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Coffee in crisis: the bitter end of our favourite drink?

Drought, flooding, disease - climate change is already threatening the source

of our caffeine fix. Are we facing the end of coffee as we know it, asks David

Robson.

By David Robson

29 July 2015

As we sip our lattes and espressos and read the daily headlines, climate change

can seem like a distant threat. But travel a few thousand miles to the source

of your caffeine fix, and the turbulence is all too real.

Consider the coffee farmers in Chiapas, Mexico, recently interviewed by

researcher Elisa Frank from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Compared to the gentler showers they were used to, they are now seeing violent

downpours that waterlog the plants in their care. When we were growing up, the

rains didn t fall this much, one interviewee told Frank. The plants produce

less. The leaves and fruit fall because of the wetness.

Where farmers once enjoyed stable, mild conditions, the temperature now seesaws

between cold that stunts growth, and heat that dries the berries before they

can be harvested. Then there are the hurricanes and landslides; sometimes, the

mud can swallow up plantations. As one farmer put it: The weather is very

strange. Strange things come that we didn t see before.

Peak coffee

These problems are by no means confined to Mexico. Farmers across South

America, Asia and Africa are watching coffee plants dwindle as droughts,

downpours, and plagues of pests attack their crops, as a result of global

warming.

The world currently enjoys a two-billion-cup-a-day habit. How can we ensure

that we get that caffeine fix in a turbulent climate?

The consequences of this unrest could soon work their way through the pipeline

to your local coffee shop. The world currently enjoys a two-billion-cup-a-day

habit. How can we ensure that the coffee still flows, when the crops are being

ravaged by extreme weather? And if the farmers can t meet that demand, will we

soon reach peak coffee ?

Some worry that our efforts to combat these challenges will only create further

environmental devastation. Others suggest that the only solution is to change

the beloved flavour of the drink itself. Whatever the answers, savour your

espresso while you can: we may be facing the end of coffee as we know it.

The problem arises, in part, from the refinement of our palette. There are two

main breeds of commercial coffee: the more aromatic Coffea Arabica, and the

more bitter Coffea Robusta variety. Thanks to its complex flavours, Arabica is

by far the world s favourite, accounting for about 70% of the coffee we drink.

Those genteel qualities that we favour come at the price of the plant s

physical strength, however: it is far more sensitive to stress than its more

robust cousin. As BBC Magazine recently explained, almost all the commercial

Arabica plants have been bred from a very small stock taken from the mountains

of Ethiopia giving it very little genetic diversity and making it

particularly vulnerable to climate change. The plant grows best between a very

narrow range of relatively mild temperatures 18 to 22C and needs gentle,

regular rainfall. It needs a very particular climate that you can only find in

a few locations around the globe, says Christian Bunn at the Humboldt

University in Berlin. That makes it very different from other crops, like corn

plants bred for thousands of years to adapt to many different environments.

The delicate Arabica plants just can t cope with the new and unpredictable

conditions that come with global warming. In Mexico, for instance, the rising

temperature seems to have brought heavier rainfall, which is battering the

plants before they have time to seed. The coffee plant only flowers for 48

hours, so if something happens during flowering if there s a big storm then

the whole crop is destroyed, explains Ainhoa Magrach at the Institute of

Terrestrial Ecosystems, ETH Zurich.

Even when the plants did blossom, the berries were shrivelled and small

Other places have the exact opposite problem: drought. When Oxfam questioned

coffee producers in the Rwenzori Mountains of Uganda, they complained that

hotter, drier seasons were causing the plants to drop their flowers before they

had turned to fruit. Even when the plants blossomed, the beans were shrivelled

and small. Further stresses come from the fact that the coffee plant s enemies

can thrive in hotter weather including pests such as leaf miners, coffee

berry borers, mealy bugs and diseases like leaf rust, all of which ravage

crops. During one of the most recent epidemics, Central America saw its

harvests drop by 20% in 2013, after an onset of leaf rust and such events may

be more common as the climate warms even more.

Calculating the long-term costs isn t straightforward - it can be difficult to

separate single, freak events from broader trends - but looking at coffee

yields in Tanzania since the 1960s, one team has found that the crops fell from

a high of 500kg per hectare to just over 300kg today. Importantly, the drop

seems to closely follow a temperature rise of about 0.3C per decade, and an

associated reduction in rainfall.

All of which paints a bleak picture for the future. Using the latest figures

for climate change across the globe, Bunn s calculations predict that the land

suited to farming Arabica could drop by as much as 50% by 2050. Classic

coffee-producing regions, such as Vietnam, India and most of Central America,

will be hit particularly hard.

We can expect coffee to become more of a luxury, with prices shooting up by

around 25% by 2050

The consequences will be serious for farmers and coffee lovers alike. For one

thing, we can expect coffee to become more of a luxury, with prices shooting up

by around 25% by 2050 according to Bunn s calculations for his PhD thesis. It

will be particularly noticeable, he says, considering that most other crops are

set to become cheaper and cheaper as technology and productivity continues to

improve. When that s taken into account, coffee will in fact be 50% more

expensive than it would have been without climate change, Bunn says.

It s unlikely the farmers will see the profit. After years of turmoil, many may

just choose to switch to more stable crops. When we take our results and

confront coffee producers, everyone tells us this is true people in

low-elevation Central America are already giving up on coffee production, Bunn

says. Everyone is shifting to rubber plantations.

The demand for coffee can only be met if we encroach on 2.2 million hectares of

valuable rainforest

Given the money on offer, others will almost certainly move to fill our empty

cups and that could come at a huge cost to the environment. Magrach recently

mapped out the areas suitable for Arabica farming and compared it to areas of

natural interest. In the worst case scenario, she found that we will need to

encroach on 2.2 million hectares of rainforest to meet the predicted demand

an area about the size of Wales. The result would be a significant loss of

biodiversity.

There may be better solutions. Given its hardiness, Robusta will be better able

to weather the changes; Magrach s models even suggest that its preferred

habitat may grow as a result of the rising temperatures. If so, a simple change

in taste may offset the coffee crash provided we can grow to love its

bitterness. It would definitely be better for the forests, says Magrach. At

the very least, she hopes that food labelling will make it clear in future

whether the beans were farmed from vulnerable areas, so that consumers are

aware of the environmental cost and can shop more ethically.

Others hope that improved farming techniques will instead keep the coffee

flowing. Along these lines, the Coffee and Climate initiative is helping more

than a dozen different coffee producers to join forces and share notes on the

best ways to deal with the oncoming challenges. One option, for instance, is to

graft Arabica strains to the roots of Robusta plants, making a hybrid that is

more resistant to drought while retaining the preferred aromatic flavour.

Alternatively, selective breeding could help produce a variety that combines

the best of both Robusta and Arabica. It s something people are working on,

but we re not sure when the new strains will be available, adds Magrach.

The livelihoods of farmers and others in the coffee business at least 25

million people according to one estimate depend on us finding an answer,

fast. For the time being, the farmers face daily uncertainty, as Elisa Frank

found during her interviews in Mexico. It can be hard to weather. Although many

of the farmers listen to the TV forecasts, and try to prepare for the oncoming

downpours, they can t help but feel helpless, swept away by forces beyond their

control.

Some of the farmers feel that the subject has almost become a taboo. We talk

very little about climate, one told Frank. We already know how it is here

and there is nothing we can do.