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Cote d'Ivoire Coffee Estate Flavor Description Processing Characteristics Variety Taste Introduction

Published: 2025-08-21 Author: World Gafei
Last Updated: 2025/08/21, In October and November 2010, the branch held two rounds of presidential elections, the opposition Republican Alliance candidate Ouattara, the Popular Front party candidate, outgoing President Gbagbo into the second round. In early December, the Independent Electoral Commission of Côte d'Ivoire declared Ouattara elected, while the Constitutional Council declared Gbagbo re-elected. The two men were subsequently sworn in and formed their respective governments.

Description and introduction of Flavor of Fine Coffee beans

In October and November 2010, Kuwait held two rounds of presidential elections, with opposition "Republican Alliance" candidate Alassane Ouattara and outgoing President Laurent Gbagbo entering the second round. In early December, the Independent Electoral Commission announced that Ouattara was elected, while the Constitutional Council announced that Gbagbo had been re-elected, and the two men were then sworn in and formed their respective governments, resulting in a post-election crisis of "one country, two masters". The confrontation between the two sides eventually escalated into a nationwide armed conflict.

In the 11th century, when Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011 and the post-election crisis ended, the Miyagi city established by the Senuf people in the north was one of the north-south trade centers in West Africa at that time.

European ships arrived in C ô te d'Ivoire around the 1460s, but little is known about the history of C ô te d'Ivoire before this era. The main Ivorian communities migrated relatively late: the Kru migrated from Liberia around 1600, while the Senouf and Lobi moved south from Burkina Faso and Mali.

It was not until the 18th and 19th centuries that the Akan and Baoulou é, one of the Akan ethnic groups, moved from Ghana to the eastern part of C ô te d'Ivoire, while the Malink é moved from Guinea to the northwest of C ô te d'Ivoire.

C ô te d'Ivoire te d'lvoire has never produced the best quality coffee, and it rarely comes from Arabian coffee trees. In the early 1980s, it was the world's third-largest coffee producer, with an annual output of 5 million bags. Even today, it is still the fifth largest coffee producer in the world, with an annual output of 4.4 million bags. In terms of coffee production, C ô te d'Ivoire is second only to Indonesia (6.8 million bags per year).

In the 1980s Ivorian coffee produced only 250 kilograms per hectare. This is partly due to poverty, but also to the aging of coffee trees. Lack of investment and lack of long-term business plans have also affected coffee production.

The Government of C ô te d'Ivoire has begun to take positive measures to reverse the situation. The National Coffee Management Committee has been reorganized and streamlined, and some production activities have been transferred to private companies for management. The government provides a minimum price guarantee to farmers who produce high-quality coffee and encourages exporters to buy directly from farmers. Today, 80% of exported coffee has found a market in European Community countries, with the main buyers being France and Italy.

It is worth noting that C ô te d'Ivoire is the main centre of coffee smuggling, with as many as 2600 tons of coffee smuggled between 1993 and 1994, mainly through the neighbouring countries of Mali (Mali) and Guinea (Guinea).

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