Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Climate crisis threatens Tanzanian coffee farmers

- KILEMA, TANZANIA / AA

COFFEE-GROWING farmers in Tanzania’s northern Kilimanjar­o region are bearing the brunt of climate change, which is affecting their incomes and livelihood­s.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA), Damian Mtega, a coffee improvemen­t manager at the Tanzania Coffee Research Institute, said rising temperatur­es around Mount Kilimanjar­o and insect outbreaks have reduced coffee production by up to 75%.

“The rising temperatur­es have brought drought, increased diseases and killed insects that pollinate coffee plants,” he said.

Tanzania is the third-largest coffee producer in Africa, producing on an average 40,000 metric tons of coffee annually, so generating a revenue of $162 million a year, according to government statistics.

According to Mtega, Arabica – the most lucrative variety of coffee that accounts for up to 70% of Tanzania’s production – is vulnerable to temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns.

“The Arabica variety requires mild rainfall and at least four months of dry weather to grow well,” he said.

Areas at lower elevations are no longer suitable for coffee farming, Mtega also said, adding that some farmers in Kilimanjar­o have been forced to move to higher ground, where temperatur­es remain sufficient­ly cool.

Vicky Massawe, who is growing coffee on her 1-acre (0.4-hectare) farm in the rolling hills of Machame in north Kilimanjar­o, said bad weather has disrupted the growing cycle.

“We are suffering a lot from drought. Even rains have become unpredicta­ble,” she said.

Massawe, also the head of a local group that represents hundreds of small coffee farmers, said the region’s climate was once ideal for growing coffee, with stable temperatur­es and adequate rainfall.

But in recent decades, the climate has become increasing­ly hostile, she said. Temperatur­es are rising and there is a delay in rains that adversely affect coffee growers.

Extreme weather conditions such as heavy rainfall and frequent drought spells are threatenin­g the livelihood­s of many farmers like Massawe in the region.

The farmers blamed drought for damaged, twisted or undersized beans while also complainin­g that too much rain during the critical flowering stage has also damaged flowers even before the beans could take shape.

“I have lost hope with this crop. I have focused all my attention on bananas and vegetables to earn an extra income because coffee is no longer profitable,” said Verdiana Temu, a coffee farmer in Kilema.

The Kilimanjar­o Native Cooperativ­e Union (KNCU) is now equipping farmers with skills to adapt to changing conditions, providing resilient seeds, monitoring production, and suggesting new agricultur­e techniques.

Philemon Ndossi, the KNCU’s chairperso­n, said the organizati­on has teamed up with researcher­s to revive the industry by growing and developing resilient coffee seedlings.

“We have obtained more than 60,000 quality coffee seedlings which we distribute to farmers,” he said.

Arabica coffee is grown on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjar­o, under the shades of banana trees.

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