John Chrysostom Alintuma Nsambu, the Ugandan Ambassador to Algeria, revealed that the embassy has established a bilateral trade agreement that targets Uganda’s coffee produce.
Coffee farmers in the greater Masaka
sub-region have been tipped on a coffee export deal worth USD 300 million to the
Maghreb region in North Africa.
John Chrysostom Alintuma Nsambu,
the Ugandan Ambassador to Algeria, revealed that the embassy has
established a bilateral trade agreement that targets Uganda’s coffee produce.
He says the trade agreement
involves exporting up to 90,000 tons of Ugandan coffee to the Maghreb
countries, which include Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco.
Nsambu says that he has discussed with the exporters giving priority to the Masaka subregion, one of the leading producers of coffee.
He indicates that, together with the Uganda Coffee Development Authority-UCDA, they have started engaging with organized farmers’ cooperatives in the districts of greater Masaka to build the required supply capacity to satisfy the newfound demand.
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Nsambu explains that they are now
considering meeting all districts' Production Officers asking them to mobilize the
farmers in their respective areas of jurisdiction to join cooperatives, as one
of the strategic ways to ensure the quality and quantity of the produce.
He indicates that besides directly
benefiting the local farmers, the contract will substantially increase the country’s
foreign exchange earnings from coffee.
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Francis Ddungu, the general
secretary of Kasasa Coffee Cooperative Society, one of the identified coffee suppliers,
says the contract presents them with an opportunity to market their coffee right
from its point of origin, saying that this will encourage more production.
He is optimistic that the opportunity
will encourage positive competition among cooperatives, which will eventually
enhance quality and productivity hence earning the country more foreign
exchange.