United Coffee is one of Europe's largest coffee roasters.[1][2][3] It produces and distributes a wide range of coffee, coffee machines, and related services through retail and out-of-home distribution channels, including hotels, restaurants, and cafés. The company is based in Geneva, Switzerland.[4]

United Coffee
Founded1818, 's-Hertogenbosch (den Bosch), Netherlands
HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland
Key people
Per Harkjaer, CEO
ProductsCoffee
ServicesCoffee, coffee machines and related services
Number of employees
1000 approx

Company edit

United Coffee was founded in 1818 and now employs nearly 1,000 people and roasts over 60,000 tons of coffee per year. The company also buys 1% of the world's total coffee exports per year.[5] The company is a market leader within the private label and single-portion coffee sector and owns retail and out-of-home brands such as Grand Café, Templo, Rosca, and Smit & Dorlas. It also supplies some of Europe's leading food service companies, including Subway, McDonald's and thousands of local cafes and restaurants.

United Coffee is dedicated to working with internationally recognised codes of conduct, including Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance and UTZ Certified and is a European leader in sustainable coffee.

Backed by mid-market private equity fund, CapVest, United Coffee is a leading roaster across six European countries: France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

History edit

The history of United Coffee dates back to 1818 when a small shop roaster, Mr. Sweens and his family, founded the company, then named Drie Mollen, in 's-Hertogenbosch (den Bosch) in the south of the Netherlands. By the late 1900s, Drie Mollen had begun its development into an international coffee roasting business.

By the 1990s, five leading tea and coffee companies had joined the original founding Sweens family, and the business continued to grow and develop.

In 2008, CapVest, the private equity fund, bought Drie Mollen. In March 2010, the company was rebranded United Coffee and its head office was moved from the Netherlands to Geneva.

References edit

  1. ^ [1] United Coffee heads for business reorganisation in UK, New Statesman
  2. ^ [2] United Coffee s’installe à Genève, Le Temps (article in French)
  3. ^ [3] United Coffee eröffnet Hauptsitz in Genf, Tages-Anzeiger (article in German)
  4. ^ [4] Dutch United Coffee to position headquarters in Switzerland, ADP News
  5. ^ [5] Per Harkjaer: Drink up, the coffee revolution has begun, The Independent

External links edit