
Guest essay by Eric Worrall
Fairtrade, a charity which attempts to offer an alternative to third world coffee buying cartels, to ensure vulnerable farmers receive a decent price for their crop, has produced a report which demands urgent climate action. But in my opinion Fairtrade are ignoring the very real hardship climate action would impose on the poor people Fairtrade tries to help.
A Brewing Storm: The climate change risks to coffee
Coffee is a key global crop and the second most valuable commodity exported by developing countries, worth around US$19 billion in 2015. Worldwide, around 2.25 billion cups of coffee are consumed each day. Nearly half of all Australians drink coffee regularly. The coffee market is growing, but faces big challenges coming up fast:
- There is strong evidence that rising temperatures and altered rainfall patterns are already affecting coffee yields, quality, pests, and diseases—badly affecting economic security in some coffee regions.
- Without strong action to reduce emissions, climate change is projected to cut the global area suitable for coffee production by as much as 50 per cent by 2050. By 2080, wild coffee, an important genetic resource for farmers, could become extinct.
- Leading global coffee companies, such as Starbucks and Lavazza, publicly acknowledge the severe risks posed by climate change to the world’s coffee supply. Consumers are likely to face supply shortages, impacts on avour and aroma, and rising prices.
- In the next few decades, coffee production will undergo dramatic shifts—broadly, away from the equator and further up mountains. Production will probably come into con ict with other land uses, including forests.
- Rising CO2 levels may boost the growth and vigour of the coffee plant, but there is no guarantee this ‘fertilisation effect’ will offset the risks imposed by a more hostile climate.
- Most of the world’s 25 million coffee farmers are smallholders. Alone, they have little capacity to adapt to a hotter world in which climate and market volatility conspire against them.
- Over 120 million people in more than 70 countries rely on the coffee value chain for their livelihoods.
- Many countries where coffee exports form a main plank of the economy are also amongst the most vulnerable to climate risk. Honduras, Nicaragua, Vietnam, and Guatemala, for instance, rank in the top- 10 for climate-related damages since the 1990s.
- Climate change is likely to significantly increase the burden on the health and well being—physical and mental—of coffee producers, labourers, and communities, with consequences for productivity.
- Crop adaptation strategies include developing more resilient production systems, diversifying crops,
and shifting plantations upslope. The global trend, however, is towards intensification as producers
seek to lift yields at the expense of more complex and carbon-rich landscapes. Ultimately, climate change is likely to push many producers out of coffee altogether.
…
However, the future for coffee and the world is not yet set. Several coffee companies have responded to customer demands for climate action, and many nations are making substantial efforts. Fairtrade, for example, has moved to ensure the production and supply chains for its Fairtrade Climate Neutral Coffee don’t add more heat- trapping greenhouse gases and that steps are taken to build safer, more resilient, more sustainable workplaces. Positive changes are brewing from above and below.
…
Read more: http://fairtrade.com.au/…
According to their website, Fairtrade is about stable prices, decent working conditions and the empowerment of farmers and workers around the world.
But as President Obama once admitted, an inevitable consequence of restricting fossil fuel usage is skyrocketing energy prices.
Video of President Obama admitting climate action will make energy prices skyrocket;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HlTxGHn4sH4
If implemented, the impact if Fairtrade’s recommendations would go far beyond simple increases in energy costs. For example, the first stage of manufacturing nitrate based fertilisers – converting atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia – is very energy intensive.
Even if poor people managed to avoid the fossil fuel powered mechanisation which they would no longer be able to afford, they cannot avoid the impact of increased energy costs on the price of essential farm inputs.
The climate models which Fairtrade uses to justify their position have never demonstrated predictive skill.
All this artificially imposed energy poverty and hardship for the sake of unproven predictions, from climate models which have never gotten anything right.
For shame, Fairtrade.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
AES -Anthropogenic Energy Shortage. Sure to kill many more people than AGW.
Perhaps we will see all of the illegal growers turn legit by replacing marijuana with coffee. The market for coffee is bigger than for marijuana.
I’m going to call this particular storm “the coffee shit-nado.” (h/t Mr. Leahy)
A little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing
After weeks of trying to bake and brew decent coffee from local beans in the deserts of Darfur a colleague who happened to be an agronomist told me why. There are 2 basic varieties of coffee: lowland and upland. I could have experimented with lowland beans for 20 years and still ended up with something raw and bitter. It was only through desperation that we continued to drink it.
Then I was moved to the Ethiopian highlands (2000 m.a.s.l.). Wow! Any guest in the most humble of mud huts is honoured through the coffee ceremony conducted by the hostess. She sits there in front of you, baking, crushing, brewing and serving – black with sugar. Theirs’ is the best in the world and they know it.
The coffee you buy is usually a blend of the two. Only suppliers of the most premium coffees supply pure upland. It is priced accordingly and you may never encounter it.
So, while coffee is a tropical plant it is very adaptable. I have seen it grown in the steamy coastal regions of West Africa, right through to wonderfully livable climates of the tropical highlands.
Should there be a ‘drastic’ increase in temperature of 1 C the upland farmers would simply shift their crops up slope. Just 300 m can mean a difference of 1 C at these altitudes.
Why is ignorance such an annoying thing?
With that I have to tell a story.
When the Ethiopians are baking coffee (in a hand ladle over fire) going on smell, one would swear it was burnt to cinder. Getting the bake just right is the key.
One day I served my own baked version to staff. After a few sips my female staff member said, “Michael, I think I need to make more coffee, there is nothing happening inside my head!”
Every week, I replace the article on the outside of my cubicle related to coffee. Why? Because this week coffee is BAD FOR YOU. And next week, coffee will be GOOD FOR YOU (or at least NOT SO BAD FOR YOU AS PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT).
Sorry for yelling, but that’s what these press releases do..
It turns out that coffee and tobacco grow very nicely in my greenhouse… stop on by for a cup of fresh roasted yum and a smoke if ya please.. hehehe. Honestly hydroponic is the bomb. It takes very little space, much less water than ground planting and the yield is about twice as much. Not to mention my growing season is year round. Seriously though, this is not the first time coffee was supposed to become a rare thing, the story usually comes along with a price rise. The only results these stories produce is the death of the credibility of the community pushing them. The shriller they scream, the more we tune out. It must be quite frustrating for them.
https://www.google.ca/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0ahUKEwjBxazax-fOAhVQzmMKHXljAgsQjRwIBw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.theglobaleconomy.com%2Fblog%2F%3Fp%3D282&psig=AFQjCNEn8j-VDA9iwq3Mzs9Wm1FKBed66g&ust=1472592235542206
so as the world has warmed, coffee production has skyrocketed. another victim of global warming.
http://www.theglobaleconomy.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/FINAL2.png
Coffee is a favorite alarmist prop because a lot of people like it. A threat to it has impact. That’s why we get these frequent scares – because they have impact.
It’s funny that my Colombia Supremo cups from Sam’s Club say “single serve cup,” they don’t say Keurig anywhere. I figure they weren’t going to pay a royalty to Keurig. Yet the box does say, “Fair trade certified,” so they are paying a royalty to Fairtrade (I assume. Maybe someone else certifies “fair trade.” Great racket).
Call me a heathen, but I couldn’t care less if my coffee is “fair trade,” and I wish I could get a refund of money spent so the box can say “fair trade certified.” What kind of crappy life must you have to worry about whether your coffee is “fair trade.”
Well to be fair I like to assume the stuff I’m getting is fair trade. You know… willing seller/willing buyer rather than the proceeds of a stickup or heist but with those Pol Pot, Mao, Stalin, Kim types I guess you do need somebody to keep an eye on that sort of thing with their overheads.
In Walmart today. Looked at their stock of coffee. Maybe 75 different brands/packages. NOT ONE had Fair Trade Certified on their boxes (though some tea boxes did).
Most said nothing about their virtue. Starbucks’ boxes had some mumbo jumbo about blessings from Conservation International. I guess the Fair Trade commercial enterprise isn’t doing so well.
If they are trying to get a better price for farmers, shouldn’t they want to see more global warming which they claim will reduce supply, thus increasing prices?
The childish notion that all of the world’s problems can be stated in terms of climate change and then solved simply by cutting emissions has taken hold in the rich countries. The poor countries enthusiastically go along with it because of billions in climate adaptation aid that it implies.
Don’t worry all the true believers won’t have much trouble weaning themselves off their instant coffee they’ve been on for years-
http://www.scotsman.com/news/uk/coffee-lovers-urged-give-up-filter-and-save-the-planet-in-an-instant-1-771229
Yuk! Instant coffee is disgusting. I’d prefer to do without. However, I feel no moral obligation to do that!
Without any coffee, that is.
Some may disagree Annie.
Living in the UK, a strong, yet silky smooth brew, in a mug using 4 x heaped teaspoons of Nescafé ‘Crema’ Gold instant coffee (£6 per 200g jar) beats any ground alternative. Delicious.
•There is strong evidence that rising temperatures and altered rainfall patterns are already affecting coffee yields, quality, pests, and diseases—badly affecting economic security in some coffee regions
OK, where is this evidence?
You know the worst drought ever in the American West? Just a few short years ? Proof of global warming ? Well its raining now and you don’t hear anymore about it. See, altered rainfall patterns. ( sarc)
One of the studies here shows there’s already an effect…
https://ccafs.cgiar.org/research-highlight/arabica-coffee-production-risk-due-changing-climate#.V8WGqThTHcs
“a new study by Alessandro Craparo from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) which shows evidence that climate change is already having an impact on the Arabica coffee sector in the East African Highlands region. The study describes that over the last 49 years, there has been a +1.42 °C increase in night temperatures which has led to yield decreases in Arabica of 195 kg/ha. The consequences for smallholders in the region are dramatic as it represents losses of 46%.”
Your ‘study’ shows they don’t understand lapse rate, claiming they only need to move vertically 3-500 meters to compensate for the alleged 1.42°C increase in night time temps. Actually they only need to move 150 meters if it is humid, or 300 if it is dry (unlikely). My, what a catastrophic fantasy!
‘Leading global coffee companies, such as Starbucks and Lavazza, publicly acknowledge the severe risks posed by climate change to the world’s coffee supply. Consumers are likely to face supply shortages, impacts on avour and aroma, and rising prices.’
I presume Starbucks, along with all the other major coffee shop chains have included that list of devasting effects on their business in their accounting statements. I mean, it’s only fair to their shareholders – and they wouldn’t want an enthusiastic AG coming after them sometime in the near future.
I prefer to buy goods and services that are produced by people who are skilled at what they do and are well paid for their work. Buying Fair Trade certified products is like getting an unemployed guy to service your car . . . he’ll no doubt welcome the work and the money but there’s a strong possibility you’ll get a couple of k down the road and the wheels will fall off or the motor will seize.
In my experience – and I’m an unabashed coffee snob (plunger brewed, no milk, no sugar, no additives of any kind) – Fair Trade coffee is rubbish.
Yet another reason NOT to choose FairTrade coffee.
Even Huffington Post acknowledges the FairTrade certification is damaging to countries, farmers, workers and the coffee itself
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bruce-wydick/10-reasons-fair-trade-coffee-doesnt-work_b_5651663.html
No more coffee?
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
We
Are
So
Doomed!
I sense a scandal brewing on North Avenue. When did Coca Cola know that climate change would endanger coffee production, and what did they do to suppress this knowledge?
The Clintons will expect a multi-million dollar speaking engagement deal from the sugar-water industry within the week, or else a certain subset of state Attorneys General will serve papers. After all, the poor and down-trodden must secure their right to finance the rich via the daily purchase of four-dollar lattes.
So they build up an entire organization apparently completely oblivious to the laws of economics… Who is anti science again?