“People front coffee that is not Kenyan coffee and call it Kenyan coffee,” said Loise Njeru, chief executive at the regulatory board. “For now, we want to give Kenyan coffee a face, because you walk anywhere in the world and find coffee called AA, it could be AA from anywhere.”
Neighbouring Ethiopia has obtained trademark rights for at least three of its coffee brands and signed agreements with scores of global companies to promote them. Most of the best beans are grown on volcanic soils on foothills around the snow-peaked Mount Kenya at an altitude of between 1,400 and 2,100 metres above sea level.
Production in the east African country has fallen over the years from an all-time peak of 130,000 tonnes in 1988/89 season due to mismanagement, indebtedness and bad returns. The government sought to reform the sector by liberalising marketing and milling and took over 3.2 billion shillings ($42.19 million) owed by farmers in 2001.
Buyers are often willing to pay a premium for Kenyan coffee. In mid-December, the price for the benchmark AA grade soared to $601 per 50-kg bag. One of the reforms instituted in the sector, which accounts for 3.5 percent of Kenya’s gross domestic product, allowed farmers to sell their produce directly to buyers overseas without offering it at a central auction.
Njeru said the brand would help the increasing number of people globally that are demanding pure Kenyan coffee to pick it out from other coffees and blends. “With the opening up of direct sales and the growing niche markets in the US and other high end markets, we are seeing relationship buying coming in place where buyers and consumers recognise that pure Kenyan coffee is far much better or superior than what they have been getting,” Njeru said.
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