We ran a similar story 2 years ago but thought it was time to update as the predictions of reduced coffee production has shifted up again.
As we said back then, this is the essence of our prism around the business side of green. An entire industry, with a product people love and crave, in jeopardy of mass destruction. Whole farms and communities at economic risk. How do you compensate for climate changes if you don't have sufficient water or everything is getting flooded?
Clearly some of those at risk are in impoverished areas and we will be cutting off their primary source of income. And, of course, the price of morning jo will jump for unhappy consumers. So, what are the alternatives? Could coffee growers, as an example, move production inside facilities and containers like many other farmers? What technology, including weather related, might help mitigate losses? We will tlry to do a show on the plight of the coffee sector soon.
Coffee Production May Drop 50 Percent Thanks To Climate Change
Climbing temperatures and altered rainfall are affecting coffee yields, quality, and pests.
Coffee
production worldwide could decline by as much as 50 percent in the next
three decades thanks to climate change, according to a new report.
Published late last week, the Climate Institute report
says a hotter climate and altered rainfall are colluding to cut the
worldwide area suitable for coffee in half by 2050. That would be
catastrophic for some 120 million people in more than 70
countries — mostly developing nations — that depend on the coffee trade.
It
would also affect billions of consumers worldwide, who together drink
about 2.25 billion cups of coffee every day, according to the report,
which warns of rising prices. The ecology is also projected to suffer,
as coffee production may be forced to move away from the equator, and
further up mountains and forests.
Rising
temperatures could make Mexican coffee unviable sooner than 2050, while
Nicaragua will lose most of its coffee zone by 2050, according to the
report.
Brazil,
the world’s largest coffee grower, is set to experience “substantial
losses,” the report notes. Already, Brazil’s coffee-growing areas are
facing a growing number of heat waves, as cold extremes declined between
1960 and 2011.
Abrupt
changes in weather patterns poses a significant problem for Arabica
beans, which account for 75 percent of the world’s coffee production and
require rainy and dry seasons to be well defined. Robusta, the other
type of coffee bean, is more tolerant to warming, yet the report notes
both types of crop seem incapable of weathering even the mild climate
change scenarios evaluated.
In
the Congo, the birthplace of Robusta coffee, the wild plant may become
extinct by 2050. In fact, the report says that unless climate change is
addressed, wild coffee could become extinct worldwide by 2080.
Climate Change Is Already Hurting The World’s Most Consumed Coffee Bean
For years, studies have warned that a warmer planet might mean fewer cups of morning coffee — but a new study claims…thinkprogress.org
For years, studies have warned that a warmer planet might mean fewer cups of morning coffee — but a new study claims…thinkprogress.org
“It’s
not just the heat, which is a big factor which is driving some of the
regions where coffee is produced uphill,” John Connor, Climate
Institute’s chief executive officer, told ABC. “We’re also seeing extra diseases increasing and being able to go up into those areas.”
Studies have long warned that a warmer world might mean a pricier morning cup of coffee, as consumption has been on the rise but coffee stockpiles have been dwindling.
U.S. consumption will be up 1.5 percent in the coming year and reach record highs, Bloomberg reported in June. Worldwide demand in various countries like China, Japan, and India also show upwards trends.
“We
have a cloud hovering over our head. It’s dramatically serious. Climate
change can have a significant adverse effect in the short term,” said
Mario Cerutti, the Green Coffee Corporate Relations director at
Lavazza, one of Italy’s most important coffee roasting companies. “It’s
no longer about the future; it’s the present.”
Other
industry officials have shared similar messages over the years. “What
we are really seeing as a company as we look 10, 20, 30 years down the
road — if conditions continue as they are — is a potentially significant
risk to our supply chain,” said
Jim Hanna, director of environmental affairs at Starbucks, in 2011. “If
we sit by and wait until the impacts of climate change are so severe
that is impacting our supply chain, then that puts us at a greater
risk.”
The
report says that consumers can help ameliorate the problem by choosing
brands that are carbon neutral, or help coffee farmers build their
capacity to adapt to climate change. Moreover, the report notes people
can demand action from companies and governments to ensure all products,
business models, and economies are carbon neutral or even better,
carbon negative.
“Our
concern is primarily for the 25 million farmers out there whose entire
livelihoods depend on this incredibly important global commodity,” Molly
Harriss Olson, chief executive of Fairtrade Australia and New Zealand,
which commissioned the report, according to ABC. “We’ve got to build a
new economy that doesn’t threaten things in our lifestyle such as our
coffee.”
No comments:
Post a Comment