How farmers in Burundi banded together to get fair prices for avocados
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[October 07, 2024] By
RODNEY MUHUMUZA and GASPARD MAHEBURWA
KAYANZA, Burundi (AP) — Farmers in a remote part of Burundi know to look
for a truck parked by a highway when it is time to sell their avocados.
They materialize from villages and form a crowd around the vehicle,
watching closely as crews weigh and load the crated fruits.
Such roadside exchanges, repeated regularly during peak harvest season,
long provided a ready market for smallholder avocado growers in a
country that’s sometimes ranked as the world’s poorest. But the
transactions now promise real earnings thanks in part to the
intervention of the national government and farmers’ cooperatives that
worked to set terms for foreign avocado dealers.
Just a year ago, farmers selling their avocados to the transporters
earned 10 cents per kilogram (2.2 pounds), far less than the price for a
small bottle of water. These days, they get roughly 70 cents for the
same quantity, a meaningful increase for people who mainly farm to feed
their families.
A major change in the trade is that payments in U.S. currency now go
into the bank accounts of cooperatives that pay their members directly
almost as soon as the avocado haulers leave. Acting as intermediaries,
groups such as Green Gold Burundi, which has its headquarters in the
northern province of Kayanza and represents 200,000 farmers nationwide,
say they are better positioned than individual growers to stem
exploitation.
The participation of the cooperatives is an important step toward
regulating the country's avocado exports, said Ferdinand Habimana, vice
president of Green Gold Burundi’s administrative board. Although the
government is promoting avocado farming to diversify exports, avocados
grown in Burundi are yet to be trademarked as coming from there, he
said.
“So it is legally done now, but what we are developing now is that the
(avocados) can reach the final destination as avocados taken from
Burundi,” said Habimana, speaking of his group’s dealings with exporters
in Tanzania and elsewhere in East Africa.
Zacharie Munezero, who oversees quality management for Green Gold
Burundi, acknowledged that the 70 cents farmers earn for a kilogram of
avocados is still insufficient when exporters can fetch between $3 and
$5 for the same quantity in international markets.
Avocados are cheap in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, where they can
be purchased from farmers in bulk for almost nothing. In Burundi,
avocados became more widely cultivated after the country's former
leader, Pierre Nkurunziza, started extolling the fruit in 2007 as a
source of nutrition and income.
Many households that don’t produce the varieties favored by exporters
usually look after at least one avocado plant of the local variety known
to Burundians as “amapeter,” in remembrance of Nkurunziza, who died in
2020.
But while coffee and tea exports – Burundi’s traditional sources of
much-needed foreign currency – have long been coordinated, the trade in
Burundian avocados has remained unregulated, according to farmer
representatives and a trade official. They said that avocado exports
could be as profitable for the country as coffee if the government
asserted its rule-making authority.
Desirable measures include guaranteeing a minimum price for farmers,
stopping foreign traders from dealing directly with farmers, and
encouraging widespread cultivation of the Hass avocados favored by
European consumers, they said.
Burundi “cannot rely only on coffee and tea,” Onesime Niyukuri, an
adviser in the foreign trade department of the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, said of the country's limited exports.
If avocado dealers from elsewhere in East Africa “can come and buy at a
price that is already set by the government, there is no problem,” he
said.
The government ramped up its efforts to organize avocado exports earlier
this year as dollar shortages fueled sporadic shortages of sugar and
other goods.
Under new regulations, which require foreign dealers to register with
local authorities, exporters must submit copies of their supply
contracts and specify market destinations for Burundian avocados,
according to the Ministry of Trade, Transport, Industry and Tourism.
Burundi aims to export more than 10 million tonnes (11 million tons) of
avocados each year by 2030, said Niyukuri, citing the government’s
strategic plan. Recent figures on Burundi’s foreign exchange earnings
from the avocado crop were not readily available.
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A farmer harvests avocados at a plantation in Kayanza province,
Burundi, Sept. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Brian Inganga)
The government’s target is to plant
50,000 avocado trees in each of Burundi’s 17 provinces. Local
authorities in provinces such as Kayanza want each household to own
at least 10 trees producing exportable avocados.
That includes the Mexican variety Fuerte and especially Hass
avocado, the most commercially successful variety globally. The
fruit, which has dark bumpy skin and bright yellow-green flesh,
takes more than two weeks to ripen and can survive several days in
transit.
Burundi, a small mountainous country about the size of Maryland, is
home to 13 million people. Annual income per capita was $199 in
2023, among the lowest globally, and nearly 65% of the population
lives below the poverty line, according to World Bank figures.
Agriculture is the main economic activity, and many people in rural
provinces such as Kayanza mostly grow the potatoes and vegetables
they will consume through the year. For some, including those with a
few avocado trees in their compounds, the pear-shaped green fruit
has proven a surprisingly reliable source of income.
Eric Nsabimana, a farmer in Kayanza, recalled starting as an avocado
grower in response to the campaign of former leader Nkurunziza. Some
farmers, feeling forced into planting avocados, uprooted the
seedlings the government gave them and now rue the missed
opportunity, Nsabimana said.
“The people who didn’t plant, they regret,” he said.
Nsabimana, who anticipates making more than $6,000 a year selling
avocados now that the price is higher, said he used his earnings to
acquire five more hectares (12.4 acres) of land now planted with 500
avocado trees.
Habimana, the senior official with Green Gold Burundi, said his
group moved to mobilize avocado farmers for better rewards after it
realized at the beginning of the year they were being exploited by
foreign traders.
One day in January, he followed a truck transporting Burundian
avocados to neighboring Tanzania, believing the cargo was destined
for consumption in the region. When he saw the avocados getting
washed, weighed and packed in the town of Njombe, he realized the
goods were bound for another export market abroad.
“There was another destination somewhere else, not in Njombe,”
Nsabimana said.
When he returned to Kayanza, Green Gold Burundi prioritized plans to
register avocado farmers in a way that eliminated middlemen and
guaranteed a reasonable price for farmers. The cooperative pays
taxes and keeps a cut of avocado proceeds to sustain operations that
include providing members with seedlings and organic manure.
Munezero, the cooperative's quality management official, said that
while the price of avocados “is still a problem,” his group is
“focusing on capacity building" and encouraging residents to plant
more avocado trees.
Green Gold Burundi has distributed millions of seedlings in the past
year, finding enthusiasm among farmers eager to join the avocado
bandwagon. Even growers with only a few backyard Hass plants said
they increasingly see avocado as a cash crop.
“Avocados mean dollars to us,” one such grower, Samuel Niyinyibutsa,
said, adding that he knows some Kayanza residents who feel “left
behind” when they see others collect payments for their produce.
“But they still have time,” Niyinyibutsa said. “They can be awakened
and start planting avocados because avocado can do well to them as
it is doing well to us.”
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