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                                     e-commerce grocery product before 2020 and the prevalence
                                     of subscription services and partnerships between delivery
                                     services and high-street chains have ensured customers could
                                     still get their hands on some. With people confined to work-
                                     ing from home and with limited options to leave the house,
                                     making coffee was one of few ways to take a break from work.

                                     Paying Back

                                         Before you buy your morning cup of coffee, there is a
                                     big business process that needs to take place: harvesting
                                     coffee, washing, drying, selling, shipping, re-selling, roasting,
                                     selling again and finally griding and brewing. But what if this
                                     long chain can be simplified for the better living of the farms?
                                     We talked with Lewis Harding from Coffee Exchange to
                                     discover how coffee chain can be shorten and made more fair
                                     to all the participants.
                                         Lewis is originally from London and growing up, sur-
                                     prisingly for a British person, never drunk tea but was always
                                     more interested in coffee. With the degree from Queen Mary
                                     University in Business & Economics he first came to China
                                     back in 2008 to work in finance. Back then there was very
                                     little coffee except instant coffee and Taiwanese style coffee
                                     chains that where more like diners so seeing first Starbucks
                                     opening in China was very exciting for Lewis.






















 At an international level, coffee producers, traders,   chains. Additionally, while the market price for coffee has
 and roasters have already seen significant changes in coffee   increased, prices for fair trade coffee have stagnated, creat-
 markets. There have been increases in international coffee   ing a risk of coffee producers abandoning fair trade schemes
 prices, with a strong likelihood of continued increases as   that promote decent working conditions. While there has
 countries stockpile coffee in case supply chains are hit   been an increased demand for coffee sold by supermarkets,
 harder by COVID-19. This could have a positive effect for   there have been steep decreases in demand for coffee sold
 coffee farmers who have until recently faced record low   at cafés, which is generally high-end or premium specialty
 prices for their coffee, providing them with essential income   coffee that brings much higher prices for farmers.
 that could go toward improving working conditions to make   Production is very dependable on the last part of the
 employment in the sector more attractive. However, coffee   coffee chain and its demand. That is why, when coffee shops
 traders’ and roasters’ increased expenditures on coffee could   close down even the best beans will stay in warehouses to
 decrease the amount of resources they have available for   rot. Luckily, online grocery retailers seem to have coped
 monitoring and remediating labor issues in their supply   well with lockdown. Coffee was already the number one

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