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Posts Tagged ‘Las Colinas’

Todd Caspersen, Equal Exchange’s Director of Puchasing, travelled to El Salvador last week.  The following is a piece he wrote about Las Colinas, a small farmer coffee co-operative that was turned over to the farmers in 1980 as part of El Salvador’s agrarian reform.  Through the years, the co-op has faced many organizational, environmental, productive, and financial struggles; but despite the challenges has nevertheless succeeded in making huge advances.  Their coffee remains some of our most popular to this day.

Last week I went to El Salvador to visit Las Colinas, a long time Equal Exchange partner; and I am psyched about the different projects they are working on.

I am psyched about the great bourbon, a cultivar  of Coffea Arabica, that was drying on the patios.

I am psyched about the farm plan they have for 2010/11.

I am psyched about how healthy the trees look.

I am psyched that the soil analysis is back and informing the soil management plan.

I am psyched that they have gotten in front of the debt they got way back in 1980 as part of the agrarian reform.

I am psyched about a bunch of other stuff too but what I want to share with you today is about water.

The farm that the members of Las Colinas collectively manage contains a significant spring of high quality water, so significant in fact, that it provides water to the entire town of Tacuba and seven surrounding communities. We are easily talking about water for 15,000 people. The spring also provides irrigation water to the members for corn, beans, and vegetables. Most importantly and contentiously, it provides water for processing coffee. In the past, the coffee at Las Colinas was processed using a traditional depulper, fermentation tanks, and channels to transport coffee to the drying terraces; the water then went to sedimentation/evaporation ponds down by a stream. But that wasn’t good enough.

So, this past year they purchased a new depulper that mechanically removes the mucilage from the bean; eliminating the fermentation tanks and the need for loads of water; these are commonly known as eco-pulpers. They bought a Sarti which is made in El Salvador. Water is still part of the process and they needed to improve the treatment of the water and stop using the evaporation ponds by the stream so they installed some motors, pumps and built some new treatment tanks.

This photo shows processing water waiting for treatment in the new tanks.

This new system is impressive; water samples are being sent to a lab for analysis which have demonstrated they are successfully cleaning the water and perhaps more importantly using much less.

All of the processed water is re-circulated and sent to these tanks for treatment in the following sequence:

Step 1: Raise the pH of the water by adding lime to about pH12.

Step 2: Put in an additive they called polimetro; I am still waiting for the chemical name, but it’s similar to the additive used in wine-making that clarifies the wine. Once added, all of the solids in the water begin to drop to the bottom.

Here you can see the solids, lodo, settled out in a test container.

Step 3: Suction the clarified water from one tank to the next.

Step 4: Add acids to the clarified water to return the pH to 7-8.

Here you can see the testing of the pH of the water after the acids have been mixed in.

Step 5: Send the wet solids to an evaporation bed for drying in preparation for composting.

Above you can see the wet solids and dried solids side by side.

Step 6: Irrigate the members’ vegetable plots and move dried lodo in preparation for making bocache, which is a type of compost.

Here is the lodo all set to be mixed with other materials like coffee pulp.

Above is the cleaned water ready for irrigation; compare this picture to one showing water waiting for processing and the one below, showing solids beginning to settle out.

This water processing project was a collaboration between Las Colinas, Apecafe (the Association of Small Coffee Producers of El Salvador), Catholic Relief Services (CRS) and Setem; each organization contributing in a different way. If you purchased coffee through our partnership with CRS you also have participated in this project.

I hope I didn’t bore you with the water geek-out, but this type of work exemplifies the building blocks we use to build great coffee from great sources.

I am really excited by how our relationship with Las Colinas is evolving, and the work we are doing on farm productivity and quality development. I recommend that you get a big hot cup of Las Colinas coffee and look at the farm on Google Maps or Google Earth: N 13 52.128′ W089.54.756′. Great Coffee Great Source.

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Small-scale coffee farmers in El Salvador were amongst the first co-operatives with whom Equal Exchange established direct, long-term partnerships in the early to mid-1990s. These partnerships came about as a natural extension of U.S. solidarity efforts during the Salvadoran civil war; activist groups launched a boycott of Folgers coffee as a way to bring pressure on the Salvadoran oligarchy responsible for much of the repression against Salvadoran farmers, students, labor activists and other civilians. The boycott succeeded in pressuring Proctor and Gamble, Folger’s parent company, to apply pressure on wealthy landowners to support the Peace Accords. It was only natural that Equal Exchange would follow-up on the coffee boycott by seeking to partner itself with agrarian reform co-operatives now owned and run by those same farmers who previously had merely picked the coffee on others’ plantations.

The following letter comes from a friend who has been living in El Salvador for over two decades. We share her sense of pride and excitement over the changes that have taken place in that country:

Today is the 18th anniversary of the signing of the Peace Accords that ended the 12 year civil war here in El Salvador.  Today President Mauricio Funes gave a speech in front of some of the signers of the Peace Accords, including ex-president Alfredo Cristiani and General Mauricio Vargas.

In his speech Funes said that as head of state he had a debt to the victims of the civil war, a debt that he had the responsibility to recognize, and that agents of the state, mostly members of the armed forces and security forces had carried out great human rights violations, abuses of power and illegal use of violence in the form of massacres, executions, disappearances, torture, sexual abuse and that these were mostly carried out against civilians.

“In the name of the Salvadoran state I ask for forgiveness!”

…forgiveness from the children, the youth, men and women, religious people, peasants, workers, students, people in opposition, intellectuals and the victims who have not been able to stop grieving because they have never known what happened to their loved ones and have never be asked for forgiveness.

We must dignify the victims.

Never again repression to silence ideas. (more…)

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