Coffee review

Introduction to the Origin of Ugandan Coffee Flavor and Taste

Published: 2024-09-20 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2024/09/20, The equator crosses Uganda and the suitable climate makes it the main producer of robusta coffee beans in the world. In the 1960s, Ugandan coffee production remained at 3.5 million bags a year. By the mid-1980s, coffee production had dropped to 250 bags a year, mainly for political reasons. But now coffee production is on the rise again, currently about 3 million bags a year. What the coffee industry is facing

The equator crosses Uganda, and the right climate makes it the world's leading producer of Robusta coffee beans. In the 1960s Uganda's coffee production remained at 3.5 million bags per year. By the mid-1980s, mainly for political reasons, coffee production had dropped to 250 bags a year. But coffee production is picking up again and is now about 3 million bags a year. One of the major problems facing the coffee industry is the lack of good roads to transport coffee to ports such as Mombasa in Kenya or Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.

In order to improve coffee quality and reduce costs, Uganda abolished the exclusive rights of the Coffee Marketing Board (CMB) in November 1990. Most of the work previously undertaken by the Coffee Marketing Committee has now been transferred to cooperative organizations. Privatized coffee generates two-thirds of the country's export revenue, so the government imposed a tax on coffee in the hope of raising much-needed revenue. This has led to a 20% drop in coffee exports and an increase in coffee smuggling.

Like Tanzania, where rising coffee prices in recent years have encouraged farmers to return to plantations and reclaim once-abandoned land for coffee, Uganda's coffee industry looks promising. Uganda's coffee beans have a unique flavor and aroma, which is very suitable for making Italian and other flavors of coffee. More importantly, Uganda's coffee beans are strictly screened according to international market standards to ensure their high quality and pollution-free characteristics.

In Uganda, Arabica coffee beans account for only 10% of the country's coffee production, but it is enough to attract attention. Uganda's best coffee is grown mainly in the Elgon and Bugisu mountains along the Kenyan border in the north and in the Ruwensori mountains in the west, where coffee is available for export in January or February of each year

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