Mired in civil war for 21 months, its oil-based economy in tatters, South Sudan is an unlikely source of upmarket coffee capsules for European consumers.
However, coffee company Nespresso is bringing South Sudanese espresso to the international market for the first time as part of a long-term plan to revive the coffee industry in the poor, war-wracked East African country.
Hollywood actor George Clooney — an advocate for South Sudan and the public face of the Nespresso brand — launched the initiative two years ago.
Photo: AP
“There is a real opportunity here,” Clooney said in July 2013.
Five months later, a fresh civil war erupted, with tens of thousands killed since, more than 2 million uprooted and 4 million pushed to the brink of starvation as fighting continues despite an August peace agreement.
In the meantime, Washington-based non-profit company TechnoServe, tasked by Nespresso to work on the scheme, continued its efforts to breathe new life into South Sudan’s coffee industry.
“We wanted to help smallholder farmers have a business opportunity around the existing coffee, to switch the thinking from: ‘I’ve got a couple of coffee trees in my yard,’ to: ‘I can really work on this and make a living,’” TechnoServe chief executive William Warshauer said.
The US$2.6 million scheme has seen 300 smallholder farmers sign up to join cooperatives so far with another 1,000 waiting to join. Hopes are to get 15,000 farmers onboard over a 10-year period.
South Sudan is a new exporter of coffee, but not a new producer. However, its nascent domestic industry, aimed at local consumption, was destroyed — like much else — during decades of civil war during the 20th century.
Wild Arabica coffee still grows on the high, misty Boma Plateau, close to Ethiopia — where the bean is thought to originate. Wild Arabica and farmed Robusta are both found in the tropical Imatong Mountains to the south.
Robusta is also farmed in fertile Central Equatoria, which has so far avoided the ravages of the civil war that began when South Sudanese President Salva Kiir accused his former vice president Riek Machar of plotting a coup.
TechnoServe works with smallholder farmers around the world to improve their crops and yields, connect them to markets and increase their income. Rarely, though, does the company find itself in a war zone.
“Some of the challenges we faced in South Sudan were common, and some were unique,” Warshauer said. “Civil unrest is something we encounter infrequently.”
Security concerns forced TechnoServe’s foreign workers to pull out for most of last year, slowing the project down.
However, Warshauer is optimistic that the harvest at the end of the year will be “multiples” larger than in previous years.
“Coffee could be the second-biggest export outside of oil,” he said.
The coffee-growing cooperatives around the town of Yei have replanted their trees and yields have improved, as has the quality of the beans, thanks to new “wet mills” installed to process the beans on site before export.
The result is a limited edition Nespresso capsule coffee called “Suluja ti South Sudan” (“Beginning of South Sudan” in the local Kakwa language), which is being made available “in extremely limited quantities” to customers in France only, for now.
“We are excited about the potential of this project for economic growth in the region,” said Jean-Marc Duvoisin, chief executive of the Swiss-based coffee company.
South Sudan’s economy relies almost entirely on oil production, which has been severely hit by the conflict and the global oil price collapse, with production falling by one-third to about 150,000 barrels per day.
At the same time, the value of the South Sudanese pound has plummeted from three to 16 to the US dollar, while inflation has soared close to 60 percent.
Coffee exports could help diversify the economy, once it emerges from war.
For now, getting any coffee out at all is nigh on a miracle in a country at war with itself.
“We have to be careful not to over-claim,” Nespresso director Daniel Weston said. “This is the beginning of something not the end, but it has the potential to grow.”
Saying that his company is a business, not a charity, Weston said: “George Clooney opened the door to the opportunity, but we stayed for the coffee.”
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