Experts predict that half of the world's coffee producing areas will disappear by 2050. Will coffee be extinct?
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No matter the taste is good or bad, coffee is basically easy to get and is taken for granted. But will there be no more coffee one day? Can you imagine that even Starbucks doesn't have coffee to buy?
This is not a doomsday prophecy. Coffee will not disappear in our lifetime, but according to the latest report of the Australian climate research organization The Climate Institute, global coffee production will disappear by half by 2050 because of climate change, global warming, drought and torrential rains. In the future, coffee will be in short supply and the price will be high and precious.
Maybe it's because you can buy coffee as soon as you walk out of the house, which is convenient and reasonably priced, which makes you think that the problem is not serious, but it is already imminent. You can understand how urgent the situation is by reading the MUNCHIES report:
At present, coffee in the world is mainly produced by the so-called "coffee belt" (bean belt)-tropical countries near the equator, including Brazil, Ethiopia, Colombia, Vietnam and Indonesia. However, as climate change has raised temperatures and changed rainfall distribution areas, existing coffee producing areas will no longer be suitable for growing coffee beans, and even wild varieties such as boutique coffee legendary geisha coffee (Geisha) may become extinct by 2080.
▲ Coffee production around the world is concentrated in the "Coffee Belt" (bean belt), a tropical country near the equator.
Coffee chains such as Starbucks and Lavazza have also warned that climate change is affecting coffee production, but demand for coffee is so high that the world drinks an average of more than 2 billion cups of coffee a day and is growing at a rate of 5 per cent a year.
"it is dark and cloudy at this time, the situation is extremely serious, climate change will have a significant impact in the short term, this is no longer a matter of the future, this is the present!" Italian coffee lavaza on behalf of Mario Cerutti said solemnly at a coffee and climate summit in Milan last year.
How serious is it?
The Australian The Climate Institute report points out that a half-degree increase in temperature will "dramatically change the yield, flavor and aroma of coffee". In addition, the rise in temperature has also aggravated crop diseases and pests. In 2012, due to torrential rains at high altitudes and unseasonally warm weather, coffee leaf rust (coffee leaf rust) broke out, destroying half of the coffee beans in Central America, of which up to 85% of the crops in Guadimara were destroyed. A pest called the coffee fruit beetle, which causes a loss of US $500 million a year, was once controlled in Congo and other low-altitude producing areas, but now it can be found at high altitude. and it may explode as temperatures rise.
This will be a nightmare for many coffee makers, especially developing countries such as Guatemala, Vietnam, Nicaragua and Honduras, which rely on coffee exports. Growing coffee in Mexico is likely to be a thing of the past in 2020, most coffee farms in Nicaragua will disappear in 2050, and coffee giants Brazil and Tanzania will also face heavy losses in the coming decades.
However, some losses may be offset by harvests in emerging areas such as the mountains of East Africa, New Guinea, Indonesia and the Andes, but about 25 million of the world's coffee farmers are mainly self-employed small-scale farmland. it is almost impossible for them to leave the equator and move to other high-altitude areas because coffee trees take years to cultivate and most farmers do not have enough capital or time to do so. They are already looking for ways to grow other diversified crops in order to cope with the cost of living in the future.
Is there still hope before things come to an end? A study has found that rising carbon dioxide increases the growth of coffee beans, but the editors say this is ironic and is not sure whether it will make up for the current loss. The report advises people to buy fair trade coffee and consider not drinking capsule coffee with non-recyclable materials.
Conclusion
Apart from carbon dioxide accidentally boosting the growth of coffee beans, what else can coffee merchants and farmers do? It may be to expand new planting areas, but some studies have shown that this will hurt more rainforests, while others say it is necessary to cultivate new species. coffee beans in the world are mainly divided into three native species, mainly Arabica beans, including a variety of fine coffees. in addition, it is often used to make instant coffee, the more bitter Robota beans and the rare Liberia beans, but Arabica is more fragile, vulnerable to insects and climate attacks. Therefore, some people try to combine the strong and durable Robusta, hoping to cultivate a variety that is both delicious and resistant to disasters, but no one can guarantee when it will bear fruit.
Of course, the most fundamental solution is to stop destroying the environment, but this cannot be done alone. Industry and animal husbandry consume natural resources faster, but if we think about the helplessness of those farmers, we should really try our best to start with ourselves. save energy and reduce carbon, and be conscious consumers.
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