub-tropical
regions.
From a
narrow band centered on the equator of around 23 degrees North
to 25 degrees South comes all of the world's source of the
liquid that a Turkish proverb calls 'black as hell, strong as
death, sweet as love'. As a commodity, coffee - from beans
grown in over 70 countries - is second only to oil in dollar
volume.
Brazil
remains by far the largest coffee bean producer with an average
output of 28% of the total. Even world-renowned Colombia is a
distant second at only 16%, with Indonesia less than half that
at 7%. Mexico, the fourth largest producer is half again at
4%.
Coffee
trees produce the best beans in high altitudes but have adapted
to a variety of areas.
In Brazil,
the plantations cover huge areas and employ hundreds of workers
to tend the plants. In Colombia the rugged mountains and poor
economic conditions mean transportation to processing centers
is still largely carried out by mule or Jeep.
While
Colombia has the tree-lined mountains, Hawaiian producers plant
on the slopes of the Mauna Loa volcano. The black volcanic ash
is rocky, but perfect for the plants where the intense
afternoon sun is softened by tropical clouds. Frequent island
showers provide the ample rain needed.
Indonesia
is composed of thousands of islands, where coffee has been
grown since the Dutch colonists introduced it in the 17th
century. Though other countries have greater technology, no one
exceeds the helpful warm, damp micro-climates found here.
Hundreds of one to two acre farms on the largest islands of
Sumatra, Java and Sulawesi combine to secure the country's
third place position.
Plantations
in Mexico, by contrast to Brazil, are primarily small farms but
with over 100,000 of them the total still makes the country a
serious factor on the world market. Most are located in the
south, in Veracruz, Oaxaca and Chiapas with the special Altura
beans indicating their origin in the high
altitudes.
Vietnam in
recent years has rapidly been challenging Indonesia's position
as the Tonkin area recovers from decades of stagnation. First
planted with arabica trees in the mid-19th century by French
missionaries, the small plantations now produce robusta, one of
the two main types of plant.
Africa,
Kenya and the Ivory Coast, though smaller producers are
world-famous for the dark, large beans grown there. In the
foothills of Mount Kenya grow some of the largest in the world
which go to produce a well-known fruity coffee. The Ivory Coast
holds its position as one of the world's largest producers of
robusta, often used in espresso blends.
Whether the
Brazilian Liberdade, the Costa Rican La Fuente, the Indian
Monsoon Malabar or the Tanzanian Peaberry, coffees from around
the world continue to find eager consumers
everywhere.
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