Coffee crisis in Central America fuels record exodus north
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[December 08, 2021]
By Maytaal Angel, Gustavo Palencia and Sofia Menchu
EL LAUREL, Honduras/LA LAGUNETA, Guatemala
(Reuters) - The four sons of María Bonilla and Esteban Funes all
embarked on the treacherous journey north, one of them aged 10,
preferring the life of an unauthorized migrant in America to a coffee
farmer in Central America.
"If I didn't have my mom, I would also go to the U.S. It's better there.
Here, no one is solvent," said 40-year-old Bonilla, who's still trying
to beat the odds and turn a profit at her family farm in El Laurel,
northeast Honduras.
Coffee doesn't pay for many of the hundreds of thousands of Central
American farmers who produce the delicate arabica beans for the world's
finest grounds. Increasingly, they are giving up, becoming part of a
broader migrant flow to the U.S.-Mexico border that U.S. data shows has
hit a record high this year.
Francisca Hernández, 48, told Reuters that about a tenth of the 1,000
coffee farmers in her hamlet of La Laguneta in southern Guatemala had
left this year for the United States. They included her 23-year-old son
who was arrested in Mexico while trying get to the U.S. border despite
having paid $10,000 to a coyote, or people smuggler.
He eventually made it across the border in February this year, and now
works in a restaurant in Ohio, sending about $300 a month back home.
Migrant surges have occurred periodically from parts of Central America
as fortunes fluctuated in the coffee sector, which almost 5 million
people in the region - roughly 10% - rely on to survive, according to
the SICA inter-governmental group.
Yet this year has been particularly ruinous, according to interviews
with about a dozen farmers across the region, the heads of one regional
and three national coffee institutes plus an executive at a U.S.-based
international coffee association.
Farmers who had been racking up losses and debts for several years from
falling world prices and the loss of business to Brazil, have now been
swamped by a devastating resurgence of "Roya", or coffee leaf rust
disease.
The fungal pathogen has been revived by the intense humidity brought by
the hurricanes Eta and Iota which ripped through Central America in late
2020, destroying crops and displacing hundreds of thousands of people.
"When coffee is not doing well, that's when you see big migrations from
Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua," said René León-Gómez,
executive secretary of PROMECAFE, a regional research network formed by
the national coffee institutes of Central America.
Production in the region, where labor-intensive hand-picking of coffee
is a way of life for many, has dropped by 10% since late 2017 and is
expected to fall further in the season ahead. This means the global
coffee market will become more dependent on mass, mechanized producers
like Brazil, and increasingly vulnerable to price spikes if extreme
weather hits the country's crops.
The decision of farmers to migrate north is a last resort, León-Gómez
said. They have been producing at a loss for years and often also
working on larger farms to make ends meet, he added.
"They're killing themselves. That's the thing."
HEADING NORTHWARDS
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) say they made 1.7 million
apprehensions at the border with Mexico in the last fiscal year which
ended on Sept. 30, the highest number ever recorded. That was double the
level in 2019 and more than four times the number seen last year when
COVID-19 lockdowns were in place.
The CBP does not break down migrants by job type, though the most recent
migration data given exclusively to Reuters by the Honduran coffee
institute (IHCAFE) gives some indication of the numbers involved.
The institute surveyed 990 Honduran coffee farmers and found that in
three popular migration months in 2019 - May, June and July - 5.4% said
at least one member of their family had left for the United States.
If that was replicated across the country's coffee farming sector, the
number of migrants would equal almost 6,000 in those months alone -
equivalent to 6% of all unauthorized Hondurans seeking to cross the
U.S.-Mexico border during that period, according to U.S. border data.
The survey did not capture whole families that migrated so the true
figure could be higher.
Honduran authorities do not have migration figures for this year, though
anecdotal reports from farmers and coffee authorities across Central
America suggest a similar, if not higher, proportion of this year's
migrants are coffee farmers.
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Coffee berries grow in a coffee farm in El Laurel, in the state of
Olancho, Honduras September 22, 2021. REUTERS/Fredy Rodriguez
Bonilla said almost all the 55 or so coffee-farming families in El
Laurel, in the state of Olancho, have seen members migrate over the
past four years, while about 10 entire families have abandoned their
farms altogether and headed north.
The CBP apprehensions data does not cover people
who succeed in crossing the border illegally.
This group includes Hernández' son and Bonilla's four sons, who have
all set off northwards since 2018 in search of a better life.
ROYA WREAKS RUIN
Hand-picking coffee has been a way of life for centuries in poor,
mountainous parts of Central America, in areas too steep,
thin-soiled or forested to grow much else. The region produces about
15% of the world's arabica, the smooth-flavored beans favored over
the rougher robusta by many coffee connoisseurs.
Yet output has plunged 10% in the four years since October 2017,
industry data shows, as farmers accumulated losses amid falling
world coffee prices. Production is expected to fall another 3% in
the current 2021/22 season, despite robust global demand and prices,
industry data shows.
Prices recovered in the middle of this year due to frost and drought
in Brazil and COVID-related logistics snarls, and some farmers were
able to break even for the 2020/21 season that ended on Sept. 30.
Yet the farmers and officials interviewed said that, with output
still falling in Central America because of the resurgent Roya
disease, making a living from farming coffee will remain a struggle.
Output is just as important as price in determining profits, because
it lowers costs by increasing economies of scale for inputs like
seedlings, fertilizer and pesticides.
Roya first broke out in the region in 2012, and by 2014, over half
of the coffee crops had been affected, before it was largely brought
under control.
The humidity brought by the two hurricanes of 2020, which themselves
wreaked $3.3 billion worth of damage to regional economies, boosted
the prevalence of the disease from low single digit percentages of
coffee plants in the 2019/20 season to 15-25% in 2020/21, according
to industry data.
Eugenio Bonilla, a 56-year-old coffee farmer from El Laurel and
brother of Maria, said his production nearly halved in the 2020/21
season, mostly because of Roya.
"It's useless that coffee prices have been improving if the trees
are not in good condition," he said.
Eugenio said some farmers in his hamlet had suffered eight years of
losses.
Their margins are razor-thin, with around half the global coffee
price going to middlemen.
When world coffee prices averaged $1.41 per lb in 2019/20, for
example, Bonilla said he and his fellow farmers received just 15
lempiras ($0.6238) per lb of coffee that cost them around 20
lempiras ($0.8317) to produce.
'IT'S THE ONLY WAY'
Several coffee farmers in Central America spoke of frightening debt
spirals.
"They start selling their things," said José Magaña, 60, a farmer
from the state of Santa Ana in El Salvador. "If they have a couple
of oxen, in the case of small coffee growers, they sell it. If
someone is a medium-sized coffee grower, he sells a house, sells
other things to be able to work the farms."
Carlos Landaverde's farm in Santa Ana was seized by the bank earlier
this year. The 44-year-old said he was undeterred by the prospective
perils of migrating with his family.
"It doesn't matter," he said. "It's the only way."
(Reporting by Maytaal Angel in London, Gustavo Palencia in
Tegucigalpa and Sofia Menchu in Guatemala City. Additional reporting
by Diego Ore in Mexico City and Nelson Rentería in San Salvador.
Editing by Nigel Hunt and Pravin Char)
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