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Brazil

Consistency, volume, and affordability made the country’s reputation. But Brazil can also produce quality at scale, backed by some of the strongest environmental and labour laws among producing countries.

Brazil is a much-loved origin at Algrano. The founders spent a year in Brazil when the marketplace was first developed, with direct feedback from coffee farmers. Brazilian producers were also the first to believe in the project, excited to find a new way to access the international market. They are forward-thinking, entrepreneurial growers and cooperatives that make great direct trade partners for coffee roasters.

Verified Sellers from

Brazil

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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Fazenda Três Meninas

Single Farm
UTZ Certified, Rainforest Alliance

We are the third generation in coffee cultivation. Me, my wife and two other employees run the farm whose name is in honor of the 3 women in the family. We combine science and innovation in the production of differentiated coffees with the local university, irrigation with water savings, synchronization of flowering, preventive management, green and biological manure, organic fertilizers, yeasts, bacteria, fungi and insects, half of the area without herbicide, with projection for 100% of the area. We have suspended terraces and our own post-harvest structure. Controlled fermentations result in differentiated and unique microlots. We are UTZ and Rainforest certified. The Baggage River and its springs run inside the farm and are preserved. We cultivate the coffee of fair human relations and environmental balance. We are in a terroir at an altitude of 1050 meters. We grow the Topaz/Arabica variety. Drying in the sun and without pulping to maintain the maximum sensory attributes of the grain.

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Sítio Bela Vista

Single Farm
FairTrade

We were born and raised on this property, where it became special to us. The property was inherited from our grandparents. There was no coffee plantation, we started little by little, in 1994 we planted our first crop only 1ha (by coincidence or not, we have other crops, however, none can beat the quality of this first crop planted). My father and my brothers that we do all the labor on the farm, which makes it Family. We are participating in the contests every year, always seeking to improve the quality of our product even more every year.

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Fazenda Grato

Single Farm

We produce our coffee in the region of Matas de Minas, specifically in the town of Manhuaçu, in Minas Gerais. This is a very hilly region and coffee is harvested mainly through manual processes. We produce our coffee in four different areas, located very close to each other. The average altitude in our farm is about 970m and reaches up to 1050m in some areas. The predominant variety is Catuaí. In a direct translation, our name FAZENDA GRATO means Farm Grateful. This was the way we found to make it explicit how thankful we are for what our father (in memory) and our mother have built together from scratch over 40 years under very challenging circumstances. In Portuguese, the word GRATO is the combination of the initial letters of their names (GRAça and TOninho). We produce our coffee with care, oriented by values such as respect and integrity, sustainability, commitment and recognition. We are young producers, committed to continuous improvement and a constant evolution of our processes and methods, in order to produce high-quality coffee with quality control. We look forward to mutually beneficial, long-term relationships.

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COOPERATIVA DOS AGRICULTORES FAMILIARES DA AMAZÔNIA

Cooperative, Mill, Exporter
FairTrade

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CAFESUL- Cooperativa dos Cafeicultores do Sul do Estado do Espírito Santo

Cooperative
FairTrade, Produto Orgânico Brasil, Produto Orgânico Brasil, Organic

Cafesul – Cooperative of Coffee Growers of the South of the State of Espírito Santo - BRAZIL, was founded in 1998 and is located in Muqui, in the southern region of the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil. It currently has 178 members, most of whom are family farmers. In 2008, Cafesul obtained the International Fairtrade certification for Fair Trade. With the Fairtrade award, it executes environmental projects and we can mention the "Cafesul Spring Recovery and Soil Recovery Project" where 40 springs were fenced, 420 dry boxes were built and 10 km of roads were recovered on the properties, making it possible to retain up to 9 million of water. It has held conilon coffee quality contests since 2010 and since 2015 it has promoted the Cafesul Women's Quality Contest. One of Cafesul's cooperative members was awarded in 2018, 2019 and 2021 at the Belo Horizonte-Brazil International Coffee Week as the Best Conilon Coffee (Robusta) in Brazil in the Coffee of the Year Contest. We were also awarded as the best Faitrade Robusta coffee in Brazil in the Golden Cup contest. We currently have a group of producers in an organic certification project in the process of transition.

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Coocaminas (Milena)

Cooperative
FairTrade

In 2006 a small group of coffee producers from Poço Fundo (Sul de Minas - Brazil) founded the “Cooperativa dos Pequenos Cafeicultores de Poço Fundo” – Coocaminas - with the aim of valuing family agriculture through the Fairtrade certification. Poço Fundo is surrounded by coffee lands. The urban area is very small. In 2007 the co-op became Fairtrade certified and since 2020 has joined FTUSA as well. With the certification, members have the opportunity to make a living from their passion: coffee. It also provide a better future for their families and it ensures social, environmental and economic impact, therefore, human impact. In 2018 two of our members won the second and third place on the 4º Fairtrade Quality Competition of Brazil. Coocaminas is compound by a passionate and small team it has quality, trade, and technical support departments and is also set to carry out the entire process of exportation.

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COORPOL - COOPERATIVA REGIONAL INDUSTRIA E COMERCIO DE PRODUTOS AGRICOLAS DO POVO QUE LUTA -

Cooperative
FairTrade, FairTrade, Organic

We are a Cooperative that operates in the Matas de Minas Region, in the East of the State of Minas Gerais, in the district of Sacramento in the City of Manhuaçu-MG. Our production is entirely done by hand and our harvest is all manual.

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TRUST COFFEES BRAZIL

Exporter
Organic, US Organic, Organic Demeter

RESPECT and TRUST above all. Our mission is to integrate the coffee production chain, from the producer to the roaster, ensuring excellence in our services, always with the utmost respect and trust. TRANSPARENCY makes the difference. We believe in valuing producers, coffee traceability and long-term relationships. Our partners have access to every detail of every coffee and every trade. QUALITY in evidence. We are always looking for the best coffees produced in Brazil! We have a rigorous selection and quality process to ensure that the roaster receives exactly the coffee they are looking for!

Country overview

Brazilians often refer to their country as terrinha. It is a term of endearment that means “little land” - and the irony isn’t lost on us. With its continental dimensions and states bigger than many European countries, Brazil has been the world’s largest coffee producer and exporter for over 150 years.

The country produces more than 50% of the world’s coffee. This is due to more than good weather and gentle slopes for mechanised harvesting. There is
also extensive research in production, a set of government policies to support farmers, and a
precise approach to irrigation and fertilising. 

Algrano is very important to us. It’s a window to access the market and specialty coffee buyers. With the possibilities Algrano brings to us, a connection to specialty coffee roasters that are compatible with our business model, we can constantly adapt, provide value and create solutions for the needs of roasters.

Fabrício Andrade | Sancoffee

History of coffee production

The success of today’s coffee sector in Brazil goes back to the 19th century. Coffee became the country’s main export in 1830. Back then, São Paulo was the biggest producing country, driving a wave of modernisation and economic investment, turning the coffee barons of old into influential political figures.

This stage of Brazilian coffee history, known as the “coffee cycle”, popularised the still pervasive stereotype of large coffee estates run by wealthy farmers. This was true at the time and so was the fact that Brazil’s coffee production expanded on the back of slavery, abolished only in 1888. 

But things look rather different now. Today, around 300 thousand homes grow coffee in 15 states in Brazil, and most run small family farms. There is no definition for how many hectares a farm should have to be considered small. Properties below 25 hectares are assumed to be in that category.

This partnership started in 2016 and has been growing since. Some clients started buying 30 bags and today buy more than 600. It’s a work of trust and credibility. We have blind trust in every client who comes to us through Algrano because we trust their work. There’s nothing better than talking to your clients, exchanging ideas, and building relationships. They become our friends. It’s not just trading.

Maurício Hervaz | APAS Coffee

Legislation

Brazil also has strong environmental and labour legislations for coffee production, with hefty fines for those who don’t comply. These include the protection of forests and water sources, adequate housing conditions and protection equipment for workers, the prevention of slave-like and child labour, etc.

On top of compliance with local legislation, Algrano requires that Verified Sellers sign a Code of Conduct regarding their practices. Large estates and cooperatives are also requested to have one or more certifications. 

Quality and harvest

Today, more than 50% of Brazil’s coffee is produced in Minas Gerais, followed by Espírito Santo (the largest Capenhora producer in the country). Around 80% of the coffee is Arabica of the Mundo Novo and Catuaí varieties. But a wide range of varieties is found throughout the country, from traditional Bourbons, Icatus, and Acaiás to the newer Obatãs, Topázios and Paraísos. 

The coffee harvest runs from April to October, peaking from late May to July. The process is largely mechanised but manual picking also exists in mountainous areas, such as Matas de Minas and the south of Espírito Santo. The traditional processing methods are Natural and Pulped Natural, though Brazilian producers are experimenting with multiple fermentations and creating their own recipes. 

Brazilian producers include some of Algrano’s oldest partners. Today, more than 20 farmers and cooperatives in Brazil actively sell coffee in the marketplace. They are small and medium coops offering regional blends or farm lots, and innovative estates led by a new generation of quality-focused producers.

Found a coffee you love?

Know the producer already? Algrano makes direct trade simple.

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