Strengthening Smallholder Coffee Farming in Uganda

Investment Date

Dec 2020

Fund

GSIF Africa

Asset class

Credit

Operating in

Uganda

Lives Impacted
0
Smallholder farmers supported
0
Of farmers are women
0 %

This Ugandan cooperative brings together thousands of smallholder coffee farmers, guaranteeing access to international markets, fair pricing, technical training, sustainability certifications, and social premiums.

By exporting organic and fair-trade coffee, it boosts farmer incomes, reinforces sustainability, and strengthens local cohesion.

The Challenge

Uganda is Africa’s largest coffee exporter, yet most farmers work on tiny plots with few resources.

  • Over 1/3 Ugandan coffee farmers saw no profits last year
  • Nearly 1/2 were unable to save any income


Coffee is a vital source of income for 1000000 of smallholder farmers across Africa, yet they face persistent challenges.

Limited Access

To credit, savings, and technical support and low bargaining power

Vulnerability

To climate risks and global price volatility (international coffee prices have fluctuated by up to 40% annually in recent years)

Barriers

To meeting international certification and quality standards 

The Solution

The cooperative provides smallholder coffee farmers with fair access to international buyers, pre-financing for harvests, technical support through agronomists and university partnerships, and continuous progress toward social and environmental certifications.

Cooperative
network
+ Access to credit, technical
support and global markets
+ Sustainable, certified
coffee production

The Impact

21,000
Smallholder Farmers Supported

Up from 14,000 at the start of the loan

39%
Of Farmers Are Women

of farmers are women; 12% are youth

162
Direct Employees

with 25% women and 59% under age 30

8
Sustainability Certifications Achieved

organic, Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance, etc.

10%
Price Difference Gained

by cooperative farmers compared to non-member farmers

2
Recent Community Infrastructure Improvements Completed

including school sanitation

3,000
Trees Planted

to protect coffee plants and soil

Why we invested

  • Strong sector relevance
    Coffee is Uganda’s largest export and a key livelihood for millions
  • Inclusive cooperative model
    Empowers farmers, pools resources, and amplifies market access

     

  • Environmental impact
    Drives sustainable and certified production, improving long-term climate resilience

     

  • Solid management and technical capacity
    Experienced leadership, agronomic expertise, and strong local governance

     

  • Transformation potential
    Combines scale, social focus, and capacity to reshape Uganda’s smallholder coffee system

GSI’s role

Together, we are helping transform Uganda’s smallholder coffee system into a more inclusive, resilient, and sustainable engine of rural development.

Pre-financing

Purchases and reducing reliance on expensive debt

Strengthening

Negotiating power in international markets

Expanding

Support services for its member farmers

 

It is reassuring for us to work with such a like-minded partner as GSI on this transformative journey of the last mile farmer.

Derick Komwangi

Projects Officer