Arabica Coffee Drives Economic Development in Tiengan Ward

Vietnam—Qahwa World

Ward in Son La Province, northern Vietnam, is gradually becoming a center for high-quality Arabica coffee production. Coffee plantations are helping local residents increase their incomes and escape poverty. In 2025, the area is focusing on high-yield varieties, modern technologies, and cooperative farming models.

Just a few minutes from the provincial center, the green and productive Arabica coffee plantations of Tiengan Ward thrive. Thanks to an elevation of over 900 meters above sea level and a mild climate, the local coffee is known for its rich aroma and light acidity, making it suitable for specialty coffee production.

As of 2025, coffee plantations in Tiengan cover more than 350 hectares, with over 80% planted with high-yield Arabica. Yields reach 1518 tons per hectare, 1012% higher than during 20202023, reflecting changes in approaches to rural economic development.

Nguyen Van Tuan, Chairman of the People’s Committee of Tiengan Ward, Son La Province, stated: “Arabica is regarded as a key crop, with a focus on organic production and the renewal of varieties to improve both quality and local incomes.”

Ka Thi Thuong, the head of Tam Quynh Village in Tiengan Ward, was among the first to successfully switch to high-yield Arabica. She said: “The village covers 772 hectares. On average, about 8 tons of Arabica are harvested per hectare. This year’s yield was particularly high: the majority of families earned more than USD 3,800, while some earned over USD 38,000.”

Beyond Thuong’s family, more than 700 households in Tiengan rely on coffee for income, earning 120150 million VND annually, contributing significantly to the local economy.

Today, Son La Province is the largest center for Arabica coffee in Vietnam, with over 20,000 hectares of plantations, representing nearly 60% of all Arabica-growing areas in the country. The “Son La Arabica” brand is gradually gaining national recognition, from coffee competitions to exports.

Vuong Van Hai, chairman of the provincial tea association, said:

“Son La focuses on producing high-quality specialty coffee and developing the sector according to geographical indications, while strictly adhering to quality standards and environmental requirements.”

Coffee not only generates income but also drives the development of primary and advanced processing, trade, and agrotourism, creating stable jobs for local residents.

Tiengan Ward aims to build a closed-loop “coffee economy” that combines environmental protection with sustainable development. One of the key initiatives in 2025 is the adoption of modern technologies in coffee cultivation: smart drip irrigation systems, the use of organic biofertilizers, and selective harvesting. These measures help achieve more uniform bean quality, higher sugar content, and consistent flavor.

From the first coffee trees planted on hillside slopes to today, Tiengan Ward is steadily moving toward a more prosperous economic future. Coffee beans have become a symbol of renewed thinking and confidence in modern agricultural development. As local farmers continue to tie their future to Arabica, the story of “prosperity from the mountains” is increasingly visible in the lush greenery of Tiengan’s coffee plantations.

Erna Knutsen: The Unsung Heroine of Specialty Coffee

Atoni Lucien I name her the mother of specialty coffee.

Our lives, all of them, are lived in versions.

I have a version of my life, my parents have another, my siblings another, and for every person I count as a friend or acquaintance, there are yet more versions of my life.

This is not news to anyone.

Famous people famously have many biographies written about them, many different versions of who they were and what they did or didn’t do.

Erna Knutsen was not a famous person, generally. She was a famous person, specifically.

The regular world, the world that is not engrossed and consumed by, obsessed and beset by coffee, that world may not know who Erna Knutsen was.

The coffee world—and not just the specialty coffee world—knows who Erna Knutsen was, though we may not agree on any one version of her story. But I think we might all agree, or most of us, on a version of the person.

She was generous, if not to a fault, then beyond normal, with her time, knowledge, and understanding.

For years before the Specialty Coffee Association of America (now the SCA) hired its first professional staff person, Erna was the unofficial spokesperson for the industry, speaking to reporters about the new fad known as specialty coffee.

Perhaps because her story can be understood as something of an underdog story, she loved to see people succeed against the expectations if not the odds; and while she was not at all shy of the spotlight, she was likely to drag someone else into the spotlight with her to share it.

She had a guffaw that bordered on a cackle and yet was thoroughly charming because it was so genuine, and often surprising, because if anyone could find humor in unexpected places, it was Erna Knutsen.

“During the discussion after one cupping session, Erna had scored a particular sample much higher than the rest of the jury, so Paul asked her to explain what she liked so much about that coffee.

She put on her reading glasses, perused her cupping sheet for a few seconds, then looked up and replied, ‘Oh… I’m sleeping with the farmer!’” -career coffee professional Stephen Vick, talking about the Cup of Excellence jury in Nicaragua, 2006 .

Erna died in June 2018. At 96, she was well past the age when we ask what it was that caused her death. Enough was enough. She had already lived more than one life by any measure and for those of us who claim coffee as a living, it was her second life that meant the most, her coffee life.

Erna’s father, Edwin, died just three months before his 100th birthday.

Long life was in her blood, is one way to put it. Another way would be to say that long life was in her spirit, and her spirit was needed to launch an industry.

To give away the ending, that is what Erna Knutsen did.

 

By:Atoni Lucien (Lucio) Ngeh

International Specialty Coffee and Roastry Manager at SADDLE CAFE and Feels Juice Bar. Specialty Coffee Consultant