Caffeine high? Climate-hit Ethiopia shifts
coffee uphill
June 3,
2018
HAMBELA,
Ethiopia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Few countries take coffee as seriously
as Ethiopia - and that’s not only because it prides itself as being the source
of the prized Arabica bean.
But
rising temperatures and worsening drought linked to climate change are now
hitting production - and fixing that may require moving many Ethiopian coffee
fields uphill, experts say.
Aside
from its cultural value, coffee is Ethiopia’s single largest source of export
revenue, worth more than $860 million in the 2016-2017 production year.
But
coffee-growing areas in eastern Ethiopia have seen the average temperature
climb 1.3 degrees Celsius (2.3 degrees Fahrenheit) over the past three decades,
according to the Environment, Climate Change and Coffee Forest Forum (ECCCFF),
an Ethiopian non-governmental organization.
That
has caused stronger drought and - given that coffee is a crop sensitive to both
moisture and temperature - a worsening of diseases that afflict coffee berries.
As a
result, thousands of hectares of coffee plants are being lost each year in
traditional growing areas, which is raising fears about the future of
Ethiopia’s coffee production.
The
country’s government is now encouraging farmers to grow coffee at higher
elevations - up to 3,200 meters (10,500 ft) above sea level, about 1,000 meters
above the norm.
That
could help mitigate some of the climate change pressures Ethiopia faces, said Birhanu
Tsegaye, who heads extension services for coffee, tea and spices for the
Ethiopia Coffee and Tea Development Marketing Authority (ECTDMA), a government
body tasked with overseeing the sector.
As
temperatures rise, “even areas not (formerly) suitable for coffee growing have
become suitable, presenting an opportunity for the country to cope with climate
change,” he said.
Pressures
from warming conditions have been noticed in other parts of the country too.
Aman
Adinew, chief executive of Metad Agricultural Development, which manages two
large plantations in Oromia and SNNP regional states, said changing weather
patterns in the country’s south had affected exports.
The
annual harvest, which normally takes place in November and December at his
Hambela and Gedeb coffee farms, was delayed by a month because the beans had
not ripened, he said.
“Since
the coffee beans were still green by the beginning of 2018 due to a shortage of
rain, it led to a delay in coffee processing and export, effectively meaning
breach of contract with our North American, Asian and European customers,” he
said.
SMALL FARMS, BIG BUSINESS
Around
90 percent of Ethiopia’s coffee-growers are small-scale farmers, and the
industry directly and indirectly employs up to 20 percent of Ethiopia’s 100
million population, ECTDMA said.
Exports
in the 2016-2017 production year totaled just over 220,000 tonnes, figures from
the trade ministry show.
Coffee
exports have fluctuated over the last five years, making it difficult to
discern any downward trend, Tsegaye told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
But
with the country adding tens of thousands of coffee hectares in new growing
areas each year, that is offsetting many of the losses in traditional areas, he
said.
Tsegaye
said the government also was working to combat the effects of climate change in
traditional coffee growing areas by offering small-scale farmers training on
using shade trees to help hold down temperatures, and on irrigation and better
crop handling after harvest.
He
said the authority was also introducing hardier varieties of coffee, resistant
to diseases and weather extremes.
However,
Tsegaye admitted that current levels of assistance to traditional small-scale
coffee farmers might not be enough to save the industry in those areas, which
is why the coffee marketing authority is looking at growing coffee at higher
altitudes.
SHIFTING COFFEE CULTURE
Tadese
Woldemariam, a technical advisor at the Environment, Climate Change and Coffee
Forest Forum, said growing coffee in areas previously unfamiliar with the crop
could work, but it needed to be done carefully - and could have side effects.
“When
traditional coffee-producing areas disappear, thousands of years of
coffee-growing culture disappear,” he said.
“Highland
areas of Ethiopia with little history of coffee production can be an
alternative only if there are agricultural extension packages that make growing
high-quality coffee sustainable,” he said.
He
said Ethiopia was racing against time to save its coffee sector.
The
areas of the country suitable for coffee production are shifting higher each
year, he said, which means “by the end of the century most coffee-growing
areas, especially those below 1,500 meters above sea level, will no longer be
suitable for coffee production.”
In
places that has already happened, with some traditional
coffee-growing areas, especially in the east, now covered in khat trees.
The plant’s leaves, chewed by millions in the Horn of Africa, contain a
psychoactive drug that is used as a mild stimulant.
While
coffee is usually harvested once a year, khat - which is drought-tolerant - can
be harvested three times a year.
Woldemariam
said 60 percent of Ethiopia’s traditional coffee-producing regions might lose
the crop in the coming decades if climate change remains unchecked.
He
urged quick action to save the crop, though warned shifting production to new
areas could affect the quality and taste of the coffee.
The
government is looking at how to begin selling to new markets as new coffee
varieties are planted and begin to fill the gaps created by what may be the
gradual disappearance of some Ethiopian varieties.
“Harar”
coffee, a highly sought-after variety from eastern Ethiopia, is particularly at
risk, he said.
ECTDMA
“is currently working to create a niche market for Ethiopian coffee in the
world’s most populous nation, China, focusing on young Chinese who hopefully
will be regular drinkers of Ethiopian coffee soon”, Tsegaye said.
---
Reporting by
Elias Gebreselassie. Editing by James Baer, Robert Carmichael and Laurie
Goering. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of
Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience,
women's rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit news.trust.org/climate
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