Café Rico

Café Rico
Type Private
Industry Beverage
Founded c. 1930
Headquarters Ponce, Puerto Rico
Key people Julio Bravo Soler, General Manager
Products coffee
Website http://www.caferico.com/ and http://www.yaucono.com/

Café Rico is a Puerto Rican corporation that manufactures coffee branded by the same name. The company's headquarters are located in Barrio San Antón in the city of Ponce, Puerto Rico, on Las Americas Avenue/Route 163 and Calle Comercio/Route 133. The company used to be called Cooperativa de Cafeteros (Coffee-growers Cooperative).

Its coffee has been reported to be Puerto Rico's best and its San Carlos Selection is said to have been the Vatican's favorite coffee at one time.[1] The company has the only coffee tasting lab and the only Certified Taster on the Island. The company has a partnership with Yauco Selecto Estate Coffee.[2]

Contents

History

Cooperativa de Cafeteros was founded in the 1930s. Its first administrator was Ramiro L. Colon. It was the first agricultural cooperative union in Puerto Rico.[3] One of its major goals when it was founded was become a major player in the coffee business by being not just the major grower of Puerto Rican coffee, but also its major manufacturer.

In July 2008, Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster purchased the Café Rico, Café Yaucono, and Café Rioja brands, thus acquiring about 60 percent of Puerto Rico's coffee market.[4][5]

Today

Today Cafe Rico is the coffee with highest sales in Puerto Rico. It is the only coffee packaged in a vacuum, a technique used to preserve the coffee's aroma. Annual 1965 sales are over $8 million dollars. The company has packaging plants in Ponce and San Juan. It has new corporate headquarters in Barrio Sabanetas in Ponce.

After closing down the 110,000 square feet (10,000 m2) Avenida Las Americas plant in September 2009, Puerto Rico Coffee Roasters is spending $8 million to reopen it again by December 2010. In so doing, it will be performing some 60% of the company's coffee roasting operations.[6][7][8]

Other activities

The company:

Products

In July 2008, Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster acquired Cafe Rico as well as Cafe Yaucono and Cafe Rioja, which together account for some 60% of the coffee consumed in Puerto Rico. Cafe Rico stopped operations out of its Las Americas Avenue plant in Ponce in September 2008 but, in August 2010, Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster announced plans to invest $8 million USD to bring the plant back into operation. With the investment, its Santurce operations will move to Ponce. This will make the Las Americas location "the largest coffee roasting location in Puerto Rico" and the facility "the most modern coffee roasting facility in the Caribbean."[9][10] Some of the products of the company are Decaff, Cafe Rico, 50/50, Yauco Selecto, and Yaucono Espresso.

Sales volume

During fiscal year 1962-63 the total volume of the cooperative was $35 million dollars.

Headquarters and warehouses

The central offices are in the city of Ponce. There are also branch offices in San Juan, Arecibo, Yauco, Mayaguez, San Sebastian, Utuado, Adjuntas, Jayuya, and Ciales.

Federal relations

In the 1930s, the company had over $300,000 in escrow at the bank of Baltimore. It is an agricultural partner with the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank. It is a member of Federacion de Cooperativas de Estados Unidos, United Cooperatives, the Cooperative Grange League Federation, and the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau, the National Council for Farmer Cooperatives, and the American Institute for Cooperation.

Economic outlook

The company has $10 million in resources, with reserves of $4 million dollars. Membership in the guild is so large that its annual meetings, heavily attended by its members, requires a whole baseball stadium to carry it on. They take place at the Francisco Montaner Stadium in Ponce.

Leadership

Its board of directors has 15 members, representaing all coffee districts in Puerto Rico.

Its past presidenst have been (to 1963):

Its current Board of Directors is composed of:

References

  1. ^ Vatican
  2. ^ Coffee testing lab
  3. ^ Coffee testing lab
  4. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. By Jason Rodríguez Grafal. Periodico La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  5. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. Jason Rodríguez Grafal. La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico. 21 October 2009. Page 16. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  6. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. By Jason Rodríguez Grafal. Periodico La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  7. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. By Jason Rodríguez Grafal. Periodico La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  8. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. Jason Rodríguez Grafal. La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico. 21 October 2009. Page 16. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  9. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. Jason Rodríguez Grafal. La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
  10. ^ Puerto Rico Coffee Roaster: Inyecta $8 milllones a antigua torrefactora. Jason Rodríguez Grafal. La Perla del Sur. Ponce, Puerto Rico. 21 October 2009. Page 16. Retrieved 3 November 2011.