Background
Coffee was first planted in Kenya at Bura in Taita Hills in 1893 and thereafter, grown at Kibwezi, under irrigation in 1900, and at Kikuyu near Nairobi in 1904. In the 1930s, following the Devonshire White Paper Report of 1923, the Colonial Government allowed controlled planting of coffee outside the European settled areas in Kisii and Meru in particular.
By the time Kenya attained its independence in 1963, the coffee industry was playing a significant role in the economy by among other things being the leading foreign exchange earner. At that time, there was no statutory control, in terms of crop husbandry, production, processing, grading and marketing. The marketing of coffee was handled by individuals and through rudimentary institutions between 1900 and 1933. On request by coffee farmers, the colonial government enacted the Coffee Industry Ordinance in 1932 and established the Coffee Board (CB) in January 1933. The role of the Coffee Board was regulatory and promotion, that is, licensing, inspectorate and promotion.