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Not Your Average Cup of “Joe”
Kigali, Rwanda│September 2007
The Rwandan Golden Cup - the country's most esteemed prize for its best coffees - was awarded at the end of August and the winning coffees were auctioned to international buyers for record prices. With support from USAID/Rwanda, the competition was designed to improve the lives of farmers, spur economic growth, and place Rwandan coffee on the international map.
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Throughout the month of August, Rwandan farmers vied for the award. Winning coffees were cupped (tasted) at least five separate times during the rigorous competition and judged by national and international juries. Only the country's 20 best coffees were selected on August 31, 2007, but the country garnered recognition for its burgeoning industry.
The highest honor went to a coffee from the SDL Muyongwe washing station in Gakenke District (in northwest Rwanda) and was sold for over US$55 per kilogram to American companies Intelligentsia Coffee and Stumptown Coffee.
The Golden Cup is a precursor to the internationally renowned Cup of Excellence. This prestigious honor for the world's finest coffees will be awarded in Rwanda in 2008, the first time the presentation will be held in Africa.
The Cup of Excellence marks another milestone for Rwandan coffee. In 2000, the country did not export any specialty coffee. But, thanks in large part to USAID funded programs, 3,000 metric tons of specialty coffee were produced in 2006. Export revenue from this sub-sector grew from zero dollars in 2002 to $8.5 million last year. Coffee is the country's largest export earner and specialty coffee contributes to the industry's growth and sustainability.
Rwandan coffee has been featured as a "Black Apron Exclusive" by Starbucks and praised as the "best of the best" by Green Mountain Coffee.
USAID/Rwanda previously provided $10 million over six years to help develop this specialty agribusiness. More recently, USAID renewed its commitment to the industry's growth by funding Sustaining Partnerships to enhance Rural Enterprise and Agribusiness Development (SPREAD), a five-year, $6 million project dedicated to improving value chain management. SPREAD works to better the industry's links "from the seed to the cup."
One of SPREAD's objectives is to map the coffees of Rwanda. Similar to the geography of wines in France, SPREAD will identify the regional taste characteristics of coffees. This will allow consumers and buyers to select coffees from specific areas of Rwanda and know exactly what to expect.
Through financial and technical assistance, USAID programs have helped establish farmer cooperatives and improved the lives of their members, built coffee washing stations, trained world class cuppers (professional coffee tasters), and marketed Rwanda's premium coffees in the global market.
The Golden Cup was planned in collaboration with OCIR Café, the country's national coffee board. The competition encouraged the production of the highest quality coffee and directly linked Rwandan farmers to coffee connoisseurs worldwide.
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Wed, 30 Apr 2008 12:13:20 -0500
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