Guatemala Huehuetenango FTO - Rio Azul Coop

Cup notes available upon arrival
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Bag Weight 69 KG BAG
Harvest Season 2024/25
Status Spot
Lot Number P613188-1
  • 60 Bag(s)
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About This Coffee

Coop Rio Azul, based in Jacaltenango, Guatemala, is a long-established coffee cooperative founded in 1967 and currently composed of 216 members, including 60 women. All members are of the Jacaltec (Popti) Mayan group. The cooperative benefits from close proximity between farms and its centralized wet mill—no member lives more than a 1.5-hour walk away—allowing for tight control over processing quality. Coffee is picked daily, delivered in cherry form, and processed at the mill using traditional washed methods, then sun-dried on patios. Rio Azul has its own export license (since 2004) and organic certification (since 2007). Infrastructure includes an eco-friendly wet mill, cupping lab, nursery, and bio-factory. The cooperative is focused on sustainability, technical training, and improving yields, with a long-term goal of financial self-sufficiency.

Country of Origin Guatemala
Region Jacaltenango, Huehuetenango
Producer Type Cooperative
Farm Name 216 smallholders
Co-Op Cooperative Agrícola y de Servicios Varios Río Azul
Processing Washed
Processing Description Sun dried on patios
Growing Altitude 1500m - 1800m
Harvest Season 2024/25
Bag Weight 69 KG BAG
Bag Type Grain Pro / Ecotact
Plant Species Arabica
Variety Bourbon, Caturra, Typica
Certifications Organic Certified NOP, FLO Fairtrade Certified

History of Coffee in Guatemala

Although coffee was brought over from the Caribbean in the mid-18th century by Jesuit priests, it was used primarily as an ornamental plant and garden crop for 100 years in Guatemala. Coffee wasn’t widely traded, however, until commercial production began in the 1850s. The volcanic soil and various micro-climates proved ideal for growing coffee in Guatemala. Coffee, within a generation, became the country’s most important crop. In 1860, Guatemala exported 140,000 pounds of coffee, and just 25 years later, the country was exporting over 40 million pounds. Large numbers of coffee farmers were German immigrants responsible for many inventions and innovations related to coffee milling. Most of Guatemala’s coffee was exported to Germany until the First World War, when exports shifted to the United States.

Growing Coffee in Guatemala

Coffee farming practices are similar to other countries in the region, but Guatemala has an abundance of water, volcanic soil, and very distinct micro-climates compared to its neighbors. Although late to coffee, Guatemala recognized and responded to the needs of the emerging specialty coffee sector earlier than most coffee-producing regions. Anacafé, the coffee producers association in Guatemala, identifies seven growing regions: Fraijanes, the plateau south of Guatemala City; Coban, a rainforest region in the center of the country; Huehuetenango, highlands near the border with Mexico; Atitlan, primarily the volcanic mountains on the Pacific side of Lake Atitlan; San Marcos, between Huehuetenango and the Pacific Ocean; Oriente, the driest of the growing regions located near the eastern border with Honduras; and the most famous of all, Antigua, nestled among the volcanoes an hour’s drive southwest of Guatemala City.

  • Region Jacaltenango, Huehuetenango
  • Farm Name 216 smallholders
  • Producer Type Cooperative
  • Processing Washed
  • Processing Description Sun dried on patios
  • Bag Type Grain Pro / Ecotact
  • Plant Species Arabica
  • Variety Bourbon, Caturra, Typica
  • Min Growing Altitude 1500m
  • Max Growing Altitude 1800m
  • Co-Op Cooperative Agrícola y de Servicios Varios Río Azul
  • On Sale No
  • Top Lot No
  • Status Spot
  • Certifications Organic Certified NOP, FLO Fairtrade Certified
  • Coffee Grade GTM CA WA SHB
  • CTRM Contract Number P613188-1
  • Country of Origin Guatemala
  • Warehouse Continental NJ