Megrano’s product portfolio is structured not only by country, but by region, terroir and variety combinations. This approach is designed to strengthen both cup quality and commercial predictability.
Venezuela Collection
Coffee production in Venezuela is concentrated especially across regions located along the Andes and is historically associated with the “Maracaibo” commercial class.
Mérida – Typica
Mérida – Bourbon
Táchira – Caturra
Táchira – Typica
Trujillo – Bourbon
Trujillo – Catuai
Lara – Mundo Novo
Lara – Caturra
Caracas (Eastern Mountains) – Typica
Maracaibo Blend – Typica / Bourbon Mix
Colombia Collection
Coffee production in Colombia extends across mountainous regions with diverse microclimates.
Huila – Castillo
Huila – Caturra
Antioquia – Typica
Antioquia – Bourbon
Cauca – Castillo
Cauca – Pacamara
Nariño – Caturra
Tolima – Colombia Variety
Quindio – Catuai
Sierra Nevada – Typica
Brazil Collection
Brazil’s coffee production spans wide geographies, making regional classification commercially important.
Cerrado Mineiro – Catuai
Cerrado Mineiro – Mundo Novo
Sul de Minas – Bourbon
Sul de Minas – Catuai
Mogiana – Mundo Novo
Mogiana – Caturra
Bahia – Catuai
Chapada Diamantina – Topazio
Espírito Santo – Robusta (Conilon)
Alta Mogiana – Acaia
India Collection
India plays a critical role in the blend market through both Arabica and Robusta production.
Karnataka – S795 (Arabica)
Karnataka – Selection 9
Karnataka – Cauvery (Catimor)
Kerala – Robusta Kaapi
Kerala – Sln 274
Tamil Nadu – Kent
Tamil Nadu – Chandragiri
Babubudangiri – Typica derivatives
Coorg – S795
Wayanad – Robusta
Micro Lot & Premium Selections
Colombia – Geisha (Huila / Cauca)
Venezuela – Bourbon micro-lot (Mérida)
Brazil – Yellow Bourbon (Sul de Minas)
India – Monsooned Malabar (Kerala)
International Trade Standards
International coffee trade is managed through Incoterms rules that standardize responsibility, cost and risk distribution between parties. These rules define the delivery point, transport costs, insurance responsibility and the stage at which risk over the goods is transferred.
Especially in coffee trade, the reason the same product may be offered at different prices is often not only quality, but also the selected trade terms and risk distribution. For this reason, choosing the correct Incoterm is not only an operational decision, but also a financial one.
Import Structure into Turkey
Coffee imports into Turkey involve a multi-layered process including contract agreement, loading, international transportation, port operations, customs clearance and domestic distribution. In order for the product to enter the country, required documents, inspections and compliance procedures must be completed properly.
Within this structure, logistics, financing, warehousing and operational costs form a significant part of the total cost and directly affect the final product price. Therefore, import is not merely purchasing; it is a discipline of process management and cost optimization.