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This week's
featured blog: Married to Green
It might make you cringe to think about how much garbage from an event bypasses recycle bins and gets thrown straight into the trash, only to cease function as just another piece of waste in a landfill.
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Published on April 28, 2008
Café Justo: Fair, fresh and pesticide-free
AGUA PRIETA, Mexico — A quiet revolution was born in the town of Salvador Urbina in Chiapas, Mexico, when several small farming families joined together to form the first of a number of organic coffee growing co-operatives more than five years ago. Café Justo is a coffee growers’ co-operative in a small town called Salvador Urbina, located in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. About 40 families with small coffee farms grow organic coffee as a part of the co-op. View Larger Map After harvesting and drying in Chiapas, the coffee seeds are bagged and trucked eight hours up to Agua Prieta in the northern state of Sonora, which is just south of the Arizona border, Adrian Cifuentes, director of production for Café Justo and a member of the co-op, said. Once there, the beans are roasted, packaged and shipped to domestic and international locations. View Larger Map The co-op has 10 employees, Cifuentes said. Seven employees work in Agua Prieta, Sonora, which is just across the border from Douglas, Ariz., roasting and packaging the coffee. The other three work in Chiapas, near the 40 farms that make up the co-op. The co-op has not done all of this alone. Gonzales, director of customer relations and marketing, said that Frontera de Cristo, a Presbyterian border ministry, helped them get a loan to buy their first roaster about five years ago. Then in 2006, the ministry, along with Living Waters for the World, another Presbyterian organization, installed a water purification system into the co-op building in Salvador Urbina, according to the 2006 Frontera de Cristo annual report and the Living Waters Web site. Daniel Gonzales said the ministry has been instrumental in giving the co-op a leg up, selling the beans and grounds in Presbyterian churches all over the United States. Beyond the farmer-owned company’s organic goodness, it has also done much for the families who grow the beans. The co-op does everything from growing, harvesting, trucking, roasting and packaging the coffee, Cifuentes said. In doing so, it has created jobs, health care and retirement benefits for farming families in Mexico. For more detail on the organic and business sides of the story, please select another story, below.
Growing organic food is pretty high up on the list of good things to do for the planet, but one group of coffee growers is taking it a step further. A growing business model puts more profits, health and retirement benefits into the hands of small coffee producers in Mexico.
Scroll down to see coffee roasting in action!
Music: "Modern Jazz Samba," by Kevin MacLeod. |