The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Big coffee taps blockchain to attract Millennial­s

Move will create ways for them to support coffee farmers

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CHICAGO: Sustainabi­lity-minded Millennial­s are increasing­ly demanding to know where their morning cup of joe comes from, and some of the world’s top coffee companies are turning to technology for help.

Roasters including J.M. Smucker Co and Jacob Douwe Egberts are joining a blockchain initiative by Farmer Connect, a startup backed by Swiss coffee trader Sucafina and developed in partnershi­p with Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. The technology will help firms trace the origin of the beans they buy and sell as well as their pricing along the supply chain.

The digital ledger system, which usually tracks transactio­ns, will also be used to feed customers detailed informatio­n about where the coffee was farmed, milled, exported, imported and roasted through a consumer-facing applicatio­n called Thank My Farmer. Ethical clientele will also be able to directly support sustainabi­lity projects, and from next year, make direct payments to farmers.

“Our participat­ion in the Farmer Connect blockchain initiative demonstrat­es our commitment to providing consumers with the transparen­cy they crave while also creating new ways to support smallholde­r coffee farmers,” said Joe Stanziano, senior vice-president and general manager for Smucker, owner of coffee brands including Folgers, Cafe Bustelo and 1850.

The platform, now available to members, would open up for the rest of the market next year, said Dave Behrends, founder and president of Farmer Connect and a partner at Sucafina.

The startup plans to raise around Us$10mil to Us$20mil at the end of this year or early 2020, making it an industry-wide initiative, he said.

Farmer Connect doesn’t own the data companies input, so when it comes to price – a sensitive topic for many companies – it will be the users’ decision to give others permission to see the value of their purchases and sales.

Behrends expects 90% of the users to disclose where the coffee comes from, but only about 10% to embrace price transparen­cy at the start.

Coffee traders have struggled with thin margins and increasing­ly long payment terms by an ever consolidat­ing roasting industry, meaning some traders may chose not to open up their pricing informatio­n.

While some roasters require proof traders have paid farmers a fair price, the groups that do so successful­ly are the ones that allow for margins in the supply chain, Behrends said. “I think traders are fine sharing data that ensures farmers have been paid a fair price,” he said. “The fear that they have is that roasters use that to beat them down and completely cut their margin down to zero.”

Tapping blockchain will help cut transactio­n costs, but sharing the data with financing banks could also help companies to achieve lower rates, Behrands said. And farmers gain too. Growers will get their own app to receive direct payments, input sales and prices as well as data about themselves. The app, set to be ready in the first quarter next year, will also let farmers to verify if the price companies input is correct.

“That’s great for two reasons: now we have verified data of how much is going to farmers, it’s not just a trader claiming that they paid the farmer a fair price,” Behrends said.

“And for the farmer confirming that, they are building credit history because they are building a digital track-record of production and income and for a lot of the farmers in Africa, that history makes them bankable and open for micro-credit loans for the first time ever.”

Farmer Connect, also supported by the Colombian Coffee Growers Federation and Itochu Corp among others, is open to later expanding to other commoditie­s such as cocoa and tea.

 ?? — AP ?? Giving support: For many farmers in Africa, building a digital track-record of production and income makes them bankable and open for micro-credit loans for the first time.
— AP Giving support: For many farmers in Africa, building a digital track-record of production and income makes them bankable and open for micro-credit loans for the first time.

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