🇰🇪 Kenya Coffee School (KCS)
Curriculum: Phytosanitary Certification & Global Coffee Trade Compliance
Program Title
Phytosanitary Certification & International Coffee Trade Compliance
Award
- Kenya Coffee School Certificate / Diploma Module
- Stackable toward: Coffee Quality, Export Management, Trade Compliance, and Value Addition Programs
Target Learners
- Coffee farmers & cooperative leaders
- Exporters & warehouse operators
- Green coffee traders & exporters
- County coffee officers
- Youth entering coffee trade & logistics
- Quality controllers & lab technicians
Program Rationale
Kenyan coffee is globally respected for quality, yet market access is lost not at cupping tables—but at borders.
This curriculum equips learners with plant health intelligence, regulatory literacy, and export readiness, ensuring Kenyan coffee:
- Passes phytosanitary inspections worldwide
- Avoids rejection, fumigation penalties, or destruction
- Retains quality while meeting biosecurity rules
- Trades competitively across Africa, Europe, Asia, Middle East, Americas & Oceania
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this course, learners will be able to:
- Interpret global phytosanitary laws affecting coffee trade
- Apply Kenyan phytosanitary procedures correctly
- Prepare export-ready coffee consignments
- Navigate continent-specific import requirements
- Protect coffee quality while ensuring biosecurity compliance
- Train others (ToT-ready) on phytosanitary best practices
Module Structure
MODULE 1: Foundations of Phytosanitary Systems
Duration: 1 Week
Topics
- Definition of phytosanitary certification
- Plant health vs food safety (key distinction)
- Pests of quarantine concern in coffee
- Why coffee is regulated despite being roasted later
Global Framework
- International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC)
- National Plant Protection Organizations (NPP0s)
- Role of World Trade Organization SPS Agreement
Practical
- Identify quarantine pests affecting coffee (CBD, Leaf Rust, storage pests)
- Case studies of rejected consignments
MODULE 2: Kenya as Country of Origin – Legal & Institutional Framework
Duration: 1 Week
Topics
- Kenya’s plant health legal framework
- Role of Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS)
- Coffee-specific inspection procedures
- Linkage between factories, mills, warehouses & export points
Practical
- Filling a phytosanitary application (Kenya format)
- Pre-inspection checklist for coffee exporters
MODULE 3: Coffee Forms & Phytosanitary Risk Levels
Duration: 1 Week
Coffee Types Covered
- Coffee cherries
- Parchment coffee
- Green (raw) coffee beans
- Roasted coffee
- Coffee husks & by-products
Topics
- Risk profiling by coffee form
- Storage pests and contamination pathways
- Moisture, moulds, and live pest prevention
Practical
- Risk assessment exercise per coffee form
- Warehouse hygiene & pest control audit
MODULE 4: Export Preparation & Inspection Process
Duration: 2 Weeks
Topics
- Export consignment assembly
- Traceability & batch integrity
- Sampling methods
- Physical inspection & laboratory testing
- Treatments: fumigation, cleaning, rejection
Practical
- Mock inspection with checklist
- Sample drawing and documentation
- Packaging & container sanitation standards
MODULE 5: Continental Import Requirements (Global Focus)
Duration: 3 Weeks
Africa
- Regional harmonization (EAC, COMESA, AfCFTA)
- Transit risks & re-export rules
Europe (EU)
- EU plant health regime
- Zero tolerance pests
- Documentation precision & traceability
Asia (China, Japan, Korea, India)
- Pre-export approvals
- Pest-free area declarations
- Strict inspection thresholds
Middle East
- Rapid clearance + strict paperwork
- Heat & storage risk controls
Americas (USA, Canada, Latin America)
- USDA & CFIA standards
- Biosecurity enforcement & penalties
Oceania (Australia, New Zealand)
- Highest biosecurity thresholds
- Mandatory treatments & declarations
Practical
- Comparative matrix: one Kenyan coffee → six continents
- Compliance mapping exercise
MODULE 6: Quality Preservation vs Phytosanitary Compliance
Duration: 1 Week
Topics
- Impact of fumigation on cup quality
- Alternatives to chemical treatments
- Preventive farm & factory hygiene
- Circular economy approaches in pest control
Kenya Coffee School Approach
- Prevention at source
- Ecological & regenerative pest management
- Low-cost solutions for smallholders
MODULE 7: Documentation, Ethics & Trade Integrity
Duration: 1 Week
Topics
- Phytosanitary certificates as legal instruments
- Fraud risks & consequences
- Chain-of-custody ethics
- Digital certification trends
Practical
- Document verification drills
- Border dispute simulations
MODULE 8: Capstone – Export Readiness Simulation
Duration: 2 Weeks
Project
Learners must:
- Prepare a full export file for Kenyan green coffee
- Select a destination continent
- Demonstrate compliance from farm to port
- Defend the consignment before a mock inspection panel
Assessment Methods
- Written assessments
- Practical inspections
- Case study analysis
- Capstone project
- Peer & industry evaluation
Certification Outcome
Graduates are certified as:
Kenya Coffee School – Phytosanitary & Coffee Trade Compliance Specialists
They are competent to:
- Work with exporters & cooperatives
- Interface with inspection authorities
- Reduce export rejections
- Train farmers and processors
- Support Kenya’s value-added coffee exports
Strategic Alignment
- Kenya Vision 2030
- SDGs (Trade, Agriculture, Youth Employment)
- Open Skills Education (OSE)
- County-level coffee revitalization
- Kenya Coffee School & Barista Mtaani ecosystem
