Voice from the Field: Fatima Ismael Espinoza

José Luis Zárate of Coffee Kids recently spoke with Fatima Ismael Espinoza, the general manager of the Coffee Kids’ partner Society of Small Producers for Coffee Export (SOPPEXCCA) to get a sense of how coffee farmers deal with unstable coffee prices and provide for their families.

Fatima Ismael EspinozaLocated in Jinotega, Nicaragua, SOPPEXCCA is a 650-member cooperative known throughout the coffee industry for their innovative practices and approaches to sustainability. Like many coffee-farming communities, they confront unstable prices for their product and variable yields.

JL: How much land does the average farmer in your cooperative have in coffee?

FE: Small producers in our cooperative on average cultivate about 1.8-2 hectares of coffee. This is insufficient for many and propagates poverty, which will continue for the foreseeable future.

JL: Is poverty an issue of access to sufficient land or low productivity?

FE: It is primarily a result of small properties, but there are two factors that go together. Limited land combined with inefficient use of that land and the lack of technical resources make it very difficult for families to survive.

JL: And when you talk about that lack of technical resources, what do you refer to?

Organic coffee productionFE: I mean technical support in the sector of organic coffee production. For example, to produce organic coffee, our producers expect a 50% reduction in production. The effect should be the opposite, organic production should be higher than with agro-chemicals because agro-chemicals deteriorate the environment.

In all the years that we have worked with organic production, we have noticed the damage to the environment that was caused by agro-chemicals. The problem that we face now is called soil infertility. My hypothesis is that this issue of infertility is the result of all the years that the land suffered from agro-chemicals, particularly in the 60s and 70s during the coffee boom. Also big estates used large amounts of agro-chemicals to make the land productive and generated such soil infertility.

JL: Maybe it's not that the soil is poor but that it is toxic…

FE: Moreover, the hurricanes now wash away the nutrients from the soil eroding the richest layers of the land. I remember days after Hurricane Mitch I saw those soils totally bleached, white and hard. This means that a process of soil rehabilitation is needed.

We have had to analyze the soils, which is expensive. The price is unreachable to producers, so they cannot understand the condition of their soils. It is not worth it for them. This is why we have done various soils samplings with the cooperatives.

Thanks to this we have realized that although some of the soils are not as poor as we thought, there are some elements in it that show deficiencies. Then, as an alternative we have been attempting at working with the young people to process organic fertilizers that, apart from providing youngsters with a source of employment, help reduce the problem for the producers of organic coffee.

Conventional producers will have to move to organic gradually because the cost of chemical fertilizers is higher and higher. This increase in the price of chemicals is going to benefit us because there will be more and more organic producers.

cupping lab at SOPPEXCCAJL: How many sacks of export-ready green coffee do the farmers produce per hectare?

FE: Our farmers produce about six sacks of green coffee (100 pounds per sack) per hectare.

JL: In your opinion, how much coffee does a family need to produce to cover living expenses?

FE: An average family should produce approximately 30 sacks of green coffee for export. But in order to survive, this production must be accompanied by the production of basic grains, fruits and some vegetables, along with other cash crops.

The aim is to diversify the products that fit into the agro-ecological system of coffee. This will prevent over dependence on coffee because if the price falls, families are helpless. If the harvest is bad, families are helpless. In our case, we have been encouraging cultivation of cocoa alongside coffee. The cocoa has a good price and it’s a more efficient use of the soil.

country road in NicaraguaJL: In your experience, how much money is necessary to cover a family’s needs?

FE: For a normal family, without wasting anything, a family could spend about $30 a day. And the average income in Nicaragua is $2 per day.

JL: What happens during the ‘silent months’ when there is no coffee production?

FE: Coffee has very little silence. Most of the energy is put in November through February, which is harvest time. But after that there is the pruning, fertilization and coffee maintenance.

JL: It seems obvious that families do not earn enough to cover their expenses. What are they doing to cover that missing part?

FE: Well, this means they’re eating badly. It’s an issue of malnutrition. And what are we doing about this? We are trying to find alternatives for the people so they can diversify their diets starting with backyard production of fruits and vegetables.

JL: What kind of projects are you promoting?

FE: There are some who have already diversified their production. Some produce coffee and cocoa, others have coffee and sheep and some others are managing coffee and cattle. There is a group of poor women that have little land and we’ve provided them with training to produce jam for local sale and consumption.

Learn more about SOPPEXCCA's efforts here or check out our Flickr page to see photos from Coffee Kids' latest visit!

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Comment by Coffee Kids on May 21, 2009 at 12:21pm
They do great work down there and the cooperative's dedication to getting certifications and helping their farmers create alternatives has really pushed them forward.
Comment by Demian Luper on May 18, 2009 at 2:41pm
SOPPEXCCA also gained their Fair Trade Certified status in 1998.

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