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A warming world threatens Colombia’s coffee future  科技资讯
时间:2021-04-28   来源:[美国] Daily Climate

Colombian coffee farmer Edgar Mendoza has been growing coffee on his 1.5-hectare farm in northern Colombia’s Serranía de San Lucas region for only 4 years, but he has already noticed that the climate is changing how he grows his crops.

“Climate change is obvious here,” he said. “There is an imbalance in the seasons, seasons with a lot of rain and other very dry seasons—even the winter and summer seasons are not fixed in place as before.”

This matches up with research in Ethiopia suggesting that climate change may radically redefine the regions best suited to growing coffee. Colombian scientists and farmers said the same is happening in their homeland, with some experts saying coffee production needs to be 150 meters of altitude higher for every degree of warming.

This is important because although coffee exports brought in $2.28 billion in 2019, coffee production in Colombia is done mainly on small family farms, where the harvest is taken in by a transient workforce, with each farmer having their own techniques and methods for producing the best possible cup of coffee, at the highest yield. With such an artisanal approach, the challenge of adaptation is huge.

Farmer pours coffee in Serranía de San Lucas in northern Colombia.Colombian coffee farmer Edgar Mendoza has been growing coffee on his 1.5-hectare farm in northern Colombia’s Serranía de San Lucas region. Credit: Andrew J. Wight

In Mendoza’s words, the challenges for coffee growing are already “gigantic.”

“With the increase in temperature, the harvests would be scarce, since coffee requires a low temperature for the setting of its flowering; and if there is excess water, it also affects the harvest,” he said, adding that “environmental balance” is required.

“Now, if we have an increase in pests, we would have to use more pesticides, which translates into more pollution, more expensive production. Thus, coffee would cease to be a profitable crop,” Mendoza explained.

In Colombia’s second-biggest city, Medellín, Julián Gamboa is the impact manager at Urbania Cafe, a company that buys and roasts coffee, including beans from Serranía de San Lucas. Gamboa sees climate change as a real threat to the coffee supply chain.

“The yields are already lower, and the quality is reduced, and that really affects our supply chain because we work with small farmers who in general don’t have the means to invest a lot in their production,” Gamboa said. “So it really affects us and our small farmer allies.”

Although more and more people are becoming aware of the impacts of climate change, Gamboa said linking climate change to a consumer’s favorite drink is a good way to get the message across.

     原文来源:https://eos.org/articles/a-warming-world-threatens-colombias-coffee-future

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