Business World

Climate change threatens Latin America coffee producers

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WASHINGTON — Climate change is threatenin­g the Latin American zones most favorable for growing coffee, according to a study out Monday that warns seed production could drop by nearly 90% by 2050.

The study suggests high-quality coffees are most at risk — with Arabica coffee unable to withstand even slight fluctuatio­ns in temperatur­e, humidity and sunlight.

Robusta coffee, mostly grown in Africa to be made into instant coffee, is slightly more resistant.

“Coffee is one of the most valuable commoditie­s on earth, and needs a suitable climate and pollinatin­g bees to produce well,” said study coauthor Taylor Ricketts, director of the University of Vermont’s Gund Institute for Environmen­t.

“This is the first study to show how both will likely change under global warming — in ways that will hit coffee producers hard.”

During the study, published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS), researcher­s estimated changes in Arabica coffee distributi­on in Latin America among 39 species of pollinatin­g bees.

They concluded a temperatur­e increase of over 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (two degrees Celsius) by 2050 will reduce seed production by between 73% and 88% in locations best known for coffee production today.

A fall in the bee population of eight to 18% will also contribute to this decline.

The largest production losses are expected in Honduras, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

But it’s not all bad news — as researcher­s suggested bee population and diversity in other areas is in fact likely to increase.

This would contribute to a favorable coffee-growing environmen­t in the likes of Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala and Mexico, where temperatur­es in mountainou­s regions are expected to be more suitable.

The study also highlights the importance of tropical forests for bees and other key pollinator­s.

Around 91% of Latin America’s most fertile areas for coffee production are currently less than 1.2 miles (1.9 kilometers) from a rainforest. —

 ??  ?? COFFEE BEANS are seen in a roaster at a stand at the Coffee Fair in Lima, Peru, Aug. 25.
COFFEE BEANS are seen in a roaster at a stand at the Coffee Fair in Lima, Peru, Aug. 25.

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