Iyula AMCOS Celebrates Success of CODE-P Project in its First Year

Iyula AMCOS Celebrates Success of CODE-P Project in its First Year

DATE: SEPTEMBER 23, 2021

A farmer holds a handful of processed coffee beans in Southern Highlands, Tanzania

Vi Agroforestry Tanzania successfully marked the completion of the first year in the Coffee Development Project (CODE-P) in the Southern Highlands. The project continues to contribute inclusive and sustainable development of the coffee value chain to better the income of smallholder farmers in the region. Since its launch, the project has enrolled over ten thousand coffee farmers in 39 Agricultural and Marketing Co-operative Societies (AMCOS) ahead of its 4-year plan to reach 24,000 smallholder farmers. Farmers in the region have benefitted from this project through Sustainable Agricultural Land Management (SALM) practices. By applying these modern farming practices, they have seen an increase in coffee yields, income, and improved livelihoods all while conserving the environment.

The Vi Agroforestry Tanzania team met with Iyula AMCOS to witness the implementation of CODE-P in person.This visit came during the blooming coffee flowering season.

Samora Mnyaonga (right), a Café Africa CODE-P project coordinator with William Mswima (left), Iyula AMCOS chairperson in front of flowering Arabica bushes.

The team met with Raphael Mswima, a 35-year-old smallholder coffee farmer and member of Iyula AMCOS. Raphael is a member of Iyula AMCOS since 2018, married and blessed with 4 children. In 2008, Raphael planted 1000 coffee trees which currently produce around 1 kg of coffee beans per tree in a year, double the average yield in his region but still nearly half the average yield in other regions of Tanzania. Low coffee yield in the Southern Highlands is highly factored by the old trees and poor farming practices despite a favourable environment and climate. AMCOS’s support farmers like Raphael by providing agricultural inputs and training them on sustainable agricultural practices for pest & disease control to maintain quality of coffee yield. Iyula AMCOS has so far succeeded in the rehabilitation of their Coffee Processing Unit (CPU) to process and store coffee beans before selling to Coffee Tanzania Limited. The CODE-P project resource intervention has already seen an increase in yield quality from the July and August harvest season.

A lorry takes harvested and processed beans to be milled and packaged for export.

The future of coffee farming in Tanzania faces a huge challenge due to lack of youth engagement in these practices. This is reflected in the currently high average age for smallholder farmers raising food security concerns for the future. However, CODE-P is working to engage the youth in the coffee value chain and has successfully reached 4,655 in total including 1,863 young women. “We need to educate youth on sustainable practices to understand that coffee farming can be profitable” said Raphael. He continues, “you can make money out of it and have a good livelihood” urging the youth to partake in the CODE-P project.

The CODE-P project team looks forward to the next 3 years partnering with AMCOS’s to improve coffee yields and better livelihoods in the region. “In the next 3 years we will continue distributing improved coffee seedlings and training farmers on Sustainable Agricultural Land Management Practices,” said Kent Larsson, Tanzania Country Manager. He adds, “We will also focus on mobilising the youth to join our project with emphasis on food security and a better livelihood.”

Improved coffee seedlings ready for distribution and planting

CODE-P is a project under the AGRI-CONNECT programme funded by the European Union and the Government of Sweden.

Declaimer:
“This publication was produced with the financial support of the European Union. Its contents are the sole responsibility of Vi Agroforestry and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union”

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