November 10, 2011
In
Uganda, the coffee trees are nearly empty and it's not because of the harvest.
A combination of disease, lack of rain and rising temperatures are decimating
coffee crops.
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A farmer near Uganda's Mount Elgon holds Arabica coffee
berries.
It's getting more difficult to grow coffee berries because of
erratic
weather patterns. (Photo by Jill Braden Balderas.)
|
When you grow coffee,
dead, brown leaves are not what you want to see.
They've been a
scourge recently for coffee farmer Ahmed Nsubuga.
“It’s not good to
show to your friends,” Nsubuga said with a laugh.
Nsubuga manages to
maintain his sense of humor, even as the coffee farm where he works in central
Uganda has been hit hard by drought.
Earlier this year,
not a drop of rain fell for six months. Some of the coffee trees died. Others
produced only a few red berries.
“One, two, three,
four, five, six, seven, eight … nine,” Nsubuga said counting the coffee berries
on an entire tree.
And even some of
those berries offer only a hollow promise.
“This one is big, but
when you open inside there is actually nothing. So you may think that you have
coffee, but there is no bean,” Nsubuga said. "Because of drought.”
Prolonged drought is
a new challenge for Uganda’s coffee farmers. The Robusta variety that Nsubuga
grows is believed to have originated in this part of Africa.
It thrives on central
Uganda’s predictable waves of sun and rain. Predictable, at least, until the
last few years.
“It is obvious there
is a change in the weather pattern,” said Africano Kangire, who heads up
Uganda’s Coffee Research Center just outside of the capital Kampala. “You can
feel it. You can see it.”
Kangire said the
change in weather patterns here means unpredictable droughts. And when it does
rain, there are sudden downpours.
“Now rains come very
strongly and very harshly,” Africano said.
That means trouble
for coffee farms here, not to mention people. Last year, major flooding near
Uganda’s Mt. Elgon wiped out more than 60,000 coffee trees and killed nearly
400 people.
Temperatures are also
going up here, according to the United Nations development program. And that
may be linked to another growing problem — coffee pests and diseases.
Farmer Pauline
Chelangat grows Arabica coffee beans on the same land where she was born, in
the cool mountains of eastern Uganda. She and a neighbor point to a tree
speckled with orange dots — coffee leaf rust, a fungus previously found in only
in warmer, lower altitudes.
But the rust is
moving up Uganda’s mountain sides. And some believe it’s because of rising
temperatures.
Chelangat first saw
the rust here last year at about 5,900 feet. She said it starts on the leaf and
“then it goes almost, I call it like a cancer.”
It then spreads to
the rest of the plant and kills it.
“So the only solution
is to uproot it completely and replant a new plant,” Chelangat said.
Farmers in the area
have been doing that, but it’s expensive.
“You will find that
it has affected the farmers’ income,” Chelangat said.
Of course a lot of
factors affect coffee farmers’ income here in Uganda and elsewhere, just as a
lot of factors affect the weather. But researchers say that what’s happening
here fits into a global pattern.
“I think what we’re
seeing in East Africa, with alternating droughts and floods, it’s consistent
with climate change,” said Peter Baker, senior scientist with the United
Kingdom-based Center for Agricultural and Bioscience International.
Baker said many
researchers are documenting increasingly chaotic weather and growing
weather-related stresses in coffee-producing areas around the world.
“There’s quite good
scientific data coming in from various parts of the world, that when it rains
it rains more and when it doesn’t rain it rains less as it were. Which is
exactly what you’d expect with climate change,” Baker said.
And, Baker pointed
out that coffee grows in a relatively narrow climatic range, so there aren’t a
lot of options for farmers to take their operations elsewhere.
“Therefore we have to
make some choices and plan accordingly,” Baker said.
He said most of the
changes needed to keep pace with climate change are beyond the scope of what a
single coffee farmer can do. For instance, he said, the entire industry needs
better infrastructure to manage water and work to develop heartier varieties of
coffee.
Farmers like Nsubuga
can’t afford to wait for these advances. He’s doing his best to adapt as
quickly as possible.
One change Nsubuga’s
farm has made is to plant more coffee under a canopy of shade trees.
“The canopy is very
light. The light can really pass through directly to the crops,” Nsubuga said.
Shading the coffee
trees keeps them and the soil cooler, so they lose less water through
evaporation.
“In the long run,
they can help protect your coffee from drying up,” Nsubuga said.
There are other
benefits as well. Leaves falling off the shade trees help fertilize the soil
when they break down. And the shade trees themselves provide important habitat
for birds and other animals.
So far the change has
paid off. The shade-grown coffee fared much better than other trees during the
recent drought.
As for the
increasingly unpredictable weather patterns, Nsubuga said there’s only so much
he can do.
“We all leave those
to prayers. God. Divine intervention,” he said.
Nsubuga hopes for
divine intervention, because ultimately, he said, coffee farmers can’t control
the weather.
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