Coffee review

The best coffee in Venezuela is made in Montibelo in San Cristobal in Tazira.

Published: 2024-09-17 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/17, The remaining 5.9 million kilograms of coffee in Venezuela last coffee year has not yet been found, and this year it will be difficult to find a market for another 7.9 million kilograms of coffee. As a result, more than 50, 000 small and medium-sized coffee farmers face the threat of bankruptcy. Experts from the Ministry of Agriculture are currently holding urgent consultations with coffee farmers on this issue. Ministry officials will study partial subsidies from the government and use this batch of coffee as a government-to-government project.

The remaining 5.9 million kilograms of coffee in Venezuela last coffee year has not yet been found, and this year it will be difficult to find a market for another 7.9 million kilograms of coffee. As a result, more than 50, 000 small and medium-sized coffee farmers face the threat of bankruptcy.

Experts from the Ministry of Agriculture are currently holding urgent consultations with coffee farmers on this issue. Ministry officials will study partial subsidies from the government to export the coffee to the international market as a government-to-government project. Optional countries include Russia, Iran, Cuba and Bulgaria.

At present, Venezuela produces about 57 million kilograms of coffee, of which 70% is consumed in the domestic market and the rest is exported to the international market.

The coffee industry in Venezuela has been shrinking in recent years. The government encourages coffee cultivation by introducing new varieties and providing loans to farmers. Venezuelan coffee production accounted for more than 7% of global coffee production in the 19th century, but since the discovery of oil in the early 20th century, the coffee industry has been in decline. At present, Venezuelan coffee production accounts for less than 1% of the world's coffee Coffee Venezuela.

The distinctive manor coffee comes from this oil-rich country.

Oil was once considered to be the main export of Venezuela. Although coffee trees were introduced from Martinique in 1730 and Venezuela, coffee production was almost abandoned at the height of the oil industry. Recently, coffee plantations have begun to recover, with the original planting of Tipica and bourbon coffee trees and new plantations laying the foundation for coffee exports. Currently, most Venezuelan coffee is exported to Russia and Colombia, where it is repackaged. Many small newly rebuilt plantations have also begun to export coffee on their own.

The coffee industry is not very prominent among the many industries in the country. The best coffee producing area in Venezuela is the southwestern state of Tachira. But the name Tazira has been indiscriminately used for coffee beans across the country

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