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6970 views July 12, 2013 posted by Maja Wallengren

HARVEST ANALYSIS: Colombia On Track For Coffee Recovery To 9M-9.2M Bags in 2013

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Exclusive SpillingTheBeans’ Harvest Insight: Coffee production in Colombia is now firmly on track for a recovery to between 9 million and 9.2 million 60-kilogram bags. This figure will emerge as final result if not in the 2012-2013 crop cycle, then at least as far as 2013 calendar year goes. As for the upcoming cycle, SpillingTheBeans forecasts production in Colombia in the next 2013-14 harvest to have a real potential to reach at least 9M to 9.5M bags.

Since the Colombian coffee sector first hit crisis with multiple weather problems starting in late 2008 SpillingTheBeans has consistently said that when real evidence emerge as to any real recovery we will take pride in being the first to report such news. After five years with production struggling to stay between 7.5 million and 8.5 million bags, production and export figures have for the last three consecutive months shown sufficient scope to suggest that evidence in deed points toward that a recovery is now happening.

In the month of June production reached 913,000 bags, up 28 percent on the same month last year where output reached 714,000 bags, according to the latest figures by Colombia’s National Coffee Growers Federation, or Fedecafe. Total coffee production in the first six month of the year was up 35 percent at 4.939 million bags, while production in the last 12 months ending June 30th were up 23 percent to reach 9.02 million bags, Fedecafe said.

At Hacienda Venecia Outside Colombia's Coffee Capital of Manizales

Despite this latest strong performance, the Colombian crop will still by most calculations fall short of Fedecafe’s hopes for a crop of 10 million bags unless significant recovery continues for the remainder of the year. It must also be noted that even though a harvest of 9 million bags by all counts is consedered a recovery after fiver years of Annus Horribilis, this is still falling short by 2.5M to 4M bags from the average range of production Colombia enjoyed up to 2008 when annual output was stable between 11.5 amillion and 13 million bags

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Attache said in its first report for the new 2013-14 marketing year that coffee production in Colombia is seen recovering to 9 million bags in 2012-13 as well as maintaining production at 9M in 2013-14.

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Forecasts remain skeptical as to the recovery prospects in Colombia. Volcafe/ED&F Man said in its latest quarterly review released in May that they were revising up the 2012-13 forecast to 7.5 million bags, while the Economist Intelligent Unit, or EIU, in its 2013 coffee report released last May, said a more significant recovery won’t start to emerge until 2017 when all the trees replanted during the last few years will start coming into production in earnest.

“For the time being we have retained our forecasts of a slight increase in output to 8.2 million bags in 2012-13 and 8.7 million in 2013-14. Medium-term production in Colombia should be underpinned by a tree rejuvenation process but the program will not be complete until 2017 at the earliest. Since this process takes trees out of cultivation, it will limit growth potential in the meantime,” the EIU said in the report.

Many traders and analysts agree with this outlook, remaining skeptical after so many years of what they consider “wishful thinking” for a recovery by Fedecafe and the reality in the field.

But if anyone is taking out price money, this year Fedecafe may end up winning the bet.heart

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2 Comments

  • […] You would think so if you consider that leaf rust and other diseases are rapidly adapting to new variables of weather.  But it is interesting to learn from the marketplace when all these predictions are taking place. Look at Colombia! Who would think that they would recover from such a loss due to that terrible fungus back in 2008 when production was reduced to seven million bags. […]

    • Thanks for your comment, but considering the massive renovation that has been taking place in Colombia the recovery really should have come much sooner. Weather, however, and the ongoing climate change is a factor that will continue to impact Colombia’s production cycle more than any other growing country because of Colombia’s two annual crops.

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