Coffee roasters fret over prices

Wake up, smell the coffee and check your wallet. Bern coffee-roasting giant Blaser Cafe is expected to announce higher prices for the coming year. Other roasters have already announced hikes, blaming the price of raw coffee. As WRS’s Tony Ganzer reports, this might not affect the price of your morning cup of java just yet, but roasters are fretting:

Illycafé is a mid-sized coffee roaster in Thalwil, near Zurich. Being “mid-sized” in coffee terms means they only import 700 tons of coffee beans a year.

Riccardo Seitz is a second-generation coffee roaster and one of the heads of Illycafé. He describes the types of beans inside the stacked 60 and 70kg sacks in his storage room, with some from Brazil or Guatemala or Indonesia.

Though only a mid-sized roaster, Illycafé still roasts about two tons of beans a day.

The beans roast under strict guidelines and travel through a winding vacuum system to keep the coffee’s aroma intact before packing.

Seitz says after the roasting, the beans go through a machine that checks their color and quality. Like in most Swiss industries, quality goes a long way to keep the reputation of coffee roasters in good standing.

But higher prices of coffee beans could threaten that.

“Everybody’s going to have to adjust prices, that’s for sure. Or they lower the quality, which is also a risk,” says Philippe Carasso, a coffee roaster in Geneva and president of the Swiss Coffee Roasters Association.

“People might want to stop drinking coffee because some roasters, instead of raising the price, lower the quality,” he says.

Carasso says speculators on the commodities market are driving up the cost of coffee beans, and small and mid-sized coffee roasters are facing a choice: either raise the price of their roasted coffees, or buy lower quality beans to keep costs under control.

Coffee giant Jacobs has already announced its prices. And even grocers Migros and Coop will have to make a decision on their coffee offerings.

“We’re raising them around—and it depends on the roaster—around 1.50-2.50 per kilo. I mean, you can’t do anything about it. If you want to survive you have to adjust the prices,” Carasso says.

He says coffee prices have risen more than 40 percent in last year, and in the next months roasters will likely raise prices just to survive.

This won’t affect the average cup right away, though, because roasters sell coffee by the kilo, and hotels and restaurants can make about 120 cups from a kilo.

So a price rise of 2 francs/kilo would only boost the price of a cup by a few cents.

But for roasters, any increase in coffee prices could be fatal.

Back at Illycafé, coffee beans fall into carefully constructed bags for sale. Company boss Riccardo Seitz says going to cheaper coffee beans is a bad option for Swiss roasters.

He says by changing to lesser-quality beans, the Swiss coffee market would be tainted. Especially in Switzerland, he says customers are very conscious of quality.

That means the beans must be the best, even if they’re more expensive.

Solar Impulse Exclusive: Link to Interview with pilot Andre Borschberg

Control room

The sun is long gone, and the countdown to dawn is ticking away.  The crowds of press and crew have dwindled to a minimum at the Payerne airfield. 

I am one of a handful of people awake and alert during this event.  A photographer once told me the key to a good picture is timing. 

“You just need to be there,” he said.  That is also true of journalism. 

At 1 a.m. I was allowed into the sacred heart of this Solar Impulse project to interview pilot Andre Borschberg. 

I and a French journalist were the only two allowed into the control room, and the interviews were broadcast at solarimpulse.com.

Continue reading “Solar Impulse Exclusive: Link to Interview with pilot Andre Borschberg”

Solar Impulse: Interview with Bertrand Piccard

Bertrand Piccard

Solar Impulse is in the air, and has been flying for 12 hours gathering solar energy from its 12,000 solar panels affixed to its massive wings.

  Your humble correspondent had a few minutes with Bertrand Piccard, the lead of the Solar Impulse project and the first man to circumnavigate the Earth in a hot air balloon. 

Here is my interview with Piccard, giving the latest. (as of 1800, 7June10.)

Continue reading “Solar Impulse: Interview with Bertrand Piccard”

No thanks

AnthonyGanzer.com