Mail & Guardian

Bad weather disrupts global coffee supplies

- Aarti Bhana

Coffee is the latest commodity to fall victim to poor climate conditions, with the price of the power bean shooting up since the start of the year after heavy rainfall in Brazil and drought in Vietnam affected production.

The Internatio­nal Coffee Organisati­on (ICO) reported that the composite indicator price — the key reference price for the industry — reached a 13-year high in April, up 16.4% from March. In other words, the price averaged 216.89 US cents a pound in April, compared with 182.18 US cents/lb in March.

Wandile Sihlobo, the chief economist at the Agricultur­al Business Chamber of South Africa, said the unfavourab­le weather conditions in South America are driving the price increases.

“It is not as sharp as what we saw in olive oil or what we saw in cocoa,

but the increase in general is there because of the unfavourab­le weather conditions and the slight decline in harvests in some of the countries within South America,” he said.

The ICO said the heavy rainfall in Brazil, the world’s largest coffee producer, is behind the price increases and will probably affect the country’s 2024-25 supply.

Vietnam, which has the secondlarg­est output, is also facing supply difficulti­es on the back of poor harvests in coffee years 2022-23 and 2023-24. The country’s agricultur­e department projected that production of the commodity could drop by 20% this year, the lowest in four years, because of drought.

Arabica or Robusta are the two most popular coffee beans, and their prices have also risen notably. Robusta hit a 45-year high in April — the highest level since July 1979 — when it averaged 195.90 US cents/ lb. Arabica stocks increased by 1.7% since March 2024, the ICO said.

In March, the World Bank forecast that Arabica prices will soften in 2024 and stabilise in 2025, but Robusta prices are likely to remain high before they subside in 2025.

The demand for Robusta beans has affected Nestle’s production, said

Carl Khoury, the business executive officer for coffee and beverages at the company’s East & Southern Africa region.

“The internatio­nal increase in green coffee commodity prices, stemming from rising demand especially on Robusta beans, supply issues in Vietnam and Brazil and soaring shipping costs, has indeed affected Nestlé’s production,” Khoury said.

The company has plans to prevent supply disruption­s or shortages and it has increased coffee prices, he said.

“In response to these market dynamics, Nestlé has implemente­d price increases across the category. However, we are also actively pursuing optimisati­on and cost-saving initiative­s across our value chains to mitigate the impact of these price hikes on consumers.”

Ciro, South Africa’s largest manufactur­er of pure coffee, had not responded to request for comment by the time of publicatio­n.

 ?? Photo: Christina Aldehuela/afp ?? Pricey: Unseasonal heavy rainfalls and heatwaves have reduced the coffee and cocoa harvests in Ghana.
Photo: Christina Aldehuela/afp Pricey: Unseasonal heavy rainfalls and heatwaves have reduced the coffee and cocoa harvests in Ghana.

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