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Coffee Yield [Productivity] and Production in Uganda: Is it Only a Function of GAP and Diseases?

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Publication date
11/06/2014
Number of Pages
12
Language:
English
Type of Publication:
Working Papers & Briefs
Focus Region:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Focus Topic:
Agricultural Value Chains / Agri-Businesses
Health & Diseases
Type of Risk:
Biological & environmental
Type of Risk Managment Option:
Risk assessment
Commodity:
Crops
Author
Robert Waggwa Nsibirwa
Organization
Africa Coffee Academy

Over the last decade efforts by government, several development partners and private sector have been geared at improving good agriculture practices [better extension services] and fighting disease and pests, as the perceived main causes of low coffee productivity and production in Uganda. These efforts gathered a lot of steam in the last five years however; coffee productivity and production volumes do not seem to be responding in the expected manner.

Robusta exports during the five years 2005/2010 averaged around 2.1 million bags with a high of 2.7 million (2007/08) and a low of 1.4 million (2005/06 – the lowest in the last 20 years). This compares with average exports of 2.3 million bags over the previous five years (2000/04) and 3.2 million bags in the five years prior to that (1995/2000). Uganda’s coffee production has stagnated actually at 2.7 million bags [165,000 metric tons] over the last 10 years.