By AUGUSTINE DOMINIC of CIC
Coffee marketing in a group will generate high volume
of coffee and raise more revenue for smallholder farmers.
Hence, the Coffee Industry Corporation, which is
tasked to regulate and promote Papua
New Guinea coffee, is encouraging and
promoting group marketing through cooperative societies registered with the
Department of Commerce and Industry or with the Investment Promotion Authority.
An example of a success story of a cooperative society
is the Rikarika Co-operative Society from the Eastern Highlands
province.
Rikarika Cooperative
Society members disembark from their vehicle to gather at the roadside for a
meeting
The society is based in Habaru village along the
Okapa road about 1,500 metres above sea level along the boarders of Okapa,
Henganofi and Lufa districts, just beneath Mt Kuru.
Politically, they are in the Henganofi district
but with their geographical location, it’s confusing to government officers
from the three districts to provide basic government services to them.
As expressed by the people, “government services
from either one of the three districts does not reach us, maybe due to the
confusion created by our central location that one think another district is
serving us”.
Nevertheless, they are privileged to live along
the recently-upgraded Okapa to Goroka road and have easy access to Goroka town
and the services provided there.
One thing they profess about and continue to
treasure is the unique coffee grown in their area, where the climate of the
lower Lufa and Henganofi plains meets the high altitudes of Mt Kuru.
Members of Rikarika
Cooperative Society purchasing coffee parchment at their roadside base
in Habaru village
The award was a big morale booster and the
society continued struggling to uphold the quality values in processing coffee.
Its commitment payed off with another
achievement when the CIC board approved its application and awarded it the
permit to erect a dry coffee factory early this year.
This decision by the CIC board was a first of
its kind for coffee cooperative societies in PNG.
CIC’s manager for industry regulation and compliance,
Sam Menaga, said the society deserved the award as it was very active in
strengthening itself for many years and had gained recognition in producing
quality coffee.
During a recent visit by CIC officers and Monpi
Coffee Ltd to the area, society chairman James Iswalito and his deputy Simon
Fikime, expressed great satisfaction in the society’s progress so far and vowed
to continue to see tangible development brought in to their area through coffee.
“We have allocated land and money for erecting
the dry coffee factory and hope to get it up soon,” Iswalito said.
He also declared his group’s
intention to supply Monpi Coffee with quality coffee produced by his group.
The group initially started with 25 members in
2000 and has grown to over 100 registered members, mostly smallholder coffee
growers owning coffee gardens ranging from one to five hectares and totalling
about 160 hectares.
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