Lampung suffers 50 per cent fall in coffee production

Lampung’s coffee production fell 50 per cent this year on extreme weather.

This year productivity averages only 700 kilogram to 1 million tonnes per hectare down from as high as 2 million tonnes last year, the Lampung branch of the Indonesian Association of Coffee Exporters (AEKI) said.

“The farmers are the hardest hit,” a chairman of the Lampung branch of the AEKI Muchtar Lutfie said here on Thursday.

Muchtar said the crop was damaged and the fruits decayed because of too much rain.

Currently is harvest time in all production centers in Lampung such as in the regencies of Lampung Barat, Tanggamus, and Waykanan, but production is only 50 per cent of normal production in harvest time, he said.

He said exports of coffee beans from Lampung have declined in the past two months as farmers stocks are shrinking.

In addition, some exporters chose to keep their stock hoping that the price would increase, he said.

He said exporters and farmers are expected to release their stocks ahead of the Islamic holy day Idul Fitri.

He said he hoped the farmers continue to tend their coffee crop using proper fertilizer to increase production in the future.

Coffee exported from Lampung include coffee from Jambi, Bengkulu and South Sumatra.

He said the availability of fertiliser is often a problem for farmers in Lampung.

“Currently the prices of fertilisers are too expensive,” he said, adding the farmers need subsidised fertilisers.

Did you find this article useful? Join the EB Circle!

Your support helps keep our journalism independent and our content free for everyone to read. Join our community here.

Most popular

Featured Events

Publish your event
leaf background pattern

Transforming Innovation for Sustainability Join the Ecosystem →