Owning Our Own Regenerative Supply Chains

Beamed to you with love from Planet Earth
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A BEU × Bloom Network Coffee Partnership


Across Uganda, farmers in the BEU Permaculture Group have spent more than a decade building a different kind of agricultural system—one rooted in soil health, community ownership, and long-term resilience. What began as a local effort to restore degraded land has grown into a cooperative supply chain that raises farmer incomes, protects microclimates, and brings regenerative products directly to global markets.

Bloom Network and BEU are partnering to expand this model. Together, we’re building a supply chain where value stays with the people who grow it, and where each step, from the seedling to the roasted bean, supports ecological regeneration and community well-being.

Why Coffee?

Coffee is one of BEU’s most successful crops. It grows within large-scale permaculture agroforestry systems where more than 500 indigenous species are planted alongside export crops. This approach:

  1. restores local microclimates
  2. increases water retention
  3. reduces flood risks
  4. improves soil health
  5. diversifies farm income
  6. strengthens food sovereignty

Farmers working with BEU see 30–50% higher incomes than conventional practices—not from external inputs, but from healthier ecosystems and direct access to fair markets.

Where Bloom Comes In

Bloom Network helps link BEU’s community-led production to customers, partners, and collaborators around the world. By contributing marketing, distribution support, and global visibility, Bloom makes it possible for BEU to reach stable, long-term markets for their coffee.

This partnership also creates a pathway for other Local Bloom hubs to develop their own regenerative supply chains - rooted in their place, culture, and materials.

Our First Joint Offering

BEU × Bloom Coffee

Grown cooperatively in Uganda, roasted in Kansas, and distributed through a transparent, community-centered network.

Every purchase supports:

  1. permaculture education in Ugandan schools
  2. expansion of the Tropical Permaculture Education Institute of Africa
  3. agriculture and climate resilience research
  4. Bloom Network’s work connecting regenerative hubs worldwide

This campaign marks a step toward a bioregional production economy - one where communities produce what they need, trade what they grow, and retain ownership of the value they create.

We invite you to be part of it.

Shop Coffee (US) → https://shop.bloomnetwork.earth/

Learn More (EU) → https://permaculture-trade.de/

Partner with BEU → https://broadfieldpermaculture.org/


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