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How much funding is provided by the coffee industry for research on the health benefits of coffee?

I came across a statistic that surprised me by its meagerness. According to their website, the National Coffee Association USA has spent $6 million on research funding over the last 20 or so years. The NCAUSA cites 80 specific investigations that they funded. (I don't know if the trend is up or down over the two decades.)

From reading Antony Wild's Coffee: A Dark History a few years ago, it was my impression that the coffee industry sets great importance on demonstrable health benefits. See in particular Chapt. 14, Coffee, Science and History.

The book mentions specifically the Vanderbilt Institute for Coffee Studies as funded by "a $6 million grant from the coffee industry" to Vanderbilt University Medical Center in 1999. (In 2007 the Institute moved its affiliation from the Medical Center to the Vanderbilt Center for Latin American Studies, but continues investigating "the health effects of coffee consumption, including potential therapeutic uses".) While some of this funding came from NCAUSA, it appears the bulk came from the Association of Coffee Producing Countries (ACPC), with additional funding by the All Japan Coffee Association and the International Coffee Organization.

The global coffee commodity market has annual sales well-up in the tens of billions($), so I would expect more in annual research funding than the average $300K/yr reported by NCAUSA.

Added: Apparently it is difficult for coffee trade associations to survive. The NCAUSA cited above is ancient in comparison to other organizations mentioned. The Association of Coffee Producing Countries (ACPC) began in 1993 with a model of OPEC-like price supports through agreed upon limitations of exports, but dissolved at the beginning of 2002. So a dimension of this topic is the limited degree to which coffee producers and manufacturers are able to cooperate.

MTSan
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hardmath
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    Looks like there's controversy over your question. I think you're asking about the ~1000x discrepancy in funding that you perceive. As an example of articles written, here's a Google Scholar search that includes a few hundred articles that have both "coffee" and "health" in the title. A quick scan seems to indicate myriad funding sources, from universities to special interest groups and everywhere in between. Can you clarify what you're asking, perhaps by citing some passages from the book or what leads you to this impression? – hoc_age Mar 05 '15 at 01:54
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    I've voted to keep, since hardmath is a sensible user and wouldn't ask random questions. – qedk Mar 05 '15 at 05:02
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    "Controversy" was perhaps a stronger word than warranted for close- and down-votes; I cast neither but agreed with both. No comments had been left. I was merely trying to help you clarify; I apologise if my comment was unhelpful. Your question isn't phrased in the form of a question; are you asking, "Who funds health-related coffee studies?" – hoc_age Mar 05 '15 at 11:33
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    @therewillbecoffee - I don't mean to sound didactic, but votes apply to questions, not users! I wouldn't expect (nor interpret) down- nor close-votes (nor up-votes, for that matter) as commentary on the user. The fact that hardmath is a sensible and high-rep user hasn't anything to do with this. – hoc_age Mar 05 '15 at 11:35
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    @hoc_age: Thanks, I appreciated that your comments were intended to provide context for the down/close vote cast by someone else. – hardmath Mar 05 '15 at 12:49
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    @hoc_age Definitely. Since it's hardmath and you asked him for sources, I guess he'd do it. Give him time, that was my message. – qedk Mar 05 '15 at 15:34
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    Don't know the history of close/down votes but think this is an interesting question. +1. – daniel Oct 31 '15 at 21:08
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    Research on the effects of consumption is a very small portion of overall research and development in the coffee industry. Significant focus has been placed on sustainability, disease prevention and quality improvement. Check out World Coffee Research for instance. Additionally, I think it may be hard to find numbers because they are so distributed. Funding doesn't go through one organization, instead through a multitude of importers, and NPOs. Also, current specialty trade organization is SCAA. Shocked it hasn't been mentioned yet. – Nate M. Apr 04 '17 at 20:12
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    Your first link is now broken – Anthony Pham Jul 06 '17 at 13:51
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    Thanks, @AnthonyPham. A few minutes of searching their site did not turn up a replacement page that reflects their history of research grants or investigations. This page about a Scientific Advisory Group seems related but it doesn't support what I wrote before, so I'll do more poking around to see if they still do health research funding at all. – hardmath Jul 06 '17 at 19:01

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