Yên Bái: The Catimor Coffee Dream Collapses

From High Hopes to Bitter Reality

Launched in 1993, the Catimor coffee program in Yên Bái Province was initially promoted as a high-value “wealth crop.” By 2000 the planting area expanded from 452 hectares in 1995 to over 1,700 hectares, with some reports of a peak above 3,000 hectares. Provincial leaders and the newly formed Yên Bái Coffee Company promised farmers prosperity and even dubbed Catimor the “Catimor Princess.”

Ambitious Support and Rapid Expansion

Under the program, the provincial budget subsidized bank loan interest, and the Coffee Company supplied seedlings, fertilizer, and inputs directly to villages. Commune officials signed debts on farmers’ behalf, expecting repayment after harvest. Party members were urged to set an example: many local leaders planted from 0.5 to 3 hectares each. Households in designated areas were even warned that refusing to plant coffee could result in their land being reallocated.

Program Collapse and Financial Losses

Despite careful tending, Catimor coffee failed to bear fruit or produced sparse, uneven cherries. By 2004, the cultivated area had shrunk to just 357 hectares, leaving farmers with heavy debts and no harvest. Trees were cut for firewood, and farmers faced bankruptcy and long-term debt.

Legal Disputes and Communal Burdens

Commune chairmen who had signed economic contracts were summoned to court over unpaid debts for fertilizers and materials. For example:

  • Xuân Lai Commune: Ordered to repay 41.6 million VND.

  • Cảm Nhân Commune: Owed 68.8 million VND.

  • Phúc An Commune: Owed 69.1 million VND.

Farmers, already impoverished, were unable to repay, leaving commune authorities facing the lawsuits.

Lasting Social Impact

Many households lost land or livelihoods. Some, like Nguyễn Xuân Hùng’s family, lost their planned coffee plots and now survive on small rice fields and odd jobs such as weaving shrimp traps. The once-celebrated Catimor project left a legacy of wasted investment, broken promises, and enduring hardship across Yên Bái’s rural communities.