EUDR Coffee — Colombia Supply Chain Profile

commoditycoffee
regulationEU Regulation 2023/1115 (EUDR)
article9_fieldsgeolocation, supplier_identification, deforestation_free_date, due_diligence_statement
cutoff_date2020-12-31
enforcement_large2024-12-30
enforcement_sme2025-06-30
primary_countryColombia
schema_version1.1
last_updated2026-05-27

Colombia's Coffee Sector at a Glance

Colombia is the world's third-largest arabica coffee producer and the second-largest global exporter of washed arabica. The sector comprises approximately 540,000 coffee-farming families (caficultores) spread across roughly 853,000 hectares in 22 departments and 590 municipalities. The average farm size is 1.5–2.0 hectares, making Colombia's coffee sector overwhelmingly smallholder-based — a structural characteristic that creates both compliance challenges (fragmented geolocation data) and opportunities (high traceability potential through cooperative networks).

Key Production Departments

Coffee production is concentrated in the Andean highlands between 1,200 and 2,000 metres above sea level. The six leading departments by production volume are:

The FNC and Colombia's Coffee Institutional Framework

The Federación Nacional de Cafeteros (FNC) is a private entity with public functions, representing Colombia's coffee growers since 1927. For EUDR purposes, the FNC's institutional infrastructure is highly relevant:

EU Export Flows and Market Share

The European Union is Colombia's largest coffee export destination. Key EU market dynamics:

Total Colombian coffee exports to the EU typically represent 35–40% of the country's annual production of approximately 12–14 million 60-kg bags. At current market prices (C-price plus Colombian differential), the EU-bound volume represents USD 1.5–2.0 billion in annual export revenue — illustrating the economic stakes of EUDR compliance for Colombia.

Deforestation Risk Zones in Colombian Coffee Landscapes

While Colombia's core coffee zones (Eje Cafetero, northern Huila) are long-established agricultural landscapes with low recent deforestation, several frontier zones present elevated risk:

For EUDR compliance, operators sourcing from these higher-risk sub-regions will need to provide more robust satellite evidence and possibly third-party field verification to demonstrate that their specific plots were not deforested after 31 December 2020.

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  "commodity": "coffee",
  "regulation": "EUDR",
  "page_type": "country_supply_chain_profile",
  "country": "colombia",
  "coffee_families": 540000,
  "total_hectares": 853000,
  "avg_farm_ha": 1.75,
  "top_departments": ["huila", "narino", "antioquia", "cauca", "tolima", "caldas"],
  "eu_export_share_pct": 37.5,
  "key_institutions": ["fnc", "sica", "almacafe", "ideam"],
  "schema_version": "1.1"
}

Revisión #1
Creado 2026-05-27 05:30:29 UTC por Gideon Blaauw
Actualizado 2026-05-27 05:30:29 UTC por Gideon Blaauw