Robusta
coffee exports from Cameroon by end-August had reached 15,650 tonnes since the
season began on December 1, up from 13,536 tonnes for the same period a year
earlier, according to the National Cocoa and Coffee Board (NCCB) on Wednesday.
Data
showed there were eight exporters of robusta in August who shipped 1,556
tonnes, down from 3,625 tonnes in July. Local company UTI topped the chart with
612 tonnes, followed by Nealiko with 288 tonnes.
The
NCCB said only three companies exported arabic in August, for a total of 296
tonnes versus 391 tonnes the previous month. Olam Cam, the local unit of
Singapore’s Olam International, topped the chart with 224 tonnes, followed by
UCCAO with 54 tonnes.
August’s
shipment brought arabica exports in the 2013/2014 season to 1,949 tonnes, down
from 2,513 tonnes a year earlier. The Arabica season runs from
October 1 to
September 30.
Cameroon
is one of the few African countries which grows both robusta and arabica coffee
but some of its production is smuggled to neighbouring Nigeria where farmers
receive a higher price.
Reuters
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