Coffee could become a luxury in the UK if Greta Thunberg’s climate warnings are not heeded, experts claim.
Climate scientists say businesses need to invest more to help farmers who are abandoning their crops due to high temperatures and historically low prices.
Increased humidity and crippling market prices are forcing coffee producers in Peru to turn to other sources of income as they struggle to harvest healthy crops.
Some have even resorted to growing the coca plant, the raw material for cocaine, despite a government initiative to reduce production.
Farmers of the Arabica bean, used in thousands of Britons’ daily cups of Joe, are deserting their farms or turning to other crops, as pests and disease trigger smaller harvests of lower-quality beans.
Farmers are also being forced to grow the delicate plant on ever-higher, cooler land, as rising annual average temperatures render large swaths of ground unsuitable.
By 2050, up to half the land currently used globally to grow coffee could become unusable for this purpose, experts predict.
The environmental cost of this could be dire, with increased deforestation likely in order to clear new areas for coffee farms.
Experts fear the quality of coffee could be diminished as farmers turn to new varieties, and that lower production volumes could cause prices to increase.
Catherine David, head of commercial partnerships at Fairtrade, said the UK public “really expect businesses to be paying a fair price for their coffee — this isn’t a nice-to-have for them.”
She told the PA news agency: “While now coffee sales have grown and it’s a very popular product and we can pick up coffee from all different price ranges, I think if we don’t invest now, then coffee could become a luxury, longer term.
“Because if 50 percent of land currently used for coffee isn’t going to be suitable for it by 2050, and coffee farmers are abandoning their farms, there simply won’t be enough coffee, and so we could, conceivably, get to a point where coffee is no longer available for, say, £1.50 ($1.85) at Greggs, but becomes a premium product for only those who can afford to enjoy it.
“It really is a crisis we are facing and I think it’s one that, if the UK public were more aware of, they’d be pretty scandalized that brands, retailers and coffee shops that they are buying their coffee from aren’t doing more.”
The poorest farmers are being hit the hardest, because they cannot invest profits in tools to improve the soil or buy new plants.
Norandino, a Fairtrade cooperative representing the largest number of farmers in Peru, about 7,000, said extreme rainfall two years ago destroyed crops and caused buildings to crumple in the northwest Piura region.
Its headquarters was flooded, and members fear the region may become uninhabitable in the future.
It buys coffee from its producers at a minimum price higher than the current market rate, but many not in cooperatives are without this vital safety net.
In Montero, a valley district in Piura, leaf rust disease has continued to diminish yields after a devastating outbreak five years ago.
The disease, which has been exacerbated by climate change, covers the leaves with orange dust and causes them to fall off, stopping the plant from photosynthesizing.
Farmers replaced many of their crops with the catimor variety, which is resistant to the rust but vulnerable to brown eye fungus, which has also become more common due to rising temperatures.
Over the last five years, coffee production in the area shrank from 80 percent to 20 percent, with many now turning to more resilient sugar cane.
Source: Read Full Article