International

Kenyan farmers toast growing European demand for avocados

Kenyan farmers toast growing European demand for avocados

August 16, 2018 | 12:42 AM
Kenyan avocado farmer Simon Kimani posing with some of his crop in Kandara, central Kenya.
It may be loved and derided as the go-to millennial brunch, but avocado toast is proving a boon for Kenyan farmers as they cash in on the seemingly ever-growing enthusiasm.Across Kenya’s ochre fields, farmers are switching coffee and tea for avocados in a bid to profit from increasing European demand for that most instagrammable of dishes.Among them is Simon Kimani, 73, who tends five acres of avocado trees.“Recently when the avocado trade started growing up we thought that it is better to plant avocados, that’s how I started,” he says, pointing to his first trees, planted less than a decade ago.Avocado toast is becoming a staple of European menus, says Laura Hannoun, a blogger who has listed the top10 places to order the simple, hip dish which can set one back by €14 ($16).“The fair price is between €10 and €11,” says the 25-year-old.In Kenya, smallholder farmers grow avocados and sell them on to exporters.Kimani’s buyer is Bernard Kimutai of Fair Trade Company Limited. Kimutai has seen a sharp increase in exports of the popular Hass avocado in recent years.“In 2016 we exported 20 tonnes, in 2017 we did about 40 tonnes,” he says, hoping to double the figure again this year.Harvesting is a low-tech affair: a broken wooden ladder and an old machete are all it takes for Kimani and his two employees to chop down the hard, green avocados, collected young so they reach Europe ripe.In this way, Kimani produces around 28,000 avocados per year, and is paid the equivalent of a little over 10 euro cents each.In European supermarkets, where they are sold alongside others from Chile, Israel and Mexico, they easily fetch 10 times that amount, if not more.“One hundred percent of (our) avocados are for export. We try to improve the quality to make sure that what we get from the farmer is 90% exportable,” says Kimutai, adding that any that do not make the grade are sold on to oil-processing companies.Kenya’s temperate climate is well-suited to avocado cultivation, especially around the high altitude town of Thika, north of Nairobi, where Kimani has his farm.In its terraced orchard, avocado trees grow alongside banana and coffee trees as part of a well-planned multi-culture that keeps the soil fertile.
August 16, 2018 | 12:42 AM