Archive | Agriculture

DLNR notifying ranchers of cattle trespass

DLNR notifying ranchers of cattle trespass

The State of Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources would like to inform the public of cattle trespass in the following areas: Haao Springs Restricted Watershed, Waiaha Springs North Kona Watershed Reserve and the Honomalino (Kapua-Manuka) Section of South Kona Forest Reserve.

This is a 30 day notice to neighboring ranchers to please remove their cattle from the forest reserves and watersheds noted. Cattle found within these boundaries after 30 days from the publication of this notice are subject to actions specified in HRS-183-19, which includes removing, shooting or destroying the cattle without compensation to the owner by Division of Forestry and Wildlife staff.

We would also like to remind the public that cattle removal operations are ongoing in the following forest reserves and watersheds per public notices published in October 2005: Hilo Watershed, Humuula, Laupahoehoe, and Piha Sections of the Hilo Forest Reserve; Kaohe, Kukuiopae and Opihihale/Olelomoana Sections of South Kona Forest Reserve; Mauna Kea Forest Reserve, Kau Forest Reserve, Kapapala Forest Reserve, Manowaialee Forest Reserve, Honuaula Forest Reserve, Kohala Forest Reserve and Upper Waiakea Forest Reserve.

Public participation in trespass cattle removal in forest reserves by hunting is illegal without authorization through an official announcement through public notice and issuance of an animal control permit from the Division of Forestry and Wildlife. Currently, animal control permits for cattle are only being issued for the Hilo Watershed section of Hilo Forest Reserve.

For further information, call the Division of Forestry and Wildlife in Hilo at 974-4221.

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Keauhou Wednesday Market (March 17)

Keauhou Wednesday Market (March 17)

Keauhou Wednesday Market is at the Sheraton Keauhou Bay Resort & Spa where fresh produce and hand made items are available. Sponsored by the Kona County Farm Bureau.

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HCA bids fond aloha to Virginia Easton Smith

HCA bids fond aloha to Virginia Easton Smith

Special to Hawaii 24/7 by Hawaii Coffee Association board member Sharon Wood, Ph.D., Arianna Farms Ono Kona Coffee, LLC

Last December, the HCA bid aloha to Virginia Easton Smith, from the Cooperative Extension Service, UH Manoa. The HCA wants to acknowledge Virginia’s many contributions which can be felt throughout the Hawaiian coffee industry.

Whether consulting in the field, interpreting the latest coffee research one-on-one or in an article, or showing how to use a moisture meter, Virginia’s work spanned the range of topics for producing the highest quality coffee.

Virginia Easton Smith

Virginia and her husband Allan moved to Hawaii in 1981, so she could pursue her degree in horticulture and to get away from the harsh Illinois winters. They planned to stay for three years, but they fell in love with Hawaii and ‘temporary’ turned into 19 years!

After receiving her B.S. and M.S. degrees in horticulture, she held several jobs including working for a landscape contractor and as a University of Hawaii field technician. In 1992, came the move to the Kona area to start her position as Agriculture Extension Agent, Cooperative Extension, Service, UH Manoa.

In addition to numerous farm-based educational seminars, she made countless walks of farms, pointing out nutritional needs of various sections, educating about pest control, and more. She also wrote a newspaper column on agriculture for 16 years for the West Hawaii Today and the Hawaii Tribute Herald.

Virginia says that in response to the incredible number of brand new farmers moving into the Kona districts and developing farms, she began a twice monthly, and later once monthly, workshop called Coffee Talk.

She was a regular invited speaker at many professional coffee associations, and at the annual Kona Coffee Cultural Festival, attendees always looked forward to her workshops and participation with the Picking Contest.

Throughout the years, one thing that coffee people say they especially appreciate has been Virginia’s ability to combine knowledge from the field with the academic science of coffee research. Her kindness and integrity have made her a true friend throughout the coffee community.

At the HCA 14th Annual Conference and Trade Show in July 2009, President Jim Wayman presented the special President’s Award to Virginia Easton Smith for her continual contributions to the Hawaiian Coffee industry.

Virginia continues to share her horticultural expertise with a new community on the Gulf Coast, in her new position as an Agriculture and Natural Resources Extension Agent with the Texas AgriLife Extension Service.

Mahalo, Virginia. We will miss you, and we wish you and your family the very best in your new adventure! Aloha!!!

— Find out more:
www.hawaiicoffeeassociation.com

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Biodynamics workshop at South Kona Green Market (March 14)

Biodynamics workshop at South Kona Green Market (March 14)

MEDIA RELEASE

The South Kona Green Market will host Dr. William Shock, Lisa Shock, and Gene Nolin for an informative community education event 10 am.-2 p.m. Sunday, March 14 at the Amy B. H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook.

Centered on Biodynamic Agricultural Practices, the workshop will feature a scientific approach to sustainable soil enrichment. Learn how to cut your fertilizer costs while increasing your crop yields. By building soil, the land benefits year after year. There will be demonstrations, talks, and question and answer periods with the opportunity to develop your own plan.

Shock is a retired large animal veterinarian who grows berries and medicinal herbs biodynamiclally with his wife Lisa. Their current focus is sustainable agricultural and etheric formative forces. Gene Nolin is a West Hawaii resident and nationally known soil and crop consultant (www.livingsoils.com) specializing in biological practices designed to maximize soil nutrition and crop yield.

“This is a terrific opportunity for our community,” SKGM manager Tim Bruno said. “Utilizing natural, biological processes to improve soil health and create a sustainable method for feeding our crops is squarely within our Market’s mission. We had to jump at the chance to get such knowledgeable experts to speak with us.”

The South Kona Green Market is 9 a.m.-2 p.m. every Sunday at the Amy B. H. Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook. The SKGM provides a place to educate, connect, and support a sustainable island community through locally produced agricultural and hand-crafted products.

— Find out more:
www.skgm.org

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Symposium looks at saving, restoring seed (April 17-18)

Symposium looks at saving, restoring seed (April 17-18)

The early registration deadline for Hua Ka Hua - Restore Our Seed Symposium is March 15. (Photo courtesy of The Kohala Center)

MEDIA RELEASE

Seed is the foundation of a thriving local agricultural economy and is essential to the development of Hawaii’s food production, future sustainability, and self-reliance. Hawaii currently imports nearly 90 percent of its food and 99 percent of its seed, creating a vulnerable and dependent agricultural economy in the state.

Restoring and revitalizing the local seed industry is the goal of the Hua Ka Hua — Restore Our Seed Symposium on April 17-18 at the Outrigger Keauhou Beach Resort in Kona. Farmers, gardeners, and seed experts from around the state and mainland will share ways to grow, select, and save high quality seeds for both home and market during the symposium.

Participants will also help to plan a public seed initiative to support on-farm/garden research and expertise in seed variety trials, selection, saving and storage, and collaborate on the development of an open-pollinated organic seed industry for market farmers and home gardeners.

“Seed as a living, renewable, and sustainable agricultural treasure,” said Nancy Redfeather of The Kohala Center. Redfeather is coordinator for the symposium and for the Hawaii Island Seed Exchange. “Only by growing it out, having the knowledge to shepherd and steward it, improve and save it, and pass it on to our communities and our children will we begin to address the concerns of future food security. Seed remains our connection to food, culture, family, community, land, and life. Seed is the living source of life on Earth.

“Open-pollinated seed is being lost at a rapid rate. In the United States, 95 percent of varieties grown in 1900 are no longer available. Worldwide, in the past century, three-quarters of our food biodiversity has been lost. Of all the food plant varieties that once fed humanity, only 25 percent remain, and only 10 percent of the remaining varieties are available for sale today. These hardy genetic varieties were the mainstay of the home and the market garden for centuries.

“Over the last three decades, plant breeders have focused on developing varieties that are adapted to high-input industrial agriculture, and have long shelf life and uniformity that is more suited to large-scale farms. The seed needs of organic, low-input and smaller scale farmers and gardeners have not been addressed, and there is great potential for adapting varieties for these food producers,” Redfeather said. “It is our vision that seed working groups will emerge from this symposium to gather knowledge, do variety trials, and offer field days to share seed and information on-farm—leading to production of high quality seed for both the home and market.”

The symposium features presentations by statewide and national seed experts on topics ranging from a historical perspective and reproduction of Hawaiian crops, and the state of seed in Hawaii to variety improvement/breeding and seed cleaning, saving and storage.

Symposium presenters include:

* Hector R. Valenzuela, Ph.D., Crop Extension Specialist, College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources (CTAHR), University of Hawaii (UH) at Manoa;
* Theodore J.K. Radovich, Ph.D., Sustainable Farming Systems Laboratory, Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, UH Manoa;
* Alvin Yoshinaga, Ph.D., Restoration Ecologist, Center for Conservation Research and Training, UH Manoa;
* Matthew Dillon, director of advocacy, Organic Seed Alliance;
* Micaela Colley, director of research and education, Organic Seed Alliance;
* Frank Morton, Wild Garden Seeds in Philomath, Ore.;
* John Navazio, Ph.D., research and education specialist for Organic Seed Alliance and Extension Plant Breeding, and seed specialist for Washington State University;
* Jerry Konanui, expert in Hawaiian food plant varieties, their propagation, cultivation, harvesting, processing, and use.

The symposium includes a seed swap sponsored by Regeneration Botanical Garden of Kauai, and information booths are available for a nominal fee to conference participants.

A free public lecture will precede the symposium from 5:30–7 p.m. Friday, April 16, at the resort. “The Story of Seed: Wild, Domesticated, Bred, and Engineered — Where Did We Begin and Where Might We Go?” will be presented by Dillon and Morton.

Symposium planners are surveying potential participants about their interest and knowledge of seed growing and saving. The survey initially elicited 106 statewide responses.

Registration is $100 by March 15; $150 after March 15 (cost includes buffet lunch for both days). To register, go to www.kohalacenter.org/seedsymposium/registration.html

The Outrigger Keauhou Beach Resort is offering a special symposium room rate.

The symposium is hosted by The Kohala Center, with funding through an USDA Organic Research and Education Initiative (OREI) grant. Other sponsors include the College of Agriculture, Forestry, and Natural Resource Management, UH Hilo; the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, UH Manoa; the County of Hawaii; and Keauhou-Kahaluu Education Group/Kamehameha Schools.

The Kohala Center is an independent, not-for-profit center for research and education about and for the environment. The Kohala Center builds local, regional, national and international partnerships that focus on global challenges — energy self-reliance, food self-reliance, and ecosystem health — in a locally relevant and internationally valuable way.

— Find out more:
www.kohalacenter.org

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Container gardening at Keauhou Wednesday Market

Container gardening at Keauhou Wednesday Market

MEDIA RELEASE

The Keauhou Wednesday Market is hosting an Introduction to Container Gardening at 10 a.m. Wednesday, March 3 at the Sheraton Keauhou Beach Resort and Spa.

Bree DuPertuis, Kona Outdoor Circle’s education director, will present an overview of how a variety of containers can produce astounding assortment of healthy plants not only for visual beauty as well as to provide health fresh food.

This information is useful for anyone, whether they live on a farm or in a condominium.

The free weekly Keauholu Wednesday Market located on the front lawn at the Sheraton Keauhou Beach Resort and Spa.

For further information, call the Kona County Farm Bureau at 324-6011.

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Grow Hawaiian Festival in Captain Cook (Feb. 27)

Grow Hawaiian Festival in Captain Cook (Feb. 27)

MEDIA RELEASE

If you have a passion for native and Polynesian introduced plants, then you won’t want to miss the 6th Annual Grow Hawaiian Festival at the Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden in Captain Cook. This festival is 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 27.

Over the last six years, this festival has attracted practitioners of the Hawaiian arts, biologists, conservationists, and horticulturists – professionals who share a common passion for the native and Polynesian introduced plants of Hawaii.

The Annual Grow Hawaiian Festival has something for everyone at any age. There will be hands-on activities for the keiki and adults, cultural demonstrations, ask-the expert booths, displays, live entertainment, and much more!

The festival is presented by Hawaii Forest & Trail, and sponsored in part by Hawaii Electric Light Company.

For more information call 323-3318 or visit www.bishopmuseum.org/exhibits/greenwell/greenwell.html

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Economic effects of blending Kona coffee analyzed

Economic effects of blending Kona coffee analyzed

(Reader Opinions Disclaimer: This column allows members of the community to share their opinions and views, which do not necessarily reflect those of Hawaii 24/7, its staff, sponsors or anyone other than the writer. Hawaii 24/7 reserves the right to refuse any column deemed to be misinformation, of an unethical nature, a personal attack, or a blatant commercial pitch.)

By Andrew Hetzel

A new study commissioned by the Kona Coffee Farmers Association touts the benefits of legislating that all products sold with the label Kona Coffee within the State of Hawaii should consist of 100% coffee grown in Kona.

While I am in agreement with the concept of truth in labeling and believe that the origin and percentage of coffee blends should be identified on packaging, I disagree with the assessment that a 100%-only restriction would benefit the Kona coffee industry (but may be a windfall for other coffee growers in Hawaii outside of the Kona district).

My good friend and colleague Dr. Shawn Steiman makes a detailed technical analysis of the report on industry blog Roaste. I recommend that you read it at www.roaste.com/CoffeeBlogs/shawn/Kona-coffee-blends-and-their-economic-repercussions

Additionally, I find the study makes two additional assumptions that are incorrect:

1) All Kona coffees are good and desirable. False. Unfortunately, 100% Kona Coffee does not necessarily equate to 100% ‘good’ coffee. Being the only licensed coffee Q grader in Hawaii and one who is presently engaged on a project funded by the USDA to grade coffees in the State, I find that the far majority of 100% Kona coffees I have sampled directly from farms or on retail stores shelves to be of marginally acceptable quality, and most a poor value for their high selling cost in comparison to other world origins.

A rare few are exceptional, but these coffees have largely pursued a strategy of developing and and marketing their own estate label brands instead of relying on the Kona appalachian moniker to justify their high cost to consumers.

In the commercial coffee trade outside of Hawaii, 100% Kona Coffee often occupies the same “exotic” designation as Jamaica Blue Mountain Coffee, Nepal Coffee and even Kopi Luwak, all high-priced novelties that has some measure of fame on the primary basis of marketing and inordinate cost rather than commercial viability.

This market position must change in order for the origin to survive and no amount of labeling will influence the purchase decisions of commercial traders or roasters — only taste will change the impression of professionals.

2) All Kona blends use 90% inferior commodity grade coffee to complete their products. False. Although I have not worked on behalf of any company to develop a Kona blend, I find it highly unlikely that commodity grade coffees from other origins are being used in typical Kona blend products sold within the State of Hawaii.

More likely, specialty grade coffees from Central or South America would be used for this purpose to create a mild and nondescript flavor, as taints and faults in commodity grades would be easily identifiable to even the most novice palate as undesirable.

There is no direct correlation between price and quality where coffees of differing origins are concerned, so any assumption that coffees being used for blending are inferior to domestic Hawaiian coffees on the basis of price is incorrect.

The study concludes: The blenders’ loss in the No Blending case would be offset by the benefit of improving consumers’ perception of the quality of “Kona Coffee” by avoiding attaching that appellation to a product whose taste is indistinguishable from commodity coffee.

Unfortunately, the greater problem is that most Kona coffees ARE indistinguishable from the coffees used for blending, thus creating a market opportunity for lower cost and subsequently better value blends that approximate the same result.

The only sustainable solution for Kona is to innovate, develop and improve the flavor profile of Kona coffee to match modern commercial and consumer taste preferences through research and then enact strict quality standards for harvesting, processing and eventually roasting.

We must make Kona coffee more desirable for use in modern methods of extraction, like espresso, and provide some objective assurance of quality and traceability for coffees produced to justify the high cost of operating in Hawaii. We must add value, not simply restrict use.

I urge the Hawaii Legislature to not restrict the free market from purchasing blended Kona coffee. In the absence of a blended sales outlet, the price of Kona coffee will collapse, as surplus supplies flood warehouses and Hawaii store shelves, thus creating further hardship for American farmers already hindered by the cost of doing business in the U.S.A. and unique costs of operating in Hawaii.

Furthermore, Hawaii does not exist in a vacuum and is not so distant from the U.S. Mainland or Japan as it may sometimes feel. As prices fall, Kona coffees will merely be sold off to other markets that do not operate under the enforceability of Hawaii’s State laws, further hindering small farmers who cannot reach store shelves on foreign shores.

Business as usual is not the answer, but neither are market restrictions. Make Kona coffee something identifiably unique and of great value, then consumers will no longer be satisfied by anything less than 100%.

Andrew Hetzel is a business advisor to multinational coffee retailers, roasters, institutional investors and industry trade organizations. He is founder of Cafemakers and a board member of World Barista Championship UK, Ltd a board member of World Barista Championship UK, Ltd. Find out more at www.coffeestrategies.com/

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Avocado Fest 2010 pulls in 2,000 fans

Avocado Fest 2010 pulls in 2,000 fans


Story and Photographs by Karin Stanton | Hawaii 24/7 Contributing Editor

The day-long Avocado Festival 2010 featured a slate of entertainment and agriculture presentations, as well as booths of arts, crafts and food Saturday, Feb. 20 at the Amy BH Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden.

The fourth annual event keeps growing. This year, organizers said the crowds likely topped last year 2,000.

Presentations included:

* Diana Duff – Vermiculture
* Jenny Bach – Honeybee Pollenation and Varroa Mites
* Angela Frailey of Recycle Hawaii – Garden Composting
* Ty McDonald, CTAHR – Avocado Grafting and Tree Care
* Diane Heinlein – Everything You Wanted to Know About Mac Nuts

Entertainment was provided by Isa & Kyle, Kona Celtic Connection, Daughters of the Water, Stuheart and Friends, Bolo and Bhakti Tribe. Attendees also were treated to a Green Fashion Show.

— Find out more:
www.maunakeasanctuary.org

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Korean natural farming workshops (Feb. 26-March 2)

Korean natural farming workshops (Feb. 26-March 2)

MEDIA RELEASE

Han Kyu Cho Cho, the founder of Korean Natural Farming, will be in Hilo Feb. 26 through March 2 to teach two workshops on natural farming, sponsored in part by a grant from the county Department of Research and Development.

Master Cho has been teaching natural farming for more than 40 years and has trained more than 18,000 people in 32 countries.

He is director of the Janong Natural Farming Institute (janonglove.com) in Seoul, South Korea.

Natural farming focuses on living soil and Indigenous Micro-Organisms (IMO’s). Natural farming offers true sustainability and island food security, using only inputs already available on your land. Purchasing and importing outside fertilizers is not needed.

A three-day gardening/farming workshop at the University of Hawaii Hilo agriculture farm in Panaewa will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Feb. 26–28. The workshop focuses on theory of Korean Natural Farming and hands-on making of the home-made ingredients used in the plant nutritive cycle. Cost is $50.

A two-day livestock workshop at the UHH agriculture farm will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 1-2. Participants will learn how to raise pigs, chickens and cows without odors and environmental wastes as well as how to produce your own animal feed. Cost is $40.

Master Cho will lead farm tours in the Hilo area on March 3 and in Kona on March 4. The cost of the tour is $10 per day.

The informational flyer and registration form are available on-line at www.localgarden.us. Other inquires can be made to Dwight Sato (808) 345-3464. Prices increase by 50 percent after Feb 19.

Other coordinators and sponsors include the University of Hawaii College of Agriculture Forestry & Natural Resource Management and College of Tropical Agriculture & Human Resources, Hawaii Community College Office of Continuing Education & Training, DC Enterprises Ohana LLC, Hamakua Springs, Ka Hana Noeau, a program of the Kohala Intergenerational Center, and Partners In Development Foundation.

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Report: Kona coffee blends take profits from growers

Report: Kona coffee blends take profits from growers

(Hawaii 24/7 photo special by Ken Love)

MEDIA RELEASE

A new study on the “Economic Effects of Blending Kona Coffee” concludes that current Hawaii law transfers profit from independent Kona coffee growers to the large corporations that produce Kona coffee blend.

HRS 486-120.6 – a statute which authorizes use of the “Kona” name on packages of 90% foreign-grown coffee, is the legal loophole that blenders use to label their mostly foreign coffee with the Kona name, and the result is income flowing out of Hawaii into deep out-of-state corporate accounts.

The study was undertaken by Marvin Feldman, Ph.D. of the San Francisco-based firm of Resource Decisions. Feldman analyzed and contrasted two polar cases – a Business as Usual case and a No Blending case.

The study’s Executive Summary explains: “Under the Business As Usual case -The analysis concludes that blenders gain up to $14.4 million in “economic rent” per year through the use of the Kona appellation on 10% Kona blends. Kona coffee growers experience an economic loss that may be on the order or possibly greater than the benefit to the blenders.

Under the No Blending case — The analysis shows an upper bound estimate of $14.4 million loss per year to the blenders and marketers of 10% Kona coffee blends, with a corresponding gain to growers that may equal or exceed that loss.

The blenders’ loss in the No Blending case would be offset by the benefit of improving consumers’ perception of the quality of “Kona Coffee” by avoiding attaching that appellation to a product whose taste is indistinguishable from commodity coffee.

In 2007, the state Legislature made a factual finding that “existing labeling requirements for Kona coffee causes consumer fraud and confusion and degrades the ‘Kona coffee’ name” (Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 102, 2007). Now, the Feldman Study will focus the attention of the Legislature on the economic damage caused by this consumer fraud, confusion, and misuse of the Kona coffee name – damage not only to Kona coffee growers, but to the state’s revenues as a whole.

“Hawaii needs to protect the economic interests of its farmers,” said Kona Coffee Farmers Association president Bruce Corker, “and should provide the same types of protections for the ‘Kona Coffee’ name as California provides for ‘Napa Valley Wines,’ Idaho provides for ‘Idaho Potatoes,’ and the State of Georgia provides for ‘Vidalia Onions.’”

The Kona Coffee Farmers Association is a volunteer, non-profit, community-based organization of coffee farmers with the mission to promote and protect the economic interests of Kona coffee farmers who grow and sell 100% Kona coffee and to seek greater legal protection of the Kona coffee name.

The full text of Marvin Feldman’s report:

Economic Effects of Blending Kona Coffee — A Preliminary Analysis

Marvin Feldman, Ph.D., Resource Decisions

February 10, 2010 – Executive Summary

This report is the result of a preliminary analysis of the economic effects of blending Kona coffee with non-Hawaiian coffees. Although based on a limited level of effort and limited data availability, it was possible to reach certain conclusions regarding the magnitude and incidence of economic impacts on growers and blenders. Two polar cases were analyzed: a Business As Usual (BAU) case and a No Blending case.

Under the BAU case — The analysis concludes that blenders gain up to $14.4 million in “economic rent” per year through the use of the Kona appellation on 10% Kona blends. Kona coffee growers experience an economic loss that may be on the order or possibly greater than the benefit to the blenders.

Under the No Blending case — The analysis shows an upper bound estimate of $14.4 million loss per year to the blenders and marketers of 10% Kona coffee blends, with a corresponding gain to growers that may equal or exceed that loss. The blenders’ loss in the No Blending case would be offset by the benefit of improving consumers’ perception of the quality of “Kona Coffee” by avoiding attaching that appellation to a product whose taste is indistinguishable from commodity coffee.

With regard to the distribution of the impacts, the report concludes that the marketing of 10% Kona blends authorized by current Hawaii law results in a partial transfer of profit from growers to blenders and from in-state to out-of-state interests.

Background

At present, the Hawaii Revised Statues Chapter 486 -120.6 specifies that the geographic origin labeled coffee must contain a minimum of 10% of coffee from that geographic origin. The Hawaii State Legislature passed SCR 102 in 2007, a bill which among other items requested that the Hawaii Department of Agriculture (HDOA) study labeling requirements for Hawaiian-grown coffee with a geographic designation. In it the HDOA was asked to address a number of issues related to Hawaiian coffee including an economic analysis of increasing the minimum content from 10% to 50% for geographically designated coffees such as Kona coffee. This is the most recent of a number of inquiries regarding the use of the origin name Kona coffee.

The HDOA held several meetings with the concerned associations and industry groups. From these meetings the HDOA noted that the Kona Coffee Farmers Association favors restricting the Kona name to 100% Kona coffee while the Kona Coffee Council and the Hawaii Coffee Association favor retaining the current 10% minimum requirement. In its report to the Legislature prepared in response to SCR 1021, HDOA notes that coffee farmers in the Kona region have expressed concern that the use of the Kona geographic designation for blends with 10% Kona content has lead to consumer confusion and is misleading.

SCR 102 also includes the statement: “WHEREAS, existing labeling requirements for Kona coffee causes consumer fraud and confusion and degrades the ‘Kona coffee’ name;” The HDOA concluded that increasing the minimum content from 10% to 50% would have a significant economic impact on producers, processors and consumers. HDOA recommended that a new study be undertaken that would analyze these economic impacts.

They received a quote of $200,000 from the University of Hawaii CTAHR and another from the Kona County Farm Bureau for an estimated cost of $98,000.

No funds have been allocated from the Legislature to conduct an economic study. Under the present financial conditions faced by Hawaii it is unlikely that funds will be available any time in the near future. Therefore the Kona Coffee Farmers Association (KCFA) decided to act on its own to fund a preliminary study to utilize existing data sources and previous studies to place some boundaries on the economic effects of alternative blending requirements.

Resource Decisions was engaged to conduct this study. This report is the result of that study. Although the scope and budget for this preliminary study were severely limited, this report represents an effort to place some boundaries on the economic impacts of the current 10% minimum blending requirement versus the KCFA’s proposal to limit the use of the Kona name to 100% Kona coffee.

In the interest of full disclosure, the Principal of Resource Decisions, Marvin Feldman, owns and operates a small leasehold coffee farm in Captain Cook. He is a member of both the KFCA and the Kona Coffee Council.

Data Sources and Limitations

The primary source for data for this study is “Hawaii Coffee” a biannual publication of the HDOA and the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) a branch of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). In addition data was compiled from other HDOA publications and other publications as referenced.

The Hawaii Coffee data present previous years’ data in several issues. For ease of use, these data are compiled into tables including data from the 1997/1998 year through the latest available year 2008/2009. The tables are broken into Statewide, Big Island and Kona District Tables. The Kona District table was not published by the HDOA/NASS. Rather it was constructed from the Hawaii County table by assuming that Kona District production comprises 90% of the Hawaii County production, as estimated by M. Southichack.

The HDOA/NASS data do not break out the price for the various grades of Kona coffee, notably Prime grade. The author estimates that this grade, the lowest grade that can be labeled Kona coffee sells at 75% of the average of all grades of Kona coffee.

This study is limited by the lack of data available from the blenders, who consider their data proprietary. The missing data includes the actual cost of production of Kona blend coffee, the annual volume of sales and tax revenues from sales of Kona blend. In the absence of hard data, these values were estimated using reasonable assumptions and professional estimates. The author would be happy to adjust the analysis accordingly if these data are made available.

Preliminary Analysis

Given the limited data presently available and the very limited scope of this study, analysis was limited to two polar cases and one intermediate case. The first case examines the economic impacts of business as usual, assuming that Kona blend absorbs the entire prime grade Kona and does not use any other Kona coffee. The second case assumes that all of the Kona prime grade production is sold as commodity coffee and there is no 10 percent Kona blend sold.

Business as Usual (BAU) Case

Although in theory the category of “Kona Blends” could include any pure Kona content from the statutory minimum of 10% to 99%, in actual practice almost all Kona blend coffees are exactly 10% Kona. The vast proportion of Kona blends produced in Hawaii is produced by two Honolulu-based companies: Hawaiian Coffee Company (Lion and Royal Kona brands) and Hawaiian Isles Kona Coffee Company.

HCC employs approximately 450 people and is a subsidiary of Paradise Beverages which is in turn a wholly-owned subsidiary of Topa Company. Topa is privately owned by John Anderson who is a California resident.

Hawaiian Isles Coffee Company Ltd., employs 150 people (125 in Honolulu) and has annual gross sales of $36 million. Hawaiian Isles Kona Coffee is owned by its president Michael Boulware, who is a Hawaii resident.

Both companies also produce and market pure Kona coffee. All of their Kona blend coffees contain the minimum Kona content to permit the designation of Kona coffee: 10 percent. They are privately held companies so detailed sales information, notably the breakdown of sales of Kona blend coffee is not publicly available.

A number of assumptions must be made in order to estimate the current sales volume of Kona blend coffees:

* All blends contain exactly 10% Kona coffee
* Only the lowest grade coffee legally identifiable as Kona (“prime grade”) is used
* All of the prime grade Kona coffee is used in blending

The first and second assumptions can be justified on the basis of common sense. The labels state the contents are at least 10% Kona coffee (the legal minimum requirement for Kona labeling). There is no reason for them to contain more than 10% nor is it likely that they contain Kona grades higher than prime grade8, because the Kona coffee content is not detectable, even to an expert cupper.”

Because the actual quality of Kona blend coffee is less critical than the cachet of the name Kona coffee, it would be illogical for blenders to use higher grades. This assumption has been verbally confirmed by Jim Wayman, President of Hawaiian Coffee Company, in public meetings.

The assumption that ALL of the prime grade production of Kona coffee is used for blending is conservative in that it tends to inflate the economic value attributable to the blended product.

These assumptions are generally substantiated by the available data. According to Southichack 2006, approximately 10% of all Kona coffee produced is prime grade, 30% is Number 1, 30% is Fancy, 20% is Extra Fancy and the remaining 5% is peaberry. Data on Kona coffee production is not reported separately from the total production of Hawaii County, but Southichack estimates that Kona comprises 90% of the Island’s production.

The average green production of all grades of Kona coffee in the past 10 years has been 2.7 million pounds. Thus approximately 270, 000 pounds per year of prime is available for blending, resulting in an estimated 2.7 million pounds of green Kona blend. Allowing 20% for the shrinkage due to roasting, results in 2.2 million pounds of roast 10% Kona blend being available under the BAU case.

(It should be noted that the estimated availability of prime grade Kona might be underestimated by as much as 5 percentage points (15% of the crop rather than 10%) based on comments by blending industry leaders at public meetings and data on coffee imports due to blenders. However, as these data could not be substantiated, the lower estimate of 10% based on Soutichuck was used).

Blenders Perspective

From the blenders’ perspective, the value added by blending Kona and commodity coffee is based on the cost of the component green beans, plus the added cost of roasting and bagging. Commodity coffee is currently trading at $1.40 per pound, for an estimated delivered cost in Hawaii of $1.50. The average price of all grades of green Kona coffee was $6.63 during the 2008/2009 season.

Assuming that the lower grade “prime” Kona sells at 75% of the average of all grades yields a cost of approximately $5.00 per pound. Thus a pound of 10% Kona and 90% commodity coffee currently costs $1.85 per pound. Allowing an additional $1.50 per pound for warehousing, roasting bagging and marketing, and applying a 20% shrinkage factor due to roasting, results in an estimated total cost of $3.81per pound of roasted Kona blend.

Kona coffee blends are sold at wholesale to stores and directly to retail through web sites. Hawaiian Coffee Company’s website lists their Lion brand at $16 per 20 ounces resulting in $12.80 per pound. Hawaiian Isles coffee offers their blend at $16 per two pound package resulting in a price of $8.00 per pound. Averaging these two prices results in $10.49 per pound. Thus the spread between cost and retail price averages $6.68 per pound of apparent net profit for internet retail sales.

There is no public data on which to estimate the extent of retail internet versus wholesale sales to stores and distributors. The internet sales are no doubt far more profitable than the sales to the wholesale market. However, making the extreme assumption that all sales are retail sales, yields an extreme upper-bound estimate that the marketing of Kona blend yields an apparent net profit of $14.4 million per year to the blenders. In economic terminology, the blenders receive an economic rent in the amount of $14.4 million per year from the use of the Kona appellation.

Coffee Grower Perspective

Growers receive an estimated $1.4 million from the sale of prime Kona to the blenders. The higher grades (the remainder of the coffee production) are sold by the growers either through retail sales or to wholesalers who market pure Kona coffee. Many growers believe that purchasers of Kona blend are deceived by the label Kona coffee on blends and that the sale of blends degrades the appellation Kona Coffee by attaching it to an inferior product. If this allegation is correct, the demand for pure Kona coffee is reduced as potential consumers reduce their willingness to pay the premium price for pure Kona coffee because it is not a differentiated product from non-specialty coffee.

Eliminate Kona Blends

It is not the purpose of this report to elaborate on the extent of consumer deception inherent in the Kona blend products. These arguments are addressed in several papers and testimonial filing by the Kona Coffee Farmer’s Association. A statement that appeared in a refereed journal summarizes some of these issues:

When asked what quality they expected of a 10% Kona Coffee Blend, consumers believed the blend would have less of the special Kona coffee characteristics than pure Kona coffee, since they felt that 10% was too small an amount to have an influence on the flavor. However, since some consumers preferred a mild coffee, they would try the 10% Kona Coffee Blend. Many expressed concern that tourists who buy Kona Coffee Blends do so without carefully reading the label. Consequently, these tourists may find Kona Coffee Blends not to be distinctive and may think that the leading descriptor Kona Coffee was not worthy of a special price. This reaction is similar to consumer attitudes toward trivial, easy-to-make brand extensions, which are perceived as an unjustified excuse to use an already established “brand,” in this case Kona, and may actually damage the brand’s image (Aaker and Killer 1990).

Dr. Hodgson confirmed to the KCFA in 2007 that, “Dr. Bruhn and I think that the results still apply today.”

Expert cupper Ken Davids, editor of Coffee Review, said in his experience it would be very difficult to impossible for even an experienced cupper to determine which of two otherwise identical blends contained 10% Kona and which did not. Davids reviewed Kona Blends for the Coffee Review in April, 2006:

“Kona can’t be blamed for the indifferent quality of the three Kona blends we sourced. The Kona blends we sampled suggested that these companies tossed whatever vaguely low-acid, wet-processed coffee they had around the warehouse into their faux Konas without much real commitment to approximating the subtle Kona character.”

A 2004 report by the Hawaii Dept of Agriculture on the outlook for Hawaii’s coffee industry states:

Quality maintenance and product differentiation are the major factors determining long-term success of Hawaii coffee industry. Product differentiation based on point of origin is critical because bean quality is partially determined by natural factors (soil composition, rain, temperature, and sunlight), which are location-specific, in addition to cultural practices and cherry processing.

A more detailed study might explore the economic effects of alternative blends including for example 20% and 50% Kona blends, which are presently marketed in small quantities. However, for this preliminary analysis a polar case of eliminating Kona blends will provide some insights. For this purpose the No Blending case assumes that all coffee identified by the geographic designation “Kona Coffee” contains only pure Kona coffee.

The absence of Kona blends would in all likelihood have a positive effect on the Kona coffee market due to improved consumer perception of the quality of Kona coffee. As evidenced by Hodgson and Brand’s 1992 consumer preference study, many consumers are disappointed in Kona blend quality and are deceived in thinking that this inferior product is representative of Kona coffee. These consumers might not try Kona coffee again.

In the absence of Kona blends these consumers would not be eliminated from the market, thus shifting the demand for Kona coffee upward. Other consumers who might have continued to buy Kona blend for the snob appeal or as gifts would be lost to the market. However, without Kona blends, anyone who tries Kona coffee would be exposed to the actual flavor of Kona coffee.

Given the perception of Kona as one of the great specialty coffees of the world, it is reasonable to anticipate that the eliminating Kona blends from the market will enhance the overall perception of the quality of Kona coffee and hence the shift the demand for Kona coffee upward, qualitatively illustrated in Figure 1.

Figure 1 illustrates a shift in the demand curve due to increased perceived quality of Kona coffee due to the elimination of blending. With this perception change, the quantity demanded at each price would increase. This figure is qualitative due to data limitations. The actual degree to which the supply and demand curves will shift and the shape of these curves remains to be quantified.

Blenders Perspective

The blenders would lose the $14.4 million per year of economic rent that is gained by attaching the Kona name to 10% Kona 90% commodity coffee. This loss would likely be offset by additional sales of their pure Kona coffees as all major blenders also sell pure Kona. It is not clear whether the offset would be partial, or completely recovered by these additional pure Kona sales. This would depend on the change in buyer perceptions about Kona coffee in the absence of blends.

Thus the $14.4 million in economic rental obtained by blenders for the use of the Kona appellation is an upper-bound estimate of the loss to blenders from the elimination of Kona blends. The profits due to blending are shared by the employees involved in blending, packaging and marketing Kona blend and the owners of the blending companies. In the case of the largest blender, HCC, all of the proprietor’s income (profit) leaves Hawaii and accrues to Topa, the parent company, which is owned by a California resident John Anderson. Hawaiian Isles Coffee appears from public information to be Hawaiian owned. The proportion of the labor income that might be lost due to the elimination of blend would affect Hawaii residents.

Again, it is not clear how much of this loss would be offset by gains in the sale of pure Kona coffee by the current blenders, processors and direct retail sales growers.

Growers Perspective

The prime grade coffee that would otherwise be used in blends would most likely be included in the estate grade coffee sold by growers through the retail market. If the prime coffee is sold on the wholesale market it would likely receive the same price as is presently paid by the blenders, resulting in no net change in the market for prime. This coffee might otherwise be sold as 100% Kona coffee at the presumed lower price of $6.63 per pound or mixed in with higher grades of Kona coffee. It is unlikely that the additional 10% of the volume of Kona coffee represented by the prime grade output would produce a glut of Kona coffee.

According to the Hawaii Coffee Association (an organization largely comprised of large growers, roasters, blenders and distributors) in past years all Kona coffee demand typically exceeds supply. Therefore it is likely that growers would not experience any economic loss due to the elimination of Kona blends.

As seen in Figure 1, the area under the shifted demand curve at price P2 (blue square pattern) represents the additional producer surplus accruing to the growers. As a large percentage of Kona coffee owners are Hawaiian residents most of this surplus would remain in Hawaii. All of the additional labor income needed to provide the higher equilibrium quantity supplied would remain in Hawaii.

Preliminary Conclusions that can be drawn from existing data

There is no data on which to base a quantitative demand curve, but the qualitative relationship is illustrated in Figure 1. The shaded area A shows the loss of producer surplus (net profit) that result from this effect. Note that this producer surplus is lost to all retail sellers of pure Kona coffee (vertically integrated growers, roasters, and blenders to the extent to which they also market pure Kona coffee).

With the available information it is not possible to quantify the demand curve and its shift and thus to determine whether the gain in producer surplus to the vendors of pure Kona coffee completely or partially offsets the loss of economic rent obtained by the blenders for the use of the Kona appellation.

We have demonstrated that a maximum of $14.4 million of producer surplus or economic rent is obtained through the use of the Kona appellation in Kona 10% blends. Growers experience no benefit from blending as is now practiced. In fact they experience a loss that is possibly on the order or greater than the gain to the blenders. The net efficiency (blenders gain versus growers loss) cannot be estimated form the existing data.

There are equity issues at stake as well, both from the consumer perspective and from the growers’ perspective. These issues go to the fairness and possibly the legality issues of: whether the blenders’ economic rent is justified at the expense of the erosion of the Kona appellation (see Aaker and Keller (1990). They are not economic issues per se. The appropriation of the Kona appellation by the blenders has been generally understood by researchers to be misleading to consumers.

Despite the fact that Kona blend labels do disclose the 10% minimum percentage of Kona many consumers see the name Kona prominently displayed on the label and incorrectly infer that they are buying a superior product. Professional taste tests indicate that this is not the case. Furthermore, the distribution of the economic impacts represents a transfer of profit from growers to blenders and from in-state to out-of-state interests.

Bruce Corker, President of the KFCA states: “We are aware of no region anywhere in the world, other than the State of Hawaii, which authorizes the use of the name of one of its specialty agricultural products with only 10% genuine contents.”

The Hawaii Department of Agriculture Market Outlook Report states “Quality maintenance and product differentiation are the major factors determining long-term success of Hawaii coffee industry. Product differentiation based on point of origin is critical because bean quality is partially determined by natural factors which are location-specific, in addition to cultural practices and cherry processing.”

Options for further study

As noted above, data limitations and the scope of the current study limit the definitiveness of the conclusions that can be drawn at this time. Further research in the following areas would help to further refine the economics effects of changing the blending requirements:

* Gather data from blenders on volume of sales, costs and profitability of the blended coffee products currently being sold.
* Information from blenders on the employment attributable to blended coffee sales and regarding the portion of proprietors income remaining in Hawaii.
* Quantification of the degree to which consumers of Kona blends are misled in thinking they are purchasing a true Kona coffee.
* Investigation of the economic effects of intermediate blending scenarios such as a minimum of 50% pure Kona in products identified as Kona coffee.
* Fiscal revenue implications for the state of Hawaii and Hawaii county resulting from the current blending requirements and the impacts of alternative blending requirements.
* Quantification of the supply and demand curves qualitatively represented in Figure 1 of this report.

Additional information regarding consumer preferences for Kona blends is NOT a high priority at present because past research has already adequately addressed these issues. Nor will additional economic research help to define equity issues related to the blenders’ current ability to extract economic rent from the Kona appellation and thus erode the quality perception of the Kona coffee brand.

References

Aaker, D.A.; Keller, K.L. (1990) Consumer Evaluations of Brand Extensions, Journal of Marketing, Vol. 54, No. 1, pp. 27-41.

Bittenbender, H. C., and Smith, Virginia E. (2004). Growing Coffee in Hawaii. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii-Manoa.

Bittenbender, H. C., et al. (August 1990). “Coffee Industry Analysis Number 3,” Agricultural Industry Analysis: The Status, Potential, and Problems of Hawaiian Crops. Submitted to the Governor’s Agriculture Coordinating Committee. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii-Manoa.

Fleming, Kent, and Nakamoto, Stuart (2003). “Kona Coffee for the Japanese Market,” Western Profiles of Innovative Agricultural Marketing: Examples from Direct Farm Marketing and Agri-Tourism Enterprises. Western Extension Marketing Committee.

HASS, Statistics of Hawaii Agriculture, various issues, Department of Agriculture, State of Hawaii.

HDOA: HASS, Hawaii Coffee, a biannual report, various issues 1997-2009, Department of Agriculture, State of Hawaii.

Hawaii Coffee Association. www.hawaiicoffeeassoc.org

International Coffee Organization. www.ico.org/ 15

Southichuck, 2004: Hawaii’s Coffee Industry Market Outlook Report Hawaii Department of Agriculture hawaii.gov/hdoa/add/research-and-outlook-reports/Coffee%20Outlook%202004.pdf

Martin, Donald, Hawaii Coffee, various issues, HASS, Department of Agriculture, State of Hawaii.
The McKinsey Quarterly (March 2004). “A Wake-Up Call for Coffee Growers,” Chart Focus, www.mckinseyquarterly.com/newsletters/chartfocus/2004_03.htm.

Nakamoto, T. Stuart, and John M. Halloran (July 1989). The Markets and Marketing Issues of the Kona Coffee Industry. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii.

Nakamoto, T. Stuart, et al. The Coffee Market in Japan. Information Text Series 037. College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii.

Southichack, Mana (July, 2006). Hawaii’s Coffee Industry: Structural Change and Its Effects on Farm Operations. Hawaii Department of Agriculture. Final Report.

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Little Fire Ants on Capt. Cook agenda (Feb. 10)

Little Fire Ants on Capt. Cook agenda (Feb. 10)

MEDIA RELEASE

Hawaii 24/7 received the following public announcement:

As you may have heard by now, the Little Fire Ant, LFA, has been found in a residential neighborhood of Kailua-Kona.

Up until last month LFA was found only on the windward side of our island. Mostly in Puna, but also in Hilo and Hamakua. Kona County Farm Bureau has scheduled an informational public meeting with HDOA Ant specialist, Cas Vanderwoude at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10 at Yano Hall in Captain Cook.

LFA is one of the most destructive pests worldwide. It could have a devastating effect on our tree crop industries, such as coffee, macadamia nut, avocado etc. It is important that farmers in our community educate themselves in the safeguards needed to prevent the spread of this horribly invasive pest.

Please attend this very important meeting, and tell your friends!

Aloha,

Una Greenaway
President
Kona County Farm Bureau

Posted in Agriculture0 Comments

 

 

 

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