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Colombia

You can get fresh coffee from Colombia all year round: from clean, consistent Washed lots to some of the wildest coffee experiments in the market.

Strong institutions set production and quality standards in Colombia long before the specialty movement was born. Their Washed coffees are clean and consistent with a good shelf-life. But younger Colombian farmers are reinventing coffee processing and pushing fermentation boundaries. The producers on Algrano represent both worlds and multiple regions so you can find the right coffee and partner.

Verified Sellers from

Colombia

Discover the right supplier for your roastery, from innovative farmers and independent exporters to certified cooperatives. Volume lots, micro-lots, blends or single varieties... You'll find what you're looking for.

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CLEARPATH COFFEE (SUNTERRA S.A.S.)

Group of Farms, Association, Commercial Representative, Exporter

El Puente is a social impact project that started on 2018 with the idea of solving 3 main problems small producers face when processing coffee for the specialty coffee industry: Lack of post harvesting infrastructure: Its common for small producers with farms between 1 to 5 hectares to have problems with their processing capacity during the harvest season. They do not have enough drying and storage space to handle all of their production. This leads to cup defects such as mold and phenols. It also leads the producer to sell his coffee without finishing drying for what they receive a discount in price that can go up to 50%. Lack of financial resources: Harvest season is a cash demanding time; producers need to pay pickers which is the most expensive labor in coffee farming. They also need to wait 25 to 30 days for the coffee to be dry in order to be able to sell it at a good price. This leads to the need of finding loans that add to the cost or again the need to sell the coffee wet losing some of its value. The risk of trying new processing methods that are popular with specialty coffee clients. Extended fermentations, naturals, honeys, etc are new practices that became popular in the last few years, but they are not what producers in Colombia are used to. We have a strong tradition of washed process with more than 100 years of history. Learning to make this fermentations and different processes involves a risk of damaging a few batches, something that small producers can’t afford. Selling these coffees also requires more time and the right market access. El Puente solves these problems by buying freshly harvested cherries from the allied producers, paying against delivery a price equivalent of that of dry coffee, taking the risk of processing and the task of selling those coffees to the right clients. Kind of coffees produced and sold: Natural process. Honey processed. Washed coffees*. El Puente doesn’t process big volumes of washed coffees because it doesn’t have the right water treatment plant to clean the water needed for this king of process. But it does offer market access for coffee processed by allied producers. This allows producers to have the option of selling the coffee that do process at their farms and get a good price for it. Social and environmental impact: Producers get paid against delivery of the cherries and equivalent of the days market price for dry coffee. This saves them, all the time and resources they otherwise would use to depulp, ferment, wash and dry that coffee. We estimate and average of 12% margin on the sale of the cherry VS doing all the processing and selling to local market at the days price. Producers have more time and cashflow to focus on the harvesting and processing of the coffee they do have the infrastructure and capacity to do at their farms. In this way they have a better chance of achieving high quality coffees. El Puente offers market access for the high-quality coffee’s producers process at their farms. By focusing on natural and honey processes El Puente uses 80% less water than it would be used to process these coffees by the traditional washed method. (For 1 kg of a traditionally washed process coffee 10Lts of water are used).

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Café de la torre AUS ( FELIX ALBERTO TORRES MORANTES)

Fazenda única
4C, UTZ Certified, Rainforest Alliance

We are coffee producers and exporters. We started the business to help get better prices for our father's coffee. He owns a 10 hectares farm called Finca Hoyo Frío in Curiti, Santander. Having found a good market for his coffees, we now support other producers in Santander and in other areas of the country to sell their beans abroad. All coffees are fully traceable, and priced by the farmers, who own the coffees until they are sold to roasters.

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MUSKOX HOLDING COMPANY

Granja individual
FairTrade, UTZ Certified, Organic, Rainforest Alliance

This batch of Natural Coffee comes from the municipality of Pueblo Bello in the department of Cesar, located in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. Finca LA VICTORIA was founded by Mr. NICANOR 38 years ago with his wife and 14 children, Hoy; After 3 generations this Farm is in charge of Mr. Gustavo Vargas, where each year his goal is to collect the best coffee harvest, they work hard to pass on their knowledge to future generations, to the farmers and neighbors who carry out the harvesting work, trying to choose the best cherries to have a special coffee, managing to perfect the harvesting techniques, preventing the coffee tree from suffering when obtaining the fruit.

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Forestal - Grupo café

Granja individual
Bird Friendly, Organic

Forestal is a group of 4 farms (San Sebastián, Los Pinos, Santa María and La Esmeralda) and a roasting business owned by Francisco Serrano in Santander, a Northern department of Colombia in the Andes mountains. Our organic farms are inspired by coffee’s original ecosystem with dense tree coverage and preservation of biodiversity. We preserve natural woodland areas to protect wildlife, acting as a home to hundreds of endemic and migratory birds of the region. All of our coffees are manually picked by capable workers in a way that ensures they have constant employment throughout the whole season. We also enrol our permanent members of staff in a membership scheme, paying them bonuses every end of the year, and support smaller producers from our region on achieving sustainable development. We grow, roast and brew many different varietals of coffee, from the traditional Castillo to Pink Bourbon and La Esmeralda is a dedicated Gesha farm. Message us here and speak to me, Joel, the manager!

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Cooperativa De Cafetaleros Del Norte Del Valle CAFENORTE

Cooperativa, Moinho, Exportador
FairTrade, Rainforest Alliance

CAFENORTE is a cooperative with around 1.600 associated Coffee families in 12 municipalities of the Norte del Valle del Cauca, it has been more than 50 years as a leader in the production and marketing of Coffee in the northern region of the department. Our main purpose is to assure the wellness of the associated Coffee families, for that reason the cooperative has created services, programs and has obtained different certificates to contribute to their quality of life. At the same time we offer to our clients traceability throughout the value chain and a life experience directly with the coffee growers, due to CAFENORTE has supervised and controlled the entire chain process since the farm until the milling or roasting.

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La Casiana

Granja individual
Rainforest Alliance

Located at 1800 meters above sea level on the western range of the Andes in the municipality of Jardín, Antioquia, La Casiana has been home to three generations dedicated to harvesting the best Colombian coffees. Soft, washed coffees. That’s what we are known for. We produce Castillo, Colombia and Cenicafé 1 varieties. Our coffee is known for its medium, brilliant acidity; round, balanced body; aromas and fragrances take the form of dark chocolate, caramel and molasses; aftertaste is sweet and floral. Three generations of coffee growers. All convinced that we must hand over a land better than that which we received. That’s where our commitment to sustainability resides. For over more than ten years, La Casiana has been part of a group of farms that comply with the Rainforest standard. At La Casiana, we are able to bring to market some 10,000 kgs of green coffee per year. Though we harvest year-round, our main harvest takes place mostly around October, November

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Asociacion De Productores Agropecuarios De La Union Nariño (ASPROUNIÓN)

Cooperativa
FairTrade

Where are we? ASPROUNIÓN has its factory and offices in the municipality of La Unión, with a coffee collection point in the municipal capital, its members reside in different municipalities in the north of the department of Nariño. What do we do? Each associated family produces high-quality coffee independently, but advised and accompanied by the guidelines of ASPROUNIÓN. The organization collects the coffee, processes it and markets it according to the profile of the cup and the need of each customer. How do we do it? All production, storage, threshing, roasting and logistics processes are carried out by highly trained personnel, including certified Q-grader tasters and master roasters, who apply strict protocols, thus guaranteeing traceability and its high-quality consistency in the cup. Www.asprounion.com.co

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La Marianela Estate

Single Farm

Each person that purchases this coffee is providing a helping hand to those with the lowest working opportunities of the “Popayán Plateau” this area is located between the volcanic mountains of Coconuncos and the Nevado del Huila. It has been showered for centuries with the ashes of these volcanoes, making its soil perfect for the growth of a unique single origin coffee with all the characteristics that make it a top quality Colombian speciality Coffee. La Marianela estate is located in this privileged zone, extending its lands and plantations through 150 Ha and between 1650 – 1800 m.a.s.l. creating a perfect environment for the production of a coffee, with all the characteristics that make it a top quality Colombian ground. As if this were not enough, “La Marianela” estate is covered with pure water springs and crossed by dazzling creeks. This has not only been beneficial for the crops, but it has also created ecological corridors that have allowed the growth.

Colombia produces coffee that tastes great and has sustainable credentials grown by producers with a long history in farming and heaps of experience. Today, 40% of the coffee the country exports is sold as specialty, and producers receive up to 96% of the FOB price. Taste profiles have always been varied but farmers are so innovative that the concept of regional flavours got old. Every cup is a surprise. 

Quality foundations      

Colombia is the world’s largest producer of Washed Arabica - and they do it well. Unable to compete in volume with Brazil, the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia (FNC) created a strategy around quality. They defined production and processing standards and rewarded coffee with good physical characteristics with better pricing. 

(Photo: Hacienda Cafetera La Pradera)

The standards set by the FNC spread because the organisation buy large volumes of coffee and offers a purchase guarantee. Their base price is defined by how much exportable green coffee they can get from 94 kg of parchment, known as the factor de rendimiento. If 94 kg of parchment yields more than 70 kg of Excelso, the farmer is paid above the base price. If it yields less, payment is below the base price.  

A leap from physical to sensory standards 

(Photo: Hacienda Cafetera La Pradera)

These physical quality standards have existed for a long time. For a specialty coffee buyer today, they might not seem all that relevant. But this is one of the reasons why Colombian coffee tastes so good today. Historically, their Washed lots are cleaner, lighter and more acidic than standard Brazilian or Peruvian coffees. 

This is also one of the reasons why Colombian producers experiment as much as they do. They already had a good understanding of fermentation for the Washed process. That was a solid foundation to explore other processing methods and differentiate. Especially as more producers started getting export licenses. 

Sustainable and always available

Colombia is also a popular origin because it has coffee available all year. Unlike most other countries, it has two dry and two wet seasons. This triggers two periods of flowering and, as a result, two harvests. Most of the country has a main harvest from March to June. That’s responsible for 60% of Colombia’s volume. The remaining 40% is produced from September to December. It’s called a fly crop or mitaca

Hacienda Casa Blanca

The country is also a big producer of certified coffee. Two-thirds of Colombia’s volume has at least one certification, such as 4C, Rainforest Alliance or Fairtrade. The Northern departments, like Santander and Magdalena, also produce a lot of organic shade-grown coffee. It’s a commercial differentiator from the Coffee Axis. And it makes sense because the area gets more sun exposure. 

Beyond its environmental credentials, Colombia protects farmers from shocks in the futures market. In 2020, the government and the FNC established a Coffee Price Stabilization Fund to guarantee a minimum floor rate should market prices drop below the cost of production.

The wild version of Panama

Hoyo Frío

Specialty coffee production changed a lot in Colombia in the last five years. Farmers taking baby steps in new processing methods now have super diverse coffees they export themselves. They also experiment with all sorts of varieties. Gesha lost its crown as the “golden seed” and made way for Tabi, Caturra Chiroso, Bourbon Aji, Bourbon Papayo, and others.

Among younger producers, co-fermented and infused coffees are all the rage. These are usually micro-lots. But more farmers are challenging themselves to produce large volumes of Naturals despite the weather, which can be too humid for long periods of sun-drying. The new generation wants to make a name for itself as Panama did - but they’re wilder. 

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Sourcing coffee beyond cooperatives in Colombia with La Casiana

Sourcing coffee beyond cooperatives in Colombia with La Casiana

July 12, 2022
Luiza Pereira Furquim

Transitioning from local sales to the international market can seem impossible to small and medium producers, yet they are the best partners for roasters of a similar size. Learn how farmer Esteban Uribe is driving change within his family to embrace the global arena.

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