2022
03/28
World Coffee Research 2021年次レポート
World coffee Research 2021 年次レポート
chouette blancheから継続的に寄付をおこなっています、World Coffee Researchですが2021年の年次レポートが届きました。
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annual report 2021
Ensuring the future
of coffee
Our mission Grow, protect, and enhance supplies of quality coffee while improving the livelihoods of the families who produce it. Our strategic aim Preserve origin diversity in the face of the climate crisis by accelerating innovation for coffee agriculture in multiple, strategically targeted countries. Our objectives Drive agricultural innovation to:
ABOUT THIS REPORT This report covers World Coffee Research activities, highlights, and results for the period from January 1, 2021 to December 31, 2021. |
We are 236 coffee companies from 27 countries investing in agricultural research and development to benefit coffee farmers in 11 strategic countries critical for preserving origin diversity. WCR 2021 Annual Report 2 |
Celebrating 10 years
WCR was formed by the global coffee industry in 2011, recognizing that innovation in coffee agriculture is necessary to meet the climate crisis.
Over the last decade we matured from being a scrappy start-up into a global leader, defining a vision shared by farmers, coffee producing countries, and roasters to leverage agricultural R&D for productivity, profitability, quality, and climate resilience.
10 things the world didn’t have 10 years ago
$23 million invested in agricultural R&D through
WCR since 2011
A global strategy for conserving coffee genebank collections
The Coffee Sensory Lexicon and WCR/SCA/
UC Davis Coffee Taster’s Flavor Wheel
An open-access arabica coffee genome (generated via an Italian partnership led by illycaffè and Lavazza, published openly by WCR)
The Arabica Coffee Varieties catalog
And coming in 2022… the world’s first modern, collaborative, global crop improvement network for coffee, bringing proven approaches from other crops to support coffee breeding programs to generate climate-resilient
coffee varieties for the future
outputs
outcomes
Modernized variety improvement systems = better plants available and accessible to farmers
A bridge to connect national coffee research institutions in producing countries with multinational and specialty roaster demand
impact
Increased productivity, profitability, quality, climate resilience, and supply stability
200+ coffee companies from 27 countries investing in agricultural research and
development to benefit coffee farmers in 11 strategic countries critical for origin diversity
The world’s largest network of international variety trials testing 31 varieties in 24 agroclimatically diverse locations in 15 countries
10x lower cost for seed quality assurance technology and three open-access training manuals for seed providers and nurseries
WCR 2021 Annual Report 3
“This battle for sustainability must be a pre- competitive one. We need to share resources, efforts, and knowledge collectively to make the overall coffee industry more sustainable and continue to compete for the taste of our coffee rather than for the title of ‘most sustainable’.
— Andrea Illy, Chairman, illycaffè
”
“One improved variety can mean less plant disease, pesticide use, and deforestation— with more resilience, yield, taste, and profit
benefiting more people—than anything else we can do. Not only does Agricultural R&D have the best ROI, investing with peers brings both scale and expertise.
— Doug Welsh, Vice President of Coffee and Roastmaster, Peet’s
”
“To retain quality and origin diversity with stewardship of our natural resources, we need to find scientific solutions to produce coffee on existing acreage with a significant increase in yields. World Coffee Research is our industry’s Noah’s Ark.
— Konrad Brits, CEO, Falcon Coffees
”
WCR 2021 Annual Report 4
2021-2025
Strategy Roadmap
In 2021, World Coffee Research launched a new five- year strategy to drive global agricultural R&D to sustain origin diversity and secure global supply of coffee.
New membership model
In 2021, World Coffee Research (WCR) redesigned its membership model, adopting a volume- and revenue- based membership fee structure. This approach provides greater equity and transparency among member companies, and more sustainable long-term funding for agricultural research. The new membership model was designed by
the Development Committee of WCR’s Board of Directors, working with WCR member companies.
Launch Global Breeding Network for climate resilience
Remodeled Nursery/Seed Value Chains programs in key countries
Strategy launched
Program restructure
trials
nursery/seed sector
breeding
global leadership
Focus country analysis: Ethiopia, Uganda, Nicaragua, Honduras,
Guatemala, Peru, Mexico
New membership model*
External Program Evaluation
2026-2030 strategy development
External review of WCR’s portfolio + global consultation
*$10.9M
secured in support of wcr’s 5-year strategy
“
The new model is a key enabler to securing coffee into the future through agricultural R&D. ”
— Keith Writer, Supply Director, Taylors of Harrogate (UK)
WCR 2021 Annual Report 5
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5
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Where we worked in 2021
WCR’s 11 focus countries are critical to global origin diversity. When fewer countries produce more of the
world’s coffee, it makes it harder to find the unique flavors that coffee drinkers want and coffee businesses rely on, creating significant risk to stability in coffees supplies. Accelerating agricultural innovation across multiple origins forges opportunities for coffee businesses, coffee farmers, coffee nations, and coffee consumers.
Nicaragua
11th | 50%
Mexico
12th | Programs in planning
Peru
9th | 75%
Guatemala
10th | 44%
11 Focus Countries
50% of the world’s 12.5 million
family coffee farms
—
30% of global supply of coffee
Honduras
4th | 95%
Uganda
7th | 99%
Ethiopia
8th | 86%
Kenya
16th | 65%
Focus Country Global Export Rank | % coffee grown by smallholder farmers WCR portfolio of activities in country: trials nursery/seed sector breeding |
Other places where we worked or collaborated in 2021: Australia, Costa Rica, Democratic Republic of Congo, Hawaii, Laos, Malawi, Phillipines, Puerto Rico, Zambia, Zimbabwe
El Salvador
WCR Research Farm @ Flor Amarilla
India
6th | 80%
Indonesia
5th | 99%
Papua New Guinea
17th | Programs in planning
Rwanda
Host of the East Africa Regional Breeding Hub
WCR 2021 Annual Report 6
Host of the Latin America Regional Center for Genetic Improvement
legend
Country Highlights Ethiopia and Uganda
Ethiopia and Uganda are Africa’s leading coffee producers of arabica and robusta, respectively. Together they contain over 30% of the world’s smallholder coffee farms. In 2021, WCR signed memoranda of understanding agreements with both countries in support of their goals to improve farmer productivity and profitability through enhanced agricultural research and development.
For the first time in coffee, the two countries undertook a series of breeding program assessments using the Coffee- Breeding Program Assessment Tool (C-BPAT) aimed at discovering ways to innovate and support increasing the rates of genetic gains in coffee research programs. The original Breeding Program Assessment Tool (BPAT) was developed with support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for food security crops. In 2020, through funding from USAID under the Feed the Future Alliance for Climate Resilient Coffee (ARC) project, WCR partnered with the University of Queensland to adapt the tool for coffee.
The C-BPAT used in Ethiopia and Uganda identified the strengths, gaps, and needs required to turn these breeding programs into high-performing, modernized public programs. From the assessments, detailed roadmaps are being built, which will be used to influence millions of dollars of public sector investment toward the coffee industry’s shared priorities with producing country research institutions in 2022 and beyond.
Uganda
|
Ethiopia
|
WCR 2021 Annual Report 7
Program Areas
Nurseries
Trials
Breeding
WCR 2021 Annual Report 8
Breeding WCR provides global tools and supports key coffee-producing countries to modernize their breeding programs.
|
WCR 2021 Annual Report 9 |
program highlights Breeding Introducing the Coffee-Breeding Program Assessment Tool (C-BPAT) A global tool to support breeding modernization In order to secure future supplies of coffee, it’s critical for breeding programs to increase the rate of genetic gain, which can boost productivity and “pyramid” desirable performance traits. But the public coffee breeding programs that shore up global supply are woefully underfunded and out of date. In 2020, WCR worked with the University of Queensland to create a first-ever assessment tool for coffee breeding programs to evaluate gaps in their technical and management capacity that limit genetic gain. The C-BPAT process identifies the strengths, gaps and needs required to turn all breeding programs into high- performing, modernized public programs. It was used for the first time by the breeding programs of Ethiopia and Uganda in 2021. From the assessments, detailed roadmaps are being built, which will be used to influence millions of dollars of public-sector investment toward the coffee industry’s shared priorities with producing country research institutions in 2022 and beyond. World-class genotyping comes to coffee Global demand to accelerate modern breeding heats up In order for coffee breeding programs to take advantage of modern breeding approaches used widely by other crops, coffee breeders need access to basic tools, including a low-cost and robust genotyping platform. But the cost for any individual breeding program to develop and deploy such a tool is prohibitively high. In 2021, WCR convened 10 institutions in 8 countries to initiate the collaborative development of a low- cost, world-class genotyping platform for coffee. The effort builds on prior work of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) through its Excellence in Breeding (EiB) program to create a streamlined mid-density SNP panel service using DArTag genotyping technology for multiple other crops. By joining together and aggregating demand, coffee breeding programs can achieve a platform that accelerates the production of improved varieties, while remaining cost effective for all. The platform is tailored for use by coffee breeding programs pursuing genomic selection approaches, but can also be used by researchers for diversity studies, and can complement low-density genotyping services. The service is expected to launch, via Intertek, in 2022. |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 10 |
Trials WCR operates dozens of trial sites around the world, testing both existing and new varieties in different environments, both on research stations and in farmers’ fields. Our progress • • • • • • Coffee companies involved in cupping coffees from WCR field trials: 107 Varieties/candidates/accessions cupped: 75 Top 2 finalists will advance to precommercial trials in 2023 Farmer field days: 4 |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 11 |
program highlights Trials International The world’s largest coffee variety trial has its first global cupping! The IMLVT is the world’s largest coffee variety trial with
We are also using this unprecedented network to identify the best locations to place future breeding trials. Because trial plots have been placed in a huge number of diverse environments, it’s possible to assess which sites are better at discriminating between varieties. For example, some sites face higher prevalence of coffee leaf rust, or more “rust pressure.” These sites more effectively differentiate between varieties that are susceptible to rust or resistant to it. This is critical when you are testing varieties for climate resilience. High performance across extreme environments is a good predictor of climate resilience. F1 hybrids trial Finalists will advance on the basis of high performance; risk study forthcoming From an original group of 46 hybrid crosses, WCR has identified finalist candidates to advance to precommercial testing in Central America on the basis of high field and cup performance. • The candidates were tested at three sites in Central America from 2016–2021
IMLVT Global Cupping Varieties BATIAN, IPR103, MUNDO MAYA, PACAMARA, CENTROAMERICANO, MARSELLESA, SL28, SLN6, S.795, Catigua MG2 Participating partners/sites DRC (INERA, Mulungu station), India (Central Coffee Research Institute, (CCRI), Chikmagalur station), Indonesia (ICCRI, Gambung station), Kenya (KALRO, Ruiru station), Nicaragua (ECOM, La Virgen), Peru (JNC, San Ignacio) Companies Caravela Coffee-Australia Pacific, Caravela Coffee-USA, Coffee Libre, EFICO Group, Farmer Brothers, J. M. Smucker Co., JDE Peet’s, Keurig Dr Pepper, Lavazza, Melbourne Coffee Merchants, Mercon Specialty, National DCP/ Dunkin’, Peet’s Coffee, Starbucks, Strauss Coffee, Sustainable Harvest Coffee Importers, Taylors of Harrogate, Tchibo, TERAROSA, Westrock Coffee/S&D Coffee and Tea |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 12 |
Seed Sector/Nurseries 1-3 years to farmer impact What started as individual diagnoses and trainings with single nursery operators in 2017 has evolved into a comprehensive approach—tailored for each country—to assessing and addressing bottlenecks to getting better plants into farmers’ hands. Our progress
New guide! Available for free download at: https://worldcoffeeresearch.org/guias |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 13 |
program highlights Seed Sector/Nurseries Better plants in Latin America In 2021, WCR’s suite of tools and technologies for professionalizing the coffee seed sector grew. Development of a new, low-cost genetic testing service to support seed-sector quality assurance for seed producers and nurseries was finalized and deployed in multiple large projects in Latin America.
• In El Salvador, seed quality testing of 63 seed lots Quality assurance evaluation of 139 seed lots producing 15 varieties in Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Peru. |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 14 |
Coming to Africa Supporting coffee transformation through improved seed supply systems In 2021, WCR piloted a new comprehensive approach to seed sector work, starting in Uganda and Kenya. Both countries are critical coffee suppliers to the world. What are the barriers to getting better plants to farmers in Uganda? Uganda has an ambitious national agenda to increase coffee production from 4.3 million bags to 20 million over the next five years. To achieve this, the government is incentivizing planting new coffee trees and is interested of arabica seed sector challenges. The results point to key opportunities to make the current seedling distribution system more efficient for farmers and nurseries, which we will build on in 2022. • Interviews with 152 nursery operators in the three arabica producing regions of Uganda and 541 farmers in Rwenzori and Mt. Elgon.
Ahead in 2022: Support to purify arabica seed lots and nursery plant material at the 10 largest arabica nurseries in Elgon, Rwenzori, and West Nile; translate and release nursery training videos; release Uganda coffee variety catalog; expand activities to robusta in the Masaka region. |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 15 |
Leveraging our impact
WCR contributes critical agricultural R&D components to coffee development projects around the world. These projects provide a key avenue to ensure that development efforts take into account long-term capacity building through research investment, and ensure the relevance of R&D for smallholder farmers. WCR acts as a bridge, connecting the expertise of the private sector with these projects on the ground. They are a crucial driver of the long-term impact of coffee agricultural R&D.
Maximizing Opportunities in Coffee and Cacao in the Americas (MOCCA)
Countries: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Peru
Funder: Food for Progress, USDA
Partners: TechnoServe (lead), PROMECAFE, NCIs, NGOs
Target coffee beneficiaries: 60,000 farmers
Total project investment: $36.4m (for coffee and cacao)
Feed the Future Democratic Republic
of the Congo Strengthening Value Chains
Country: Democratic Republic of Congo Funder: Feed the Future USAID/DRC Partners: TetraTech (lead), INERA, UCB
Target coffee beneficiaries: 15,000 farmers Total project investment: $23m
Philippine Coffee Advancement and Farm Enterprise (PhilCAFE)
Country: Philippines
Funder: Food For Progress, USDA Partners: ACDI/VOCA (lead), DSSC, CMU
Target coffee beneficiaries: 70,250 people Total project investment: $25.45m
Rehabilitating Puerto Rico’s Coffee Seed Sector Post Hurricane Maria
Funder: Starbucks Foundation and Fonalledas Foundation Partners: Puerto Rico Coffee Roasters and
Hispanic Foundation
Target coffee beneficiaries: 200 Total project investment: $583,243
Innovative Technology for the Management of Coffee Nurseries
Country: Mexico
Funder: Interamerican Bank Partners: Sustainable Harvest (lead)
Target coffee beneficiaries: 2,000 Total project investment: $2m
Peru Coffee Alliance for Excellence (CAFÉ)
Country: Peru
Funder: USAID/Peru Partners: Technoserve (lead)
Target coffee beneficiaries: 12,000 Total project investment: $12.925m
Program for Strengthening the Climate Resilience of Coffee Forests in El Salvador
Country: El Salvador
Funder: Interamerican Development Bank
Leader: Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock (MAG),
Salvadoran Coffee Council (CSC) Target coffee beneficiaries: TBD Total project investment: $45m
Global Coffee Genetic Resource Conservation
Country: Global
Funder: USDA/Foreign Agricultural Service Partners: Crop Trust, NCIs
Total project investment: $32,971 Strengthening Ethiopian Coffee Sector
Country: Ethiopia
Funder: Feed the Future USDA/Foreign Agricultural Service Partners: USAID/Ethiopia, EIAR, JARC
Total project investment: $75,000
= L E D B Y W O R L D C O F F E E R E S E A R C H
In 2021, WCR contributed scientific and technical expertise to 9 publicly funded development
programs targeting the coffee sector. In total, these projects aim to invest $144 million dollars
in 10 major coffee exporting countries, and to impact 159,433 coffee farmers.
WCR 2021 Annual Report 16
Global Leadership
The Shade Catalog
Available in both English and Bahasa, the Catalog empowers Indonesian farmers to select shade trees that are good for coffee, support and diversify household incomes, and provide benefits to wildlife and ecosystem services. The Shade Catalog gathers existing data on trees found in coffee landscapes—from the species’ main attributes, uses, and benefits to propagation and management tips—and makes it freely accessible to support whole-farm planning. A collaboration between World Coffee Research, Conservation International, and the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center.
Yields’ Heterogeneity in Coffee: A Global Perspective
Dr. Rocco Machiavello, Associate Professor in Management, London School of Economics
Dr. Davide Del Prete, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Naples Parthenope
Researchers from the London School of Economics and University of Naples Parthenope, using global farmer data from Enveritas, generated an analysis on the price/yield paradox. It explores differences in coffee yields around the world, why measuring the agricultural productivity gap matters, how resource allocations can deliver different outcomes on yield and price, and the impact that increasing yields for the lowest-performing farmers
would have on global supply and price.
Carbon Accounting for Coffee- Based Farming Systems
Dr. Umesh Acharya and Dr. Rattan Lal
CFAES Rattan Lal Center for Carbon Management and Sequestration
This white paper, led by World Food Prize Laureate Dr. Rattan Lal, collates and synthesizes information on commonly used tools in estimating the carbon footprint (CFP) of coffee- based farming systems, discusses pros and cons of those tools, reviews recent research on coffee’s CFP, and proposes improvements to measure CFP more accurately at the farm level.
WCR 2021 Annual Report 17
Webinars
Publications
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Coffea arabica Survey in South Sudan and Genotypic Comparison with Ex Situ Germplasm Collections from CATIE
Sarada Krishnan, Solene Pruvot-Woehl, Aaron P. Davis, Tim Schilling, Justin Moat, William Solano, Amin Al Hakimi, and
Christophe Montagnon
Views: 2,636
Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution
Vulnerability of coffee (Coffea) genetic resources in the United States
Sarada Krishnan, Tracie Matsumoto, Chifumi Nagai, James Falconer, Suzanne Shriner, Jennifer Long, Juan F. Medrano, and Fernando E. Vega
Views: 439
WCR Presents: Is producing more coffee good or bad for farmers?
Watched by 352 people in 58 countries
WCR Presents: Rethinking Carbon Accounting
Watched by 442 people in 59 countries
WCR Presents: La gran
epiedmia de roya
Watched by 315 people in 22 countries
Download or watch at worldcoffeeresearch.org/resources
WCR 2021 Annual Report 18
2021 Finances* Despite the continued economic uncertainty of 2021, WCR closed the year in a strong position. Thanks to conservative expense management and financial support from 241 companies and individuals, we closed 2021 with solid reserves. Contributions earned† from the coffee industry in 2021: $2,945,000 2021 Year-End Financial Position Investment and other $-8,000 In-Kind $166,000 Government sponsored $1,160,000 Product Sales $9,000 Cash/Investments: Pledges Receivable: Other Assets: $3,550,000 $5,976,000 $568,000 Liabilities: Net Assets: $217,000 $9,877,000 Total Financial Position: $10,094,000 Trials $1,194,000 *Pre-audit figures on an accrual basis Nursery $535,000 Coffee Industry Contributions (Net Discount)† †Of which approx. $6M are future-year pledges for 2022-2024 Administration and Accounting $720,000 Fundraising $200,000 Global Leadership $413,000 INCOME $10,248,000 In-Kind $166,000 EXPENDITURES $3,785,000 Breeding $557,000 |
WCR 2021 Annual Report 19 |
2021 Members and Contributors
Our members—companies large and small—come together pre-competitively to set a shared global agenda for coffee research. Their participation is a critical foundation for a vibrant and sustainable coffee sector.
In 2021, 241 companies and individuals from 27 countries contributed financially to our work.
$500,000+
$200,000-$499,999
$100,000-$199,999
$50,000-$99,999
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Community Coffee Company
-
Foodbuy (Farmer Brothers Artisan Coffee)
• KEYCOFFEE Y.S. Foundation
• Lavazza Professional
• Tchibo
• Westrock Coffee Company
• KEY COFFEE
-
Coffee Circle
-
EFICO Group
-
La Marzocco
-
Mercon Coffee Group
• Philz Coffee
• PROBAT
• Royal Cup Coffee • Workshop Coffee
$20,000-$49,999
WCR 2021 Annual Report 20
$10,000-$19,999
-
Asahi Quality & Innovations
-
Caravela Coffee Europe
-
Chameleon Cold-Brew
-
Clif Bar & Company
-
Counter Culture Coffee
-
Descamex
-
Eight O’Clock Coffee
-
F. Gaviña & Sons
-
Intelligentsia Coffee
$1,000-$4,999
• S. Ishimitsu & Co.
• Small Batch Coffee
Roasters
• Solberg & Hansen
• Spyhouse Coffee Roasting Co.
• Square Mile Coffee Roasters
• Sweet Maria’s Coffee
• Swiss Water Decaffeinated
Coffee Company
• Temple Coffee Roasters
• The Gentlemen Baristas • The Roastery
• The Seed
• Transcend Coffee
• Union Hand -Roasted Coffee
• Vides58Coffees
• Walker Coffee Trading • WDF Pte Ltd.
• La Colombe Coffee Roasters
• Lincoln & York Coffee Roasters
• Louis Dreyfus Company • MiiR
• Reily Foods
• Sucden Coffee
• TKI NovaSource • Tony’s Coffee
• Atlas Coffee Importers • Bäckerei Happ
GmbH & Co.
• Barrie House Coffee
• Batdorf and Bronson Coffee Roasters
• Beck Flavors
• Black Oak Coffee Roasters
• Boomtown Coffee
• Brian Gaffney
• Cafcom Trading
• Cafe Virtuoso
• Cafes Lobodis
• Calendar Coffee
• Dark Woods Coffee
• Dear Green
• Driftaway Coffee
• DRWakefield
• Dunn Brothers Coffee Franchising
• Evan Piepenbrink
• Friday Coffee Roasters
• Hacienda La Minita
• Huckleberry Roasters
• Intercontinental Coffee Trading
• Irving Farm New York
• Jones Coffee Roasters
• Kaldi Coffee Farm
• Kaldi’s Coffee
• Limini Coffee
• Marubeni Foods
• Melbourne Coffee Merchants
• Mr. Espresso
• Ofi International
-Geneva Branch
• Olam Specialty Coffee-Europe
• Ozo Coffee
• Pacific Espresso
• Raw Bean Limited
• Roast House Coffee
-
Ally Coffee
-
Bewley’s N.A./Java City
-
Blue Bottle Coffee
-
Camber Coffee
-
Caravela Coffee USA
-
Coffee Libre
-
Equator Coffees
-
InterAmerican Coffee/ Neumann Gruppe USA
-
Olam Americas–Specialty Coffee Division
• Origin Coffee Roasters • Rave Coffee
• SEY COFFEE
• Single O
• Specialty Coffee Association of Japan
• Sucafina Specialty EMEA
• Sustainable Harvest
• TERAROSA (Haksan Co.Ltd) • The Coffee Source
$5,000-$9,999
WCR 2021 Annual Report 21
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1Cup Coffee Roasters
-
Bakito Baki
-
Be Brave
-
Beanstock Coffee Roasters
-
BlendIn Coffee Club
-
Blossom Coffee Roasters
-
Blume Coffee Traders
-
Bodum
-
Bolt Coffee Company
-
Boon Boona Coffee
-
Boxcar Coffee Roasters
-
Brewpoint Coffee
-
Bridge Coffee Co.
-
Brookmill Roastery
-
Bulavity
-
Camino Real Coffee Roasters
-
Caravan Coffee
-
Caravan Coffee Roasters
-
Caravela Australia Pacific
• Casa Espresso
• Chanji Coffee Firm
• Charlotte Mulliner
• Chouette Torréfacteur Laboratoire
• Clare Thompson/ Love Bristol
• Coastal Coffee Traders • Coffea arabica limited • Coffee Bros.
• Coffee Editor
• Coffee Factory • Coffee Friend • Coffee Medley • Coffee Nexus
• Coffee Traders
• Coldblow Coffee Company • Colour Coffee Roasting
• Crankhouse Coffee
• Crop to Cup Coffee
Up to $999
-
Cuppers Choice
-
Curve Coffee Roasters
-
Daniel Mondak
-
Darden-Young Farm
-
Dave’s Koffiebranderij
-
Dispatch Coffee
-
Dmitrii Kirilin
-
ECRE
-
Espanola Coffee Roasters
-
Excelco Trading
-
Exhale Healthy Coffee
-
Firsthand Coffee
-
FiXX Coffee
-
Flat Fox Coffee Company
-
Flying M Coffee
-
Fort Findlay Coffee & Doughnut Shoppe
-
Fortitude Coffee Roasters
-
Fulcrum Coffee
-
Full City Rooster
-
Genius Coffee
• Girl with a portafilter • Greenway
Coffee Company
• Halvo Coffee Roasters
• Hardoor Estates
• Heart and Graft Coffee
• Horiguchi Coffee Institute
• Horsham Coffee Roaster
• Ickle Coffee
• Imbibe Coffee Roasters
• Jakub Ditrich
• Jared Gottdiener
• Johann Jacobs Haus
• Jonas Wellington
• Journee Coffee
• Junker’s Café-Rösterei
• Kiss the Hippo Roastery
• Kittel Coffee
• Kona Kaffeerösterei
• Kyokuto Fadie Corp.
• Landmark Specialty Coffee
• Lineover Coffee
• List + Beisler
• Lüna Coffee
• Macondo Coffee
• Marco Agustoni
• Marigold Coffee
• Market Lane Coffee • Melodrip Co.
• Method Coffee Roasters
• Metric
• Monastery Coffee
• MoonGoat Coffee Roasters • Mundo Novo Coffee
• Mya Bros
• Nathan Page
• Nemesis Coffee
• Nicolas Rivolta
• North Fork Coffee Roasters • Olisipo Coffee Roasters
• Osito Coffee
• Pachamama Coffee Cooperative
• Prescott Coffee Roasters • Primavera
Coffee Importers
• Prometheus Coffee Roasters
• Public Coffee House • Quaffee
• Rabbit Hole Roasters • Rebel Dog
Coffee Company
• Red Cedar Coffee Co.
• Restaurant Au jardin
• Rimini Coffee
• Ringtons
• Ritual Coffee Roasters Tasmania
• River City Coffee
• Rose N Crantz Roasting Co.
• Rose Park Roasters
• Ross Street Roasting
• Rothfos Corporation
• Saint Henri-Micro Torrefacteur
WCR 2021 Annual Report 22
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Sample Coffee Roasters
-
Samuel Liu
-
Satoru Coffee
-
SCS Global Services
-
Shedlight Coffee Roasters
-
South Texas
Coffee Initiative
-
Square One Coffee Roasters
-
Startup Coffee Company/ Apex Coffee
-
Structure Coffee Roasters
-
Swan Song Coffee
-
Taf Coffee
-
Takewara Coffee
• Tamikka Sims
• Tata Coffee
• The Steam Engine
• Therefore Coffee Roasters • Travis Horesh
• True Stone Coffee Roasters • Vagabond Coffee Roasters • Vessel Roasters
• WB Coffee
• Wesley Hanson
• West Cork Coffee Roastery • Zen Coffee Roasters
• Zephyr Green Coffee
WCR 2021 Annual Report 23
2021 Checkoff Program Participants
Participating Suppliers – Matching/Contributing
Participating Suppliers – Non-Matching
-
Atlas Coffee Importers
-
Caravela Australia Pacific
-
Caravela Coffee Europe
-
Caravela Coffee USA
-
Crop to Cup Coffee
-
Descamex
-
DRWakefield
-
Excelco Trading
-
Falcon Coffees
-
Hacienda La Minita
-
InterAmerican Coffee USA
-
Intercontinental Coffee Trading
-
List + Beisler
-
Melbourne Coffee Merchants
• Ofi International • Olam Specialty
Coffee – Americas
• Olam Specialty Coffee – Europe
• Osito Coffee
• Primavera Coffee
Importers
• Rothfos Corporation
• Sucafina Specialty EMEA
• Sustainable Harvest
• Swiss Water Decaffeinated Coffee Company
• The Coffee Source
• Walker Coffee Trading • Zephyr Green Coffee
-
Algrano
-
American Coffee
Corporation
-
Atlantic Specialty Coffee
-
Be Green Trading SA
-
Benchmark Coffee Traders
-
Bourbon Specialty Coffee
-
Cafe Imports
-
Cape Horn Coffee Company
-
Capricorn Coffee Comercio Internacional
-
COFCO International
-
Condesa Co. Lab
-
Coopfam
-
East Africa Coffee Co.
-
Expocaccer Cooperativa dos Cafeicultores
do Cerrado -
Exportadora de Café Guaxupé
• Gollücke & Rothfos
• Greencof
• InterAmerican Coffee UK
• Kawacom
• La Bastilla Coffee Estates
• Louis Dreyfus Company
• Nordic Approach
• Paragon Coffee Trading Company
• Racafe
• RGC Coffee
• Royal Coffee
• Sucafina Specialty North America
• The Green Coffee Company
• Trabocca
• Volcafe Specialty Coffee
WCR 2021 Annual Report 24
Participating Roasters/Retailers
-
Fort Findlay Coffee & Doughnut Shoppe
-
Fortitude Coffee Roasters
-
Full City Rooster
-
Greenway Coffee Company
-
Heart and Graft Coffee
-
Horsham Coffee Roaster
-
Huckleberry Roasters
-
Imbibe Coffee Roasters
-
Intelligentsia Coffee
-
Irving Farm New York
-
Johann Jacobs Haus
-
Jones Coffee Roasters
-
Junker’s Café-Rösterei
-
Kaldi’s Coffee
-
Kiss the Hippo Coffee
-
Kittel Coffee
-
Landmark Specialty Coffee
-
Limini Coffee
-
Lüna Coffee
• Marigold Coffee
• Market Lane Coffee
• Monastery Coffee
• MoonGoat Coffee Roasters • Mr. Espresso
• National DCP – Dunkin’
• Olisipo Coffee Roasters
• Origin Coffee Roasters
• Ozo Coffee
• Philz Coffee
• Public Coffee House
• Quaffee
• Rabbit Hole Roasters
• Rave Coffee
• Rimini Coffee
• Ringtons Ltd
• River City Coffee
• Roast House Coffee
• Rose N Crantz Roasting Co. • Rose Park Roasters
• Ross Street Roasting
• Saint Henri – Micro Torrefacteur
• Sample Coffee Roasters
• Single O
• Small Batch Coffee Roasters
• Spyhouse Coffee Roasting Co.
• Square Mile Coffee Roasters
• Square One Coffee Roasters
• Structure Coffee Roasters
• Taylors of Harrogate
• Temecula Coffee Roasters • Temple Coffee Roasters
• The Roastery
• Tony’s Coffee
• True Stone Coffee Roasters • Vagabond Coffee Roaster
• West Cork Coffee Roastery • Workshop Coffee
• Zen Coffee Roasters
-
1Cup Coffee Roasters
-
Allegro Coffee Company
-
Bäckerei Happ
-
Barrie House Coffee
-
Batdorf and Bronson Coffee Roasters
-
Beanstock Coffee Roasters
-
Bewley’s N.A./Java City
-
Black Oak Coffee Roasters
-
Blossom Coffee Roasters
-
Blue Bottle Coffee
-
Blume Coffee Traders
-
Bodum
-
Bolt Coffee Company
-
Boon Boona Coffee
-
Boxcar Coffee Roasters
-
Brewpoint Coffee
-
Cafe Virtuoso
-
Calendar Coffee
-
Camino Real Coffee Roasters
• Caravan Coffee Roasters • Casa Espresso
• Chameleon Cold-Brew
• Coffee Bros.
• Coffee by Tate
• Coffee Factory Ltd
• Coldblow Coffee Company
• Colour Coffee Roasting
• Counter Culture Coffee
• Crankhouse Coffee Ltd
• Cuppers Choice
• Curve Coffee Roasters
• Dark Woods Coffee
• Dave’s Koffiebranderij
• Dispatch Coffee
• Driftaway Coffee
• Dunn Brothers Coffee Franchising
• ECRE
• Equator Coffees
WCR 2021 Annual Report 25
Board of Directors Our board members are some of the most important leaders and thinkers from coffee companies around the world. They work hard behind the scenes to guide our programs. Doug Welsh JDE Peet’s Chair Jim Trout The J.M. Smucker Company Vice Chair Giacomo Celi Mercon Coffee Group Shawn Hamilton Counter Culture Coffee Secretary Treasurer |
Hope Bagozzi Tim Hortons Nadia Hoarau-Mwaura JDE Peet’s James McLaughlin Intelligentsia Coffee Jim Smith Nanda Bergstein Tchibo Mario Cerutti Lavazza Kelly Goodejohn Starbucks Coffee Company Elizabeth McLaughlin Westrock Coffee Company Matt Saurage Community Coffee Company Andrea Illy illycaffè Liz Longstreet Darr National DCP – Dunkin’ Monique Oxender Keurig Dr Pepper Pablo von Waldenfels Victoria Salin Texas A&M (TAMU) Royal Cup Coffee Tchibo Taylors of Harrogate Keith Writer WCR 2021 Annual Report 26 |
Team
Our team executes our ambitious agenda to modernize variety innovation systems to increase supplies of quality coffee and improve farmer livelihoods.
leadership
Dr. Jennifer “Vern” Long
ceo
Dr. George Kotch
research director
Dr. Kraig Kraft
asia & africa girector
Salvador Urrutia Loucel
latin american director
Hanna Neuschwander
strategy & communications director
Siaska Vieira de Castro
administration & finance director
our team
Julio Alvarado
Research Technician
Jorge Berny Mier y Teran
Breeding and Technical Manager
Josue Callejas
Sub-Regional Coordinator (North)
Elly Castro
Sub-Regional Coordinator (South)
Kristin Franklin
Contracts and Grants Manager
José María Gómez Vargas
Latin America Program Manager
Koleen Hall
Business Manager US
Jarrod Harris
Finance and Post-Award Manager
Alexa Heinicke
Corporate Partnership Manager
Jean Baptiste Kayigamba
Breeding Hub Technician
Ana Lucia Kolasinski
Accounting Manager
Christiane Masikira Fazili
Congo R&D Agronomist
Jimmy More
Peru Agronomist
Simon Martin Mvuyekure
East Africa
Breeding Coordinator
Maureen Namugalu
Uganda Agronomist
Maud Nicolas
Business Manager Europe
Square Nyasulu
Malawi Agronomist
Jose Paiz
Guatemala Coordinator
Solene Pruvot-Woehl
Trial Manager
Nuzul Qudri
Asia Regional Coordinator
Remy Rodriguez
Puerto Rico Agronomist
Sylvain Roulain
Trial Manager
Jean Paul Rugwiro
Rwanda Agronomist
Peter Sinnott
Data Systems Manager
Samuel Thuo Mungai
Kenya Agronomist
Donnel Tiedra
Philippines Agronomist
Emilia Umaña
Nursery Development Program Manager
Jesslin Zeledón
Nicaragua Agronomist
WCR 2021 Annual Report 27
As of July 1, 2021, WCR team members were:
Female
Female
50%
36%
leadership
team
Male
Male
living in 16 countries
50%
64%