100% of the profits from every bag of coffee go to our farmers, their communities, and the ecosystem they call home.
Gorongosa National Park is a park for the people. Our goal is for 20,000 girls from communities around Gorongosa to earn a high school diploma by 2035.
It collaborates with local stakeholders to provide access to health care and education,
particularly for girls and young women.
Girls' Club is an after-school program that encourages girls to stay in school and end child marriages. The Club began in 2016 and now has 50 locations serving 2,000 girls around Gorongosa. They meet every weekday to study, learn life skills, and engage with women role models from their community.
Just as importantly, the clubs give the girls time to play — something they don’t often have time to do between their studies and household chores. Over time, they gain the confidence to dream big for their futures and be agents of change in their communities.
Gorongosa National Park is one of the most biodiverse places on the planet. Our goal is to support its flora and fauna by planting one million rainforest and mangrove trees by 2035.
It supports conservation initiatives that protect and preserve Gorongosa’s
ecosystems for generations to come.
Conservation in Gorongosa National Park is entrusted to a team of 260 trained rangers who patrol over a million acres of habitat — a job that requires plenty of skill and passion. In the Park, men and women endure difficult training to achieve their dream of becoming rangers.
Thanks to them, over the past few years, the number of snares and traps found in the Park has declined by more than 60%, and several perpetrators involved in illegal logging and pangolin poaching have been caught and prosecuted.
Gorongosa National Park is an economic engine for the communities around it. Our goal is to create 2,000 full-time jobs for locals by 2035.
It provides resources, training, and jobs in industries (like coffee) that support
sustainable economic growth.
Floriana grew up in Nhanguco village. She doesn't know when she was born and didn’t go to school. Before joining the Coffee Project, she practiced subsistence farming, making it difficult to make a steady income. Today, she earns a monthly salary planting coffee and above fair market prices for her harvest. She dreams of building a good house and a better life for her family. She even saves money every month to buy building materials.