ZAMBOANGA CITY, PHILIPPINES— Gov. Sakur Tan has urged local coffee farmers to form or join cooperatives and strengthen the industry by maintaining the high quality of their products.
Tan, who met recently with members of the Federation of Sulu Coffee Producers Cooperative (FSCPC), said he would help them mechanize the farming process to speed up production from planting to harvesting to distribution, especially now that the province is exporting Arabica and Robusta coffee beans to Japan.
“We want to strengthen the local coffee industry by improving quality, increasing productivity, and training more farmers,” the governor said.
FSCPC chairman Muddazer Hailanie and secretary Abdurajik Dansalan said 10 other coffee farmers’ cooperatives have expanded their plantation to 68 hectares and that 12 more cooperatives are joining the federation.
Hailanie, citing the latest coffee test results, said Sulu’s Arabica and Robusta cherries, also popularly known as “Kahawa Sug,” is now ranked 4th in the entire country.
He also said that Japan has placed an order of two metric tons of Arabica and Robusta coffee.
Tan commended the FSCPC for its efforts and commitment to strengthening the coffee industry. To spur the growth of the industry, he also provided an unspecified amount and other farm materials, including a tractor, to the cooperative.