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Tanzania coffee report: New plants to boost production by 20%

Raw Common Coffee Bean
Tanzania
Published Jul 12, 2023

Tridge summary

Coffee production in Tanzania is expected to increase by over 20% in 2023/24 due to improved weather conditions and the introduction of productive coffee plants by the government in 2018. As a result, exports of Tanzanian coffee are projected to rise by around 13% to 1.27 million bags, representing 94% of the annual production volume. The increase in production is attributed to the recovery from drought conditions and the natural cycle of new arabica trees reaching their peak production period.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

Coffee production in Tanzania is expected to increase by more than 20% in the market year 2023/24, due to improved weather conditions and fruitfulness from coffee plants introduced by the government in 2018. With the increased green coffee supplies, exports of Tanzanian coffees are expected to increase approximately 13% to 1.27 million bags, representing approximately 94% of the annual production volume, according to the most recent USDA Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) report on the Tanzanian coffee sector. [Note: This is part of a series of DCN stories exploring the FAS coffee annual reports. The U.S. information agency is currently scheduled to deliver 16 annual country-level reports on the coffee sector. Each of those reports come from different authors and field offices.] Recovery from drought conditions, combined with the highest production period in the natural cycle of new arabica trees, is driving the production spike, according to the FAS report. “In 2018, the ...
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