Guatemala

About

Since 1859, coffee has been one of the engines of the Guatemalan economy. Coffee exports are the country's largest producer of foreign exchange income, it counts on 40% of all agriculture revenue. It is also the largest employer in the country. 12% of the labour force is directly employed by the coffee industry and thirty per cent indirectly. United States, Japan and some Scandanavian countries are the main segments of export sales. Even if Guatemala still has no conditions to compete on volume with other coffee producers such as Colombia and even Honduras, the country is one of most respected specialty coffee origins. The SH beans are among the best coffees in the world, full bodied, acid and fragrant. Maragogypes are no longer the best in terms of quality.

The main coffee regions of the country are: Huehuetenango, Santa Rosa, San Marcos and Quetzaltenango.

Mainly Arabica

Arabica varieties include: Arabigo, Bourbon, Typica, Margogype. Although the production of Maragogype is getting smaller, Guatemala produces some mutant coffees of high quality. Regretfully however the original Bourbon variety of coffee is being replaced by newer ones, less special but of a higher yield.

Guatemala grows a small quantity of robusta that is mostly sold as washed robusta.

Crop Periods

Flowering Period

Main : From May until July

 

Harvesting Period

Main : From August until April

 

Shipping Period

Main : November until June

Destination countries

1. USA
2. Germany
3. Japan, Belgium

Coffee is also the largest employer in the country. 12% of the labour force is directly employed by the coffee industry and thirty per cent indirectly.

Transit Days

 

Imp.

EU

US

Santo Tomas de Castilla (Atlantic)

85%

10

17

Puerto Quetzal (Pacific)

15%

14

27

ICO Figures

Varieties

Arabica varieties include: Arabigo, Bourbon, Typica, Maragogype. Although the production of Maragogype is getting smaller, Guatemala produces some mutant coffees of high quality.

By Region

For years Guatemala had been using a region name for one of its best S.H.B. the "S.H.B. Antigua". Later the adjective "Genuine" was added when other "region names" began to be used as a classification method. Exporters and producers initiated this method of classification to help differentiate S.H.B. coffees of very different taste characteristics (for example between Coban and Huehuetenango). 

A new method of classification by region has been put in place and is supported and promoted by Anacafé. This classification applies to gourmet SHB.
 

Highland Huehue


Although all of Guatemala's speciality grade coffee is grown high in the mountains, the highland description was saved for Huehuetenango. The region's magnificent Cuchumatanes mountain range has the highest non-volcanic peaks in all of Central America and is the highest and driest of the three non-volcanic regions of Guatemala. Thanks to the dry hot winds which blow into the mountains from the Tehuantepec plain in Mexico, the region is protected from frost, allowing coffee to be cultivated up to 2,000 metres.
 

Altitude:

1500-2000 metres

Soil:

Limestone

Major microclimate influence:

Tehuantepec plain

Annual rainfall:

1200-1400 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 20-24°C
Relative humidity: 70-80%

Principle drying process:

Sun and dryer

Type of shade:

Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai

Harvest season:

January / April

 

Volcanic San Marcos 

 

San Marcos gets the coveted "Volcanic" nametag because it has more volcanoes than any of the other coffee-growing regions, including the highest in Central America:Tajumulco and Tacaná. Warmest of all the seven coffee growing regions, it also has the highest rainfall, the most intense rainy season and the earliest flowering.

 

Altitude:

1400-1800 metres

Soil:

Volcanic

Major microclimate influence:

Pacific Ocean

Annual rainfall:

4000-5000 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 21-27°C
Relative humidity: 70-80%

Principle drying process:

Sun and dryer

Type of shade:

Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai

Harvest season:

December / March


 

Traditional Atitlan

Eighty per cent of traditional Atitlan is grown by small producers, mostly ethnic Maya. "Traditional" reflects the way many process their harvest by hand. Of Guatemala's four volcanic coffee regions, Atitlan soil is the richest in organic matter. Ninety per cent of Traditional Atitlan is cultivated along the slopes of the volcanoes that dominate the shores of Lake Atitlan, the largest and most famous of Guatemala's many crater lakes.

 

Altitude:

1500-1700 metres

Soil:

Volcanic

Major microclimate influence:

Large crater lake

Annual rainfall:

1800-2300 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 20-23°C
Relative humidity: 75-85%

Principle drying process:

Sun

Type of shade:

Gravilea & Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon, Typica
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai

Harvest season:

December / March


 

Rainforest Coban

 

"Coban" comes from the Maya Keckchi word "cob" (the place of clouds). Rainforests are characteristic for the region as is the moisture that nourishes them. Coban is quite different from Guatemala's other coffee regions: cloudy, rainy and cool all year round, with soil formed from limestone and clay. A typical rainforest, Coban is cultivated on the region's distinctive rolling hills, under the tropical influences of the Atlantic basin and the jungles to the north.

 

Altitude:

1300-1500 metres

Soil:

Limestone & Clay

Major microclimate influence:

Atlantic Ocean

Annual rainfall:

3000-4000 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 15-20°C
Relative humidity: 85-95%

Principle drying process:

Dryer

Type of shade:

Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon, Margopype
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai, Pache

Harvest season:

December / March


 

Fraijanes Plateau

This region is so high, extensive and rugged that most people never realise they are standing on a plateau, much less one that defines the geographical heart of the country and rivals Antigua as the oldest coffee growing region in the country. Volcanic soil filled with pumice, very high altitude and an active volcano are characteristics that Fraijanes shares with nearby Antigua. But plenty of rain, high and variable humidity, and a wider temperature range gives it a different climate.
 

Altitude:

1400-1800 metres

Soil:

Volcanic with pumice

Major microclimate influence:

Highland plain

Annual rainfall:

1500-3000 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 12-26°C
Relative humidity: 70-90%

Principle drying process:

Sun

Type of shade:

Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai, Pache

Harvest season:

December / February

 

Antigua Classic


Antigua's coffee is "Classic" because it comes from Guatemala's oldest and best-known coffee growing region. Rich volcanic soil, low humidity, lots of sun and cool nights characterise the Antigua region. The valley is dominated by the volcanoes of Agua, Acetenango and Fuego. Every once in a while, Fuego, one of Guatemala's active volcanoes, adds a fresh dusting of mineral rich ash to Antigua's soil.
 

Altitude:

1500-1700 metres

Soil:

Volcanic with pumice

Major microclimate influence:

Enclosed valley

Annual rainfall:

800 -1200 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 18-22°C
Relative humidity: 65%

Principle drying process:

Sun

Type of shade:

Gravilea

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai

Harvest season:

January / mid-March

 

New Oriente


It is called "Oriente" because it's Guatemala's easternmost speciality coffee region and called "New" because it's the newest producer of speciality coffee and is bursting with energy. Rainy and cloudy, Oriente is similar to Coban in climate, only less so. Located over what was once a volcanic range, it soil is derived from metamorphic rock. This makes it balance in minerals and very different from Guatemala's volcanic regions, all of which have seen volcanic activity since coffee was first planted.
 

Altitude:

1300-1700 metres

Soil:

Metamorphic and clay

Major microclimate influence:

Atlantic Ocean

Annual rainfall:

1800-2000 mm

Average temperature:

Low / High: 18-25°C
Relative humidity: 70-80%

Principle drying process:

Sun and dryer

Type of shade:

Inga

Varieties:

Taller-growing: Bourbon
Shorter-growing: Caturra, Catuai, Pache

Harvest season:

December / March

 

By altitude

Quality

Altitude

 

Good Washed

700 metres

Extra Good Washed

700 / 850 metres

Prime Washed

600 / 900metres

Extra Prime (E.P.)

900 / 1100 metres

Semi Hard Bean (S.H.)

1100 / 1200 metres

Hard Bean (H.B.)

1200 / 1400 metres

Fancy Hard Bean

1500 / 1600 metres

Strictly Hard Bean (S.H.B.)

1600 / 1700 metres

By Defects

US preparation

- 100% above screen 13
- Homogeneous colour
- Humidity 9-12%
- Defects max 23 per 300 gr (only for washed Arabicas)
- clean cup, without defects

Euro preparation

- 100% above screen 15 (with a tolerance of 5% above scr 14)
- Homogeneous and green colour
- Humidity 9-12%
- Defects max 8 per 300 gr 
- clean cup, without defects

Gourmet preparation

- 100% above screen 16 with a tolerance of 15% above screen 15, no peaberries nor elephants
- Homogeneous and green colour
- Humidity between 11 & 12%
- Defects max 5 per 300 gr and free from quakers
- clean cup, without defects and with acidity as well as body

By Screensize

US preparation

100% above screen 13

European preparation

100% above screen 15 (with a tolerance of 5% above scr 14)

Gourmet preparation

100% above screen 16 with a tolerance of 15% above screen 15, no peaberries or elephants

Nice to know

The "Strictly Hard Bean" coffees are among the best in the world : complete, full bodied taste, acid and fragrant cup.

Typical description

Guatemala SHB EP Huehuetenango
Guatemala Strictly Hard Bean, European Prep. from the region of Huehuetenango

 

 

Picking (1)

Mainly by hand

Washing (2)

Wet - Milled

Fermentation (3)

In tanks for approx 36 hours and washed under pressure

Drying (4)

In the sun on patios / artificially in tower or drum dryers

Sorting

manually/electronic

(1) About Picking:

Throughout the country ripe cherries are being picked during the months of September to April. The smaller planters deliver the daily yield to small collecting stations where they get a receipt for the quantity & quality delivered. From these stations the coffee is transported in lorries to the central processing plants (Beneficios). The big planters deliver directly to the Beneficios or (in most cases) handle the coffee themselves.

 

(2) About Washing

The cherry coffee supplied to the beneficios is pregraded in a siphon tank with the aid of water. Stones and other heavy foreign matter sink to the bottom while wood, empty or bad cherries float to the top and are washed away. The remaining good cherries are then conducted, with water, to drum pulpers. After pulping the beans are once again screened to remove lighter floating particles and channelled through a siphon into the fermentation tanks. In contradiction with Costa Rica, Guatemala may still use water for density selection.

 

(3) About Fermentation

Depending upon the individual size of the Beneficios, the fermentation tanks are usually made of either sheet steel, brick or concrete. Coffee is placed in these tanks, for about 36 hours at a temperature varying from 21° to 28° Celsius. The fermentation process is complete when all mucilage has been removed and the beans make a crunching sound when rubbed together.

After fermentation, the beans are washed out of the tanks with water and are conveyed through a pipeline or washing channels using special pumps. During this process all residual mucilage is rubbed off by the mutual friction among the beans. Finally the coffee is once again screened in the syphon tank and washed with fresh water before it's ready for drying.  Water is usually taken from wells or rivers.

 

(4) About Drying

The clean and drained parchment coffee is spread out to dry, in the sun, in a layer of about 15cm thick on drying grounds (usually concrete or for better coffees stone or clay). The coffee is then continuously turned over for approximately 5 or 6 days by hand using slides or small tractors equipped with a pushing device resembling a snowplough. In the artificial drying method, the coffee is dried in drum dryers at a temperature of about 60°Celsius. These drum dryers use dry parchment shells, wood or diesel for fuel and the average drying process will take about 20-36 hours.

Nice to know

Over 150 years of experience and tradition are reflected in Guatemala's fine coffees.

About Exporters

In Guatemala, coffee is grown on 269,000 hectares of land spread throughout nearly every corner of the country and exerts considerable influence over all of its economic sectors. Milling operations are dispersed throughout the land, and directly involves one sixth of the population and nearly everyone else indirectly. Guatemala has a wide variety of qualities and commercial grades, prepared in over 4,000 wet mills. In all, coffee exports represent, on average, over 35% of total exports and 6% of the Gross National Product (GNP). In all, there are 44,000 coffee producers of which the bulk is associated in cooperatives which account for 69% of all producers. Small independant farmers account for 6% of the growers and medium-size farms are 2,5%. 

About 35 companies account for 90 per cent of the total exports, the five largest of which register an average of 46 per cent of sales each crop year. 

A.N.A.C.A.F.E. (Associacion National del Cafe) is a regulatory agency. Anacafé started as the Central Coffee Office in 1960.
 

Anacafé projects

Small Producers Productivity Project (begun in 1986)

Program attacks traditional low productivity among small producers head-on through technology transfer of cultivation process and access to supervised credit through established associations of small producers or "friendship and work" groups.

Credit Program with Banrural (begun in 1999)

Anacafé signed with this agricultural development bank, a credit program which in its first year already benefited more than 1,500 small producers. 

Funrural (Foundation for Rural Development began in 1986)

Guatemala's coffee sector addressing social issues in the health and educational sector.

CFO and ICO projects in Guatemala

Integrated management of coffee berry borer

The project promotes sustainable developments by introducing an effective integrated pest management system and reducing the use of chemical pest control methods. It will also enhance productivity and competitiveness through producing higher quality coffee and reducing production losses. 

Study on coffee marketing systems and policies.

The project will evaluate coffee marketing systems and policies and identify factors which are important for effective marketing. The results will guide developing countries in improving the efficiency of marketing their coffee.

Nice to know

The share of SHB coffees has grown the most. If smuggling out of Honduras would keep on decreasing statistics might show lower exports even if the production rises.

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