Coffee production in Burundi has been a roller coaster ride of wild ups and downs: coffee was a cash crop in the Belgian colony, with exports mostly going back to Europe or satisfying European coffee demand in other colonies. Under Belgian rule, Burundian farmers were each forced to grow a certain number of coffee trees—with little pay or recognition for their work, of course. After the country gained independence in the 1960s, the coffee sector (among others) was privatized, taking control away from the government except for research or price stabilization and intervention as necessary. Coffee farming fell into disrepute and disfavor; quality declined, and coffee plantations were uprooted or abandoned. After the 1990s, which saw civil war and the near-total collapse of the country’s economy, coffee slowly emerged as a possible means of rebuilding the agricultural sector and increasing foreign exchange. In the early 2000s, largely inspired by the success of neighboring Rwanda’s coffee-based reconstruction, Burundi’s coffee industry saw a surge in investment, and a somewhat healthy balance of both private and state-run coffee companies and enterprises created more opportunities. stability and helped Burundi establish itself as an emerging African coffee-growing country, despite its small size and turbulent history. Like Rwanda and, to a lesser extent, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi is struggling with the notorious “potato blight,” a microorganism that gives infected beans a taste and aroma similar to raw potatoes. parchment, green, or roasted coffee. Research efforts to completely eradicate the blight have shown promise, and we look forward to the day when potatoes are a distant memory. MICROLOTS
Like many of its African neighbors, Burundi produces microlots almost by default: Each farmer owns less than a hectare of land on average, and the cherries are shipped to centralized pulping and washing stations, called SOGESTALS (Sociéte de Gestion des Stations de Dépulpage Lavage), and it can take more than that to make a lot. This purchasing style makes it nearly impossible, if not impossible, to get single-producer, single-farm, or single-varietal lots; instead, coffees are usually sold under the name of the washhouse. (In Kayanza, there are 21 washhouses, including familiar names on Cafe Imports’s offers page: Gackowe, Butezi, Gatare, and Kiryama.) Depending on the management and leadership at the stations, whether privately or publicly run, attention to detail in processing makes a big difference, with the precise sorting, fermentation, and washing necessary to create quality and uniformity among the coffees. The typical processing method in Burundi is somewhat similar to that in Kenya, with about 12 hours of “dry fermentation” after depulping, followed by 12–14 hours of steeping in mountain water. The coffees are floated to sort by density, then steeped again for 12–18 hours before being dried on parchment in raised beds. Coffee varieties: Bourbon, Jackson, Mibrizi and SL Annual yield: 170,000 (170,000 Arabica) Harvest period: April–July (Main Crop)