Contrary to what is often assumed, Papua New Guinea's coffee industry is not based upon large, corporately-owned plantations, but on tens of thousands of small, village coffee gardens.
Typically, they range in size from 20 trees to 500 or 600.
These family-owned coffee gardens produce over 70% of the countries' annual exportable crop; a crop which has averaged one million bags, or 60,000 tonnes per year in recent times.
The balance of the crop is grown on commercial plantations which range from 20 to 100 hectares and more in size.
Of all the plantations registered with the Coffee Industry Corporation, all but half a dozen of the largest are owned by local, village-based business groups or individuals.
It is estimated that nearly 3 million people, or almost half of the nation's population, derive a benefit from the coffee industry.
The CIC, as the coffee industry facilitator, last year launched a strategic plan for the coffee industry that should move forward the industry with re-invigorated vision and mission to new heights.
“The plan supports the National Government’s Medium Term Development Plan and the National Agriculture Development Plan,” explained CIC chairman Pugama Kopi.
“The PNG Coffee Industry Strategic Plan 2008-2018 was developed through an exhaustive exercise in which sector-wide approach was taken to ensure that stakeholders contributed in the planning process.
“PNG is naturally blessed with a varying degree of culture.
“Fittingly, the new vision for the coffee industry is: ‘Enjoy PNG Coffee Rich in Aroma and Culture’.
“Coffee is an introduced cash crop but it has now become part of PNG culture with almost all social or economic activities in coffee-growing provinces associated with coffee.
“In addition, aroma of PNG coffee is rich that coffee connoisseurs world-wide prefer to get a taste of it.
“Coffee’s importance to the local industry cannot be over-emphasised as it generates K350 million annually and 60-70% of the income goes to 397,772 households that farm coffee as a cash crop.
“Unlike other cash crops that are farmed by multi-national companies where the earnings are retained by them, the PNG coffee industry, which is largely deregulated, enables cash income to go directly to farmers.”
The thrust of the plan promotes and supports the continuing development of a sustainable coffee industry in PNG which will:
a) Maximise financial returns to all coffee producers; and
b) Contribute to the government’s economic and social policy goals.
“The Coffee Industry Corporation envisions a strategic move for the coffee industry; therefore, it has taken the onus as the industry leader to realign its modus operandi,” Mr Kopi continued.
“The CIC, in the past, has made changes with minimum fuss and was done where it was needed.
“It has taken painful exercises in the past to streamline its operations to be cost-effective and efficient in providing services to its stakeholders.
“The CIC, with industry participation, has developed a ‘homegrown’ strategic plan.
“Once again, this process will allow for the stakeholders, including the CIC, to refocus in their endeavors to enhance coffee producers maximising their returns on investments in the industry.”
The strategic framework captures:
• Increased and consistent production of high quality coffee so that producers obtain premium prices;
• Increased awareness of PNG coffee locally and internationally; and
• Enhanced CIC institutional capacity and governance to ensure that there is efficiency and effectiveness in the operation of the organisation to better serve the stakeholders.
These are the main pillars of the plan that should move the industry forward in the next decade.”
Certainly, in the highlands provinces, commerce and development would never have reached today's levels without the annual flow of income from this crop, a flow which begins in April, peaks in July/August and then tapers off quickly, so that the highland towns are comparatively quiet again in the final months of the year.
The coffee crop is 'green gold' which enriches the country annually to the extent of three to four hundred million kina in overseas earnings.
It is PNG's most valuable agricultural export.
And it is an eternally renewable resource.
Back in the early 1950s an active policy of encouraging the establishment of village coffee gardens was initiated, particularly in the highlands where the environment is ideal for the growing of Arabica coffee.
Arabica has a finer flavour and commands a higher price than Robusta, grown in coastal regions, but lacks Robusta's tolerance of the many fungus diseases which prevail in the steamy climate of the coast.
Although small areas of coffee had been established in certain coastal areas before the Second World War, no-one was prepared for the enthusiasm with which the highlands population adopted this new and initially strange crop.
At first it was hard to explain the use to which the ripe, red coffee berries or 'cherries' as they are called, would be put, and many older people, conservative and suspicious of the new plant with its shiny, dark-green leaves, predicted that coffee would bring bad luck and even cause the death of their much-prized pigs!
But very soon large numbers of highlanders were enthusiastically involved in setting up coffee nurseries with seed supplied by government agricultural extension workers.
Everywhere, families and clan groups were clearing land for coffee.
From small beginnings in the early 1950s, by 1960 more than 4000 hectares of Arabica coffee has been established by villagers, mainly in the highlands near Kainantu, Goroka, Mount Hagen and in the Wahgi Valley, but also at Wau, and in the Huon Peninsula in the mountains behind Lae and Finschhafen.
By the early 1970s, the area planted by villagers had increased to an estimated 23,000 hectares producing some 25,000 tonnes of green bean (raw bean) for export each year.
During the 1960s the infrastructural base of today's industry was laid.
Early on, all the coffee produced in the highlands was flown to Madang for overseas shipment. Initially, two coffee mills in which the dried coffee was husked, graded and bagged, were established, one in Goroka and one in Mount Hagen.
First one, and then a second export company was established, both with the participation of the then largely expatriate-owned plantations and mills.
The Coffee Marketing Board (recently re-constituted as the Coffee Industry Corporation) was set up to legislate and develop policy and to administer the industry.
The number of mills set up to buy and process the fast-growing volume of coffee produced by the smallholders soon grew to 10.
By 1964, the Highlands Highway was sufficiently well-developed to make trucking a payable proposition and the use of the aeroplane as the principal means of transporting heavy freight in and out of the highlands was phased out.
At the same time the development of a spreading network of minor roads in the coffee-growing areas allowing easier access to the towns encouraged the industry to grow.
Many coffee growers used their new-found wealth to buy small trucks and began to engage in buying coffee from other farmers, selling it at a profit to the mills.
Later in the 1970s, soon after PNG. became an independent, self-governing nation, the disastrous frost in Brazil put large sections of that country's coffee industry out of business for several seasons.
Papua New Guinea's coffee growers experienced boom conditions for more than three years.
In the highlands many new ventures based on coffee or the income from coffee were funded by a suddenly-adventurous banking industry.
Almost to a man the 100 or so expatriate planters who had arrived in the 1950s, and who with the village growers had pioneered the industry in the highlands, sold out, accepting what were in most cases generous offers made by locally-formed companies and business groups.
At the same time a government-sponsored scheme for the establishment of scores of small 20 hectare coffee plantations, owned corporately by groups of village landowners, came into being.
In the 1980s almost all the middlemen involved in the coffee trade, the buyers who trade either from trucks or roadside depots were local businessmen.
Expatriates still provided management for the export companies and some of the larger mills, but ownership now rested almost entirely in the hands of citizens or citizen corporations.
During the 1980s the world price of coffee fluctuated violently, going from the highs of the late 1970s to new lows, then to a high again in 1986, followed by a steep fall. The plantations, with their heavy burden of debt and high operating costs were in deep trouble.
The smallholders, however, the backbone of the industry, were able to survive because of their independence and in-built resilience.
The typical village-based grower in PNG uses no artificial fertiliser; no chemical sprays, and owns his farm lock, stock and barrel.
His input consists mainly of his own and his family's labour, plus a few simple tools.
Pest and disease control to the grower in the valleys of PNG's highlands means daily watchfulness and the use of fingers and a sharp pair of secateurs, rather than the massive overkill of a chemical regime.
Prunings from his coffee and leaf-fall from the trees which shade it, together with the skin and pulp of his freshly-processed crop provide natural, nutrient-rich mulch. The PNG small grower is very much his own man, very independent in an increasingly complex world.
Aware that nothing sells like quality; in 1994 PNG's Coffee Industry Corporation introduced a compulsory minimum standard for unprocessed coffee into the marketplace. This is in addition to the existing standard for export green bean.
Since 1995, it has been an offence under the provisions of the Coffee Industry Corporation Act for a farmer to offer for sale parchment coffee of the 'Reject' or Class 4 standard.
In 2002, the minimum standard for trade in smallholder parchment coffee was revised from Class 3 to Class 2.
As a result of improved quality control, the discount against the prevailing New York price for 'Other Milds' applying to PNG's 'Y-grade' has been reduced.
The balance of consumption against production in world terms is an up-and-down equation, but at present the near-term outlook for the PNG grower is good.
In particular, the increasing demand for organically-grown coffee presents opportunities for PNG.
With his ability to supply a naturally-grown, naturally-processed product the village-based coffee grower in PNG faces a reasonably assured future.
PNG's Arabica coffee is intrinsically a very good one, known for its good body and acidity, and will always be looked for in the market whilst it enjoys a reputation for reliable quality. PNG's coffee industry is here for the long haul.
This 'green gold' will continue to provide income and stability for generations of small growers in PNG's coffee producing provinces.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
Papua New Guinea's 'Green Gold'
'Papua New Guinea Made' by the Mainland Holdings Group
Mainland Holdings is a 100% Papua New Guinea national company, based in Lae and employing over 2, 000 people. The group of companies owned and operated by Mainland Holdings are uncompromisingly committed to quality in all our products and services:
Tablebirds chickens are raised in the
3 Roses Flour produced at the 7-Mile flour mill is the brand favoured by commercial bakers and increasingly by the housewife. The superior quality means bread, scones and cakes baked with 3 Roses guarantee great results. Nestle use 3 Roses exclusively in their PNG manufacture noodles and BNG Trading in their bakers’ pre-mixes.
Mainland Crocodile Farm is the world’s largest and leading salt water crocodile farm. An essential part of the species and habitat preservation programme in the Sepik wetlands, the farm exports top grade crocodile skins to Hermes in
The Mainland Coffee Division owns and operates coffee mills in Banz, Goroka and Lae and is the one of the top three coffee exporters through its 100% owned subsidiary, Niugini Coffee Tea & Spice. The Division is working with the Coffee Industry Corporation to improve export quality and small farmer incomes through training and extension, and through pursuing certification (Rainforest, Premium Smallholder, Fair Trade etc.).
In 2008, Mainland Holdings launched an initiative to revive flagging vanilla exports through the introduction of a rapid curing process. The process relieves the farmer of time consuming on farm processing with attendant risks to quality and acceptability by the customers. Market testing in Europe and the
Territory Packaging, a 51% Mainland-owned subsidiary, is the leading innovator for packaging solutions in Lae. The company operates both flexible and woven polypropylene packaging manufacturing facilities offering high quality design, printing and manufacturing from start to finish at a ‘one stop shop’. As well as servicing major Lae customers (including Trukai, Coca-Cola, Nestle, Tablebirds, 3 Roses, Paradise Biscuits etc.), the woven polypropylene plant has a growing export customer base in Australia and the Pacific Islands.
Two further divisions of Mainland Holdings provide essential services within the Group and to commercial customers:
ABCO Transport provides local and highway cartage, logistics and customs clearing services for key clients including Nestle, British American Tobacco, Coca-Cola as well as Tablebirds and 3 Roses Flour. Coffee cartage, handling and exporting on behalf of Mainland Coffee Division and several highland exporting companies is also a key part of transport and warehouse operations.
Huon Electrical provides a comprehensive electrical wholesale and contracting service from a base in Lae. The range of services extend to supply, installation, repair and servicing of electrical, electronic and refrigeration equipment, motor rewinding and associated construction services. In addition, Huon Electrical undertakes preparation of CAD electrical and construction drawings, and project management services.
Huon Electrical is the Division coordinating mechanical and electrical maintenance for the Group’s manufacturing operations and also provides construction services for development projects.
Mainland Holdings, leaders and innovators in agribusiness, committed to quality in all we do.
Friday, February 06, 2009
New Guinea Fruit Company dedicated to making 100% Papua New Guinea products
Caption: New Guinea Fruit Company's newest products: Dried Bananas and Dried Pineapples
By SALLY WATSON of New Guinea Fruit Company
New Guinea Fruit Company is dedicated to making PNG products which have 100 % PNG ingredients.
We know the flavours of fruit in PNG are unbeatable, coming from fertile soils of the Highlands, thus, our products have that advantage.
We make products from produce that grows well here, providing a market for rural farmers to sell their produce.
We buy tree tomatoes (wild fruit), lemons, ginger, strawberry, elderberry, banana, pineapple, passionfruit, pawpaw and honey from local bee keepers.
Our buying prices are shown at our buying depot at Goroka main market.
People bring in their produce and we pay per kilo.
We are always looking at developing products from produce that grow without training requirements or capital.
Our ingredients are always fresh.
Our biggest seller is the Live Lave fruit wines, which come in five types: wild fruit/ banana/ ginger/ strawberry/ elderberry.
We also have nine varieties of jams and marmalade (Troppo), three types of fruit juice drink (Apo).
The sales of these latter products have suffered somewhat with the influx of cheap Asian foods such as peanut butter/jam, etc.
It is difficult for us to compete price-wise.
The amount of cheap Asian imports in our supermarkets is vast and we feel the government needs to recognise that as long at these products are on the market, PNG-made products cannot compete price-wise and it also leaves a highly competitive gap for local business to venture into food production.
Without government interference, PNG will not get out of its dependency on food imports.
New Guinea Fruit Company is diversifying.
We have two new projects in effect this year.
Dried Fruits (banana and pineapple) are still in early stages of development, but production has started on machinery bought from the Philippines and Brazil.
This technology uses coffee husks as a primary fuel for drying.
The managers of NGF believe the end dried products are the best-tasting in the world and we believe is a beginning of a new industry in PNG which will bring economic benefits to everyone.
The second project is the making of a natural spirit out of one of our live lave wines (wild fruit).
Live lave wines are prepared in the worldwide traditional way of making wine, fermenting and maturing (about 2.5 years).
This wine is then distilled and the new spirit matured for another three years. Experiments are already being done.
We have high hopes in the product being a special export of PNG in the alcohol market.
Readers would be aware of the richness of our country.
The opportunities that it offers us is vast and to achieve our goals as a nation, we individuals, government sectors, business houses need to work together to bring about sustainable development to raise our standards of living.
While the government mostly concerns itself with infrastructural development there is a need for it to assess the needs of local businesses and use bottom – up approach in development.
New Guinea Fruit Company can see many prospects in the area of food production.
We will continue to pursue in developing what we see potential in; however, to be successful and to empower others, we need government to understand our needs.
On the subject of highlands honey, which is 100% natural honey, it is a product the world is seeking.
There is a world shortage of honey, due to bees around the world in developed countries being killed off by parasites and bee diseases.
The mites have been evolving with bees for hundreds of thousands of years; different species of bees have different species of mites as parasites.
Last year a species of mite which affects bees in other parts of the world was discovered in PNG.
It was found everywhere.
The question is how many years has it been in PNG?
What effect will it have?
Will it kill off the bees?
The first question cannot be answered.
The latter questions are still too early to answer.
We are now in the middle of the honey-harvesting season and the production rate is much the same as last year.
If, in our more natural way of beekeeping, the mites are not a problem, PNG has a real chance of building up its honey industry in the highlands, because there is a world wide demand for honey that does not contain chemicals.
Developed countries want to buy our honey for a very high price.
It is even being airfreighted to Switzerland, but we are not producing enough honey to make big shipments at the present time.
NGF is trying to grow our small honey industry by paying village beekeepers high price for honey (K10 per kilo) and selling bee equipment at a low price.
They are encouraged and more and more are going into beekeeping, however, there is a great need for outside organisations such as NGO’s and the government itself to provide training requirements.
Beekeeping is a skilled profession which can be learnt by anyone.
NGF does not have the capacity to train; we feel this is a vital area for the government to take on.
At this point in time we feel we need to study the parasite problem first and understand better if it is going to be a problem in PNG.
Support Papua New Guinea Made Products
Few countries are as blessed with natural resources as
Its largely mountainous terrain is swathed in dense tropical rainforest, the soil is rich for cultivation and the South Pacific waters off its coasts teem with fish.
Beneath the ground lies a wealth of minerals, including gold, silver and copper, and there is oil and natural gas awaiting exploitation.
It is a beautiful country too, one of the most biodiverse in the world with a dazzling variety of flora and fauna, insect and birdlife.
Yet while PNG is resource rich, it is cash poor, and 33 years after achieving independence from Australia – not very long in the life of a country – it still faces significant challenges of nationhood.
Poor transport infrastructure, law and order problems and a shortage of new investment are among the factors that have held back economic development.
New incentives must be aimed at triggering investment and growth including producing and marketing more ‘PNG Made’ Products.
There are many opportunities, but we need to create an awareness of the potential we have.
We must aggressively promote ‘PNG Made’ Products in such ways as holding international trade fairs and introduce ourselves first in the regional markets and then the bigger international markets.
Waitangi Day 2009 - Message from the New Zealand Prime Minister
As well as being a special time for New Zealanders to be with family and friends, Waitangi Day is a chance to pause for a moment on our long journey of nationhood – to look back on the path we have travelled, and to cast our eyes ahead to the next turn in the track, the next river to be crossed, the next ridgeline we must climb, and the bright, promising land that lies beyond.
The Treaty recognised that New Zealand was a nation of two peoples: Maori – the people of the land, whose culture and rights deserved respect and protection – and those who came to New Zealand in search of a better life.
More importantly, in my mind, the Treaty was a promise – that these two peoples would work as one, building their futures together, and walking at each other’s side.
Sometimes that promise has not been kept. Sometimes we have argued about where we are going, which path we should take, and how fast we should walk.
But all the while our journey has continued. And along the way we have started to build a real partnership where, together, we can feel a sense of achievement and pride in our magnificent country. A partnership of people who can see the very best in each other and know that the very best lies ahead of us.
This Waitangi Day, we pledge again our commitment to that partnership, to carry on our journey together, walking side-by-side and building a nation that is rich in culture, strong in diversity, and great in promise for all who call it home.
Best wishes for the year ahead.
Hon John Key
Prime Minister
Thursday, February 05, 2009
What Waitangi Day means for New Zealanders

The Treaty of Waitangi
The Treaty was concluded between representatives of the Crown and of Maori tribes and sub-tribes, and is named after the place in the Bay of Islands where the Treaty was first signed. The Treaty was not drafted as a constitution or a statute: It was a broad statement of principles upon which the British officials and Maori chiefs made a political compact or covenant to found a nation state and build a government in New Zealand to deal with pressing new circumstances.
The Treaty was prepared in just a few days. About 500 Maori debated the document for a day and a night before it was first signed by over 40 chiefs on 6 February 1840. Copies were then taken all around the country, and chiefs from many places added their signatures or marks. Eventually, about 540 chiefs gave their agreement.
The Treaty has three articles. In the English version, these are that Maori ceded the sovereignty of New Zealand to Britain; Maori gave the Crown an exclusive right to buy lands they wished to sell and, in return, were guaranteed full rights of ownership of their lands, forests, fisheries and other possessions; and Maori would have the rights and privileges of British subjects.
The Treaty in Maori was intended to convey the meaning of the English version, but over time some important differences have been identified and debated. Most significantly, in the Maori version the word 'sovereignty' was translated as ‘kawanatanga’ (governance): some Maori believed that the governor would have authority over the settlers alone. The English version also guaranteed undisturbed possession of all “properties”, but the Maori version spoke of “taonga” (ie treasures, not necessarily those that are tangible).
Observing the Treaty today
Since 1840, some actions taken by New Zealand governments resulted in the alienation of Maori land, waters and other resources from their owners without proper consent or compensation. Maori have tried to have their grievances addressed, and some early governments made inadequate attempts to settle some of their claims. But recent governments have recognised that the way some land transactions took place was unjust, leaving a strong sense of grievance with the original owners and their descendants.
In 1975, a commission of inquiry called the Waitangi Tribunal was created, to investigate the Crown's alleged breaches of the Treaty, and make recommendations to government to provide recompense. Since 1985 the tribunal has been able to consider Crown acts and omissions dating back to 1840. This has provided Maori with an important means to have their grievances against the actions of past governments investigated. The Tribunal is not however a court of law. It has authority only to make recommendations, which in most instances do not bind the Crown, the claimants, or any others. But the Tribunal's process is more inquisitorial and less adversarial than that followed in the courts. And it can actively search out material and facts to help it decide on a claim (courts are limited in their ability to do this).
If the government decides to accept the Tribunal’s recommendation to settle a claim, a separate body (the Office of Treaty Settlements) then negotiates on behalf of the Crown with the claimants. Once claimants and the Crown agree on the terms of a settlement, they sign a deed, and the Crown passes legislation to give effect to it and remove the tribunal's ability to inquire further into that claim.
More than 1000 claims have been lodged with the tribunal. Several large historical claims have already been settled, with a total value of NZ$600 million (over 400 million Kina).
NZAID - Helping Papua New Guinea realise its potential
In July 2008 NZAID (
The NZAID programme in PNG is not about one-off projects but about using existing knowledge and encouraging the long-term development of the people of PNG. NZAID works with local organisations and government departments, and recognises that training and informing people is often an effective way to make changes in communities.
HOW HAS
Health
East Sepik - 400 villages now have access to basic healthcare (estimate 8-12,000 people) in
Rural Livelihoods
Business training school established for 160 students a year
Huon Gulf - 14
1,200 farmers trained on how to produce better quality produce and to add value to it in the cocoa and fish farming sectors.
Launched a new programme with the Fresh Produce Development Agency in 2007 to help FPDA better meet the needs of farmers nationwide.
Peacebuilding
Kup District – work on voter education and community groups working with candidates contributed to a violence-free national election in that district in 2007. The work of the Kup women was later recognised with an international peace award. NZAID supported similar work by 50 groups nationwide in what was regarded as the most peaceful election in decades.
In
Education is the future
Since 2002,
Since 1996,
NZAID recognises that other organisations are better placed to provide services or support the development of communities. NZAID is working with the UK Volunteer Service Organisation to help implement PNG’s making a living curriculum in Chimbu and Madang. The programme assists secondary schools to tailor their curriculum to help the bulk of graduates who will not get formal employment become economically productive once back in their villages. Another such group is HOPE Worldwide (PNG). It has more than 70 staff within PNG providing health, educational and other social services to the underprivileged or disadvantaged groups. NZAID has supported HOPE’s School library programme since 2004 to offer:
· A Mobile Library Service in
· An outreach programme that helps schools set up libraries. Since 2001, HOPE has distributed well over 1 million books to 2000 schools nationwide.
· Provincial workshops for teachers on how manage school libraries.
· Computers to schools improve children’s IT skills.
From time to time NZAID helps schools that have raised funds for building projects but can’t cover the full costs. This is done through NZAID’s Small Project Fund or the Head of Mission Fund. They include:
School | Project | NZ funds |
| Kitchen Facility Upgrade | 154,324 |
Bereina Diocese, Goilala District | Training local teachers | 70,000 |
| Classroom construction | 100,000 |
| School Water Supply | 122,048 |
| Infirmary and school water supply | 475,680 |
| Staff housing, Girls Dormitory and Telecommunications upgrade | 318,035 |
| School desks | 30,700 |
| Classroom construction | 19,340 |
Marunga/Kavudemki schools, ENB | School water supply | 15,180 |
| School desks | 19,470 |