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Agriculture, Business, Global Poverty

Helping Coffee Farmers Out of Poverty in Peru

Poverty in peruAs of 2024, Peru’s national poverty rate stood at 26.6%. However, in rural communities where many coffee farmers live, the poverty rate rises to 46%. People in these communities often lack access to safe housing, stable income and education.

Poverty in Peru increased after the COVID-19 pandemic, following several years of decline. Providing farmers in rural communities with fair wages and proper tools helps them escape poverty. Here are three companies helping Peruvian coffee farmers break the cycle of poverty:

Café Femenino

Café Femenino is a coffee brand founded in 2004 by Isabel Uriarte and her husband, Victor Rojas. It began with more than 450 female farmers in northern Peru who sought to gain the same benefits men received from the coffee industry. Uriarte launched the initiative by traveling to impoverished villages to speak with women about their rights.

Uriarte hosted workshops and attendance steadily grew as more women joined. Some meetings also included men to help break down barriers surrounding traditional gender roles in these communities. Following these early workshops and conversations with impoverished women, Uriarte formally established Café Femenino.

Café Femenino requires participating farms to grant women farmers legal rights to farmland, leadership positions, financial and business decision-making power and direct payment for their coffee. Through these efforts, more coffee farms have been transferred to women, helping lift them out of poverty and strengthening their communities.

As a result, roads have been built, women have created more sanitary homes and families have gained better access to food. The company is helping reduce poverty in Peru, particularly in rural communities, by providing greater job security. Café Femenino now operates in several countries, including Colombia, Bolivia and Rwanda, fostering economic empowerment for women farmers.

Cedros Café

Cedros Café is a coffee cooperative founded in 2013 that supports small-scale farmers in the Cajamarca region of Peru. Poverty rates in this region remain high because many farmers do not receive adequate payment for their crops. Cedros Café pays its farmers about 30% more than the average market price for coffee.

The cooperative also provides farmers with training in business management, financial literacy and other professional skills. Because many of its farmers are women, Cedros Café equips them with additional skills to diversify their income. The cooperative also helps farmers obtain Fair Trade certification, which recognizes producers who follow sustainable practices and ensure fair treatment of workers. Today, Cedros Café works with 328 small farmers, helping reduce poverty in Peru.

Café Compadre

Café Compadre began when two of its founders created a solar-powered coffee roaster to help remote farmers roast their own beans, which sell for higher prices in the market. The founders soon realized that the roaster alone would not be enough to stabilize coffee farmers’ livelihoods. Because many of these farmers were located in remote areas of Peru, they lacked access to Lima’s coffee consumers.

In response, the founders established the Café Compadre coffee brand in 2014. The company now works with small, local coffee farmers to ensure they receive fair compensation for their work. Café Compadre pays farmers more than 30% above the market price for coffee. 

The company focuses on sustainable farming practices that also protect the environment. Purchasing coffee from Café Compadre supports farmers, promotes environmental sustainability and provides the high-quality coffee consumers seek. These principles form the company’s three core pillars.

Conclusion

These three coffee companies are working to support impoverished coffee farmers in rural communities across Peru. By providing innovative tools, training and prices up to 30% higher than the market average, they are helping farmers build more stable livelihoods.

– Kaitlyn Crane

Kaitlyn is based in Rohnert Park, CA, USA and focuses on Good News for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Flickr

March 28, 2026
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https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg 0 0 Hemant Gupta https://borgenproject.org/wp-content/uploads/borgen-project-logo.svg Hemant Gupta2026-03-28 07:30:112026-03-27 12:41:33Helping Coffee Farmers Out of Poverty in Peru

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