Brazil’s Coffee Growers Want More Federal Help

Coffee prices improved 21.41% this year in relation to 2004, but it was still not enough to compensate for the losses suffered with last year’s Brazilian crop, according to the president of Brazil’s Comissão Nacional do Café (National Coffee Commission), João Roberto Puliti.

In an interview, Monday, September 19, at the CNA (Confederação Nacional de Agricultura – National Confederation of Agriculture), Puliti requested government support for the sector.

He claims that "a portion of the producers are facing problems extending their loan repayment periods, and they need to have stable sources of funds" (more credit), since "they operate with a crop that requires heavy investments in relation to profits and is not easily kept in storage."

Puliti said that the growers are waiting for the National Monetary Council to announce measures on behalf of the sector, "not just in terms of the availability of credit but the prolongment of producers’ debt repayment periods as well."

On October 5 the coffee growers have a meeting scheduled with the Ministry of Agriculture to discuss measures of support. Puliti stressed that the producers do not desire any significant expansion in the area under cultivation, but, beginning this year, there should be an improvement in the quality of the coffee that is produced.

"They are afraid that excess production will lead to lower prices, which would be inopportune at a moment when the sector is starting to recover," he reiterated.

In August, 2004, Brazilian growers received US$ 86.87 (198.98 reais) per 60-kilogram sack of coffee. In August of this year, the average price was US$ 110.80 (253.78 reais).

World coffee production runs around 120 million sacks, annually. The international market currently has 20 million sacks in stockpiles. According to information from the CNA, Brazil hopes to produce 50 million sacks next year.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

By Brazzil Magazine PLAYS RIO Os Ratos do Ano 2030 (The Mice from the ...

Airport Chaos in Brazil: Plane Crews and Counter Workers Abandon Posts

Despite the help of the Brazilian Air Force, which is leasing eight of its ...

Public Works and Poor Aid Return Lula to First in Line for Presidency

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s popularity has bounced back from a corruption ...

The inside of an Embraer 170 built in Brazil

Brazil Sells Jet to Lybia. It Might Be First of a Fleet

The Embraer 170 jet airplane purchased by Libyan oil company Syrte Oil should arrive ...

Brazil and G4 Accused at UN of Selfishness Disguised as Altruism

The United Nations General Assembly today debated a set of competing proposals for reforming ...

Chavez Accuses US of Barring Him from Buying Brazilian Planes

President Hugo Chavez said Tuesday that Venezuela would consider buying Russian-built MiG warplanes if ...

Housing and Sanitation, Pressing Problems for Brazil

By 2020 the member countries of the United Nations (UN) should halve the number ...

No Pork and Daily Prayers. Brazilians Get Their First Muslim Soccer Team

In soccer country Brazil, religion usually stays off the playing field. The teams, their ...

Arabian horses in Brazil

Brazil Puts On a Show on Arabian Horses

The city of Sorocaba, in the interior of the state of São Paulo, in ...

Today’s Election in Brazil May Put Two Women in Competition for Presidency

In Brazil, where voting is mandatory, close to 130 million Brazilians are going this ...