Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Colombia's Coffee Boom: Record $5.4 Billion Exports Powered By Science And Stable Prices


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Colombia just logged a standout year for its most famous crop. Between September 2023 and August 2024, coffee exports brought in more than $5.4 billion.

The harvest across 610 coffee-growing municipalities was valued at roughly COP 22 trillion (about $5.6 billion). For a country where about half a million families depend on coffee, that is not just a headline-it is paychecks, paved roads, and stocked village shops.

The story behind the story is less flashy and more patient. First, institutions. For nearly a century, the National Federation of Coffee Growers has acted as a stabilizer: it guarantees to buy beans at a daily minimum price.

That floor matters when global markets swing, giving small farmers the confidence to invest and harvest rather than hold back.

Second, science. Colombia remains the world's No. 3 producer after Brazil and Vietnam, with more than four billion trees in the ground, and about 88 percent of coffee plots now planted with rust-resistant varieties developed by the FNC's research center, Cenicafé.



That shift has spared growers an estimated COP 1.1 trillion (about $280 million) in disease-control costs and protected yields in bad years.

Third, logistics. Beyond farm gates, the sector has pushed more than COP 34.5 billion (about $8.8 million) into regional infrastructure-especially upgrades to tertiary roads-so beans move faster and arrive in better condition.
Colombian Coffee's Global Footprint and Climate-Tested Resilience
The payoff shows up in export numbers and in the map of buyers: the United States takes around 38 percent of Colombian coffee, followed by Germany and Canada (about 8 percent each), Belgium (7 percent), Japan (5 percent), South Korea (4 percent), and China (3 percent).

Spain, the Netherlands, Australia, Mexico , the United Kingdom, and Italy each account for roughly 2 percent. Why it matters for readers outside Colombia: this is a real-world example of how smallholder agriculture can beat volatility-through credible institutions, applied science, and basic infrastructure.

It means steadier supply and quality for consumers, and a stronger rural economy at origin. The challenge ahead is the same one facing coffee everywhere: climate pressure. But Colombia's recent results suggest a sector that knows how to prepare, not just react.

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