Please login in order to download photos in full size
If you are not registered, please register for free: www.Free-Photos.biz/register
Please note to download premium images you also need to join as a free member..
You can also save the photos without the registration - but only in small and average sizes, and some of them will have the site's watermark. Please simply click your right mouse button and save the image.
Please login in order to like photos
If you are not registered, please register for free:
Sorry, non-members can download up to 1100 full-size photos per month.
It looks like you have used up your limit.
Free members can download an unlimited number of full-size photos - including the premium free photos.
Join as a member today for FREE! - and download the images without limitations:
www.Free-Photos.biz/membership.php
You can also save the images without the membership - but only in small and average sizes, and some of them may have the site's watermark. Please simply click your right mouse button and save the image.
|
This is a premium free photo
This photo was viewed times and was downloaded in full size 0 times.
This photo was liked 0 times
Source page: |
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sifting_good_beans_from_bad.jpg |
---|
Description |
Workers at Ambassa Enterprises, a coffee buyer and exporter based in Addis Ababa, sort the beans for export. Ambassa is run by Geoffrey Wetherill, a Lancastrian who arrived in Ethiopia during the Second World War. He got a taste for the country and the coffee, and returned soon after to establish Ambassa, now one of Ethiopia's leading coffee exporters. Geoffrey is enthusiastic about the Ethiopia Commodity Exchange, which was developed thanks to UK aid funded research: "It's certainly improved things here," he says. "And we are seeing a better grade of coffee now." DFID supported two leading research institutes who were tasked with finding a solution to Ethiopia's inefficient food and commodity markets. The UK aid funded research recommended setting up a commodity exchange and helped to design the warehousing, logistics and payment systems that the exchange uses today. The exchange helps to boost exports and secure a better deal for farmers and consumers. More information: <a href="https://www.dfid.gov.uk/ecx" rel="nofollow">www.dfid.gov.uk/ecx</a> Photo: Pete Lewis/Department for International Development |
|||||||
Date | ||||||||
Source | Flickr: Sifting good beans from bad | |||||||
Author | DFID - UK Department for International Development | |||||||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
|
EXIF data: | |
File name | sifting_good_beans_from_bad.jpg |
---|---|
Size, Mbytes | 1.63744921875 |
Mime type | image/jpeg |
Camera manufacturer | Canon |
Camera model | Canon EOS 1000D |
Orientation of image | 1 |
Image resolution in width direction | 72 |
Image resolution in height direction | 72 |
Unit of X and Y resolution | 2 |
Exposure time | 1/50 sec (0.02) |
F number | f / 5 |
Exposure program | 2 |
ISO speed rating | 800 |
Exif version | 0221 |
Lens focal length | 42 mm |
Date and time original image was generated | 2011:06:15 11:17:54 |
Date and time image was made digital data | 2011:06:15 11:17:54 |
Meaning of each component | |
Shutter speed | 5.625 |
Aperture | 4.625 |
Exposure bias | 0 |
Metering mode | 5 |
User comments |