The Independent is Laughably Wrong – There’s NO Climate Threat to Coffee, Chocolate, or Wine

The Independent’s recent article, “Engineering climate may not be enough to save coffee, chocolate and wine,” warns that even extreme geoengineering might not preserve “luxury crops” in a warming world. It is a false story citing an unrealistic projection based on computer models, not real-world evidence. Agricultural data shows the crops listed as threatened are actually thriving in today’s slightly warmer world.

The study behind the article relied on simulations of stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), a highly controversial technique that would spray reflective particles into the upper atmosphere to block sunlight, cooling the Earth. SAI is increasingly promoted as a last-ditch tool to “fix” global warming, but the science and potential side effects make it a profoundly bad idea. The models used to justify SAI’s necessity already exaggerate warming by a wide margin, so any proposed “correction” risks overshooting reality. Studies have warned that SAI could severely disrupt global precipitation patterns, may impact global systems and human health outcomes, undermining food and water security far more than modest warming would. The cooling effects of volcanic eruptions — often cited as SAI’s natural analogue — also illustrate its dangers: after Mount Pinatubo’s 1991 eruption, global temperatures dropped briefly, but so did rainfall, crop yields, and sunlight reaching the surface. Moreover, research from the American Geophysical Union shows that stopping aerosol injections suddenly could trigger rapid rebound warming worse than the original problem. In short, SAI would amount to a global-scale experiment with unpredictable consequences, addressing symptoms rather than causes and risking climatic side effects no computer model can reliably forecast.

Researchers cited by the Independent concluded that while SAI might reduce global temperatures, it would not reliably protect coffee, cacao, or wine grapes from future climate shifts. What the article doesn’t mention is that such predictions come from models that have repeatedly exaggerated past warming trends. According to Science Magazine, climate models “run hot,” overstating observed temperature changes by roughly a factor of two. If the models are off in their temperature projections, then any conclusions drawn about future agricultural impacts are equally suspect.

The problem is that the Independent’s reporter, Emily Beament, presents these simulations as if they reflect reality. They do not. Real-world crop data tell a very different story. In the actual world, the three crops supposedly in peril are thriving. Despite these claims, note that global coffee output has continued to rise for several decades, contradicting long-standing warnings of decline.

Higher carbon dioxide concentrations act as plant fertilizer, enhancing photosynthesis and improving drought resistance—factors that have helped coffee plantations, not harmed them.

The same pattern holds for chocolate. Production trends remain strong, and farmers are adapting successfully through irrigation improvements and hardier hybrid plants. There is no evidence of a climate-driven collapse, only the ongoing evolution of agricultural practice that has always defined farming.

Even wine grapes, the article’s third “endangered” crop, have prospered. A warmer world has actually expanded vineyard regions, especially in northern Europe. Note that England now produces high-quality sparkling wines in areas once considered too cold for grape cultivation. Meanwhile, global grape yields continue rising, with improved quality linked to longer growing seasons and CO₂ enrichment.

Hard numbers confirm these assertions. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reports that since 2000, global coffee yields have risen roughly 20 to 25 percent, cacao yields about 15 percent, and wine grape yields continue to hit or approach record levels in countries like Italy, Spain, and France. These are not the statistics of crops “under threat.” They are indicators of a more productive, resilient agricultural sector benefiting from modest warming and the fertilizing effects of carbon dioxide.

The three FAO generated graphs below for coffee, cocoa, and grapes paint an entirely different picture than the Independent’s view of these crops.

In the case of grapes, while the area harvested decreased, the global production went up, suggesting that growers have become far more efficient, needing less acreage in our moderately warming world.

The Independent’s article also fails to distinguish between natural climate variability and long-term trends, instead lumping all weather fluctuations, what they call “worsening weather extremes of climate change,” as another factor affecting crop yields. The facts say otherwise showing severe weather is not on the increase globally. Real-world data show no significant increase in extreme weather over the past 100 years. Nor does the Independent address the extensive body of satellite data from NASA showing that the planet has become significantly greener over the past four decades, a trend confirmed by multiple studies on CO₂ fertilization and vegetation growth. As a result, cropland productivity is up, not down, across much of the globe. In the end, the Independent’s warning that your morning coffee, your chocolate bar, and your evening glass of wine are in jeopardy is not supported by actual data; it is a claim from speculative computer modeling. The crops themselves tell a different story—one of adaptability, growth, and resilience in a slightly warmer, CO₂-enriched world.

By uncritically quoting a single researcher and omitting any reference to observed crop performance, the piece reads less like reporting and more like a climate advocacy handout. Genuine journalism would have compared model predictions with field results, consulted agricultural experts, and reviewed FAO data before repeating claims of climate-driven decline. The failure to do so illustrates a deeper problem: a reliance on speculative modeling and a disregard for empirical evidence. The real danger here is not to agriculture but to honest inquiry. When journalists accept model outputs as fact and ignore real harvests in the field, they trade science for storytelling and erode public trust along the way.

5 11 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

22 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
November 7, 2025 2:26 pm

The best red wines come from places that get “rather” warm and dry in summer.

In Australia, that would be the Barossa Valley, Central Victoria, The Hunter region, and Margaret River region in WA.

Scissor
Reply to  bnice2000
November 7, 2025 3:53 pm

I enjoy Margaret River cabs, e.g. from Leeuwin Estate and Xanadu.

Reply to  Scissor
November 7, 2025 4:40 pm

Fortunate enough to live in the Hunter.. and I like nice robust reds, with a nice thick eye steak, sauteed mushrooms etc etc ;-).

Tom Halla
November 7, 2025 2:27 pm

The minor little problem is that most crop
failures for grapes and coffee involved frosts, not excessive heat.

SxyxS
Reply to  Tom Halla
November 7, 2025 3:13 pm

The other problem is that these luxury crops only grow in warm climate.
Therefore cooling would have the typical opposite orwellian results of what they claim(as always) and reduce growth of almost all other plants.

Reply to  Tom Halla
November 8, 2025 1:06 am

But ‘the science’ tells us the warmening causes encolderization. No PhD for you, denier!

Neil Pryke
November 7, 2025 2:27 pm

Heaven knows what these media people would do if survival depended on the application of reality..!

Reply to  Neil Pryke
November 7, 2025 10:53 pm

Heaven knows what these media people would do if survival depended on the application of reality..!

Write fiction?

Sorry, that’s their current remit.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
November 7, 2025 2:36 pm

Anything to grab your attention so they can push their narrative. Tomorrow it will be the clothes you wear because some computer model puts cotton at risk due to adverse weather …. either to hot, too cold, too wet, or too dry, or all at the same time.

Bob
November 7, 2025 2:39 pm

I think journalists have become a far greater danger than the climate science community or academia.

SxyxS
Reply to  Bob
November 7, 2025 3:04 pm

No.
They have not become.
They have always been.

Journalists have a several magnitudes higher reach than scientists.
They are very skilled in lying – especially by omission,inducing fear, selling wars, framings texts in specific ways that makes their extreme bias look fair and balanced.
Without journalists the AGW – narrative would die within months.

Rud Istvan
November 7, 2025 2:50 pm

The ‘climate endangered coffee’ trope has been around for over a decade. Essay ‘Last Cup of Coffee’ ridiculed a version that was going around in 2013 (as headlined at CBC).
The alarmist ‘alarm well’ seems to be running dry. Recycling previously debunked alarms isn’t a good look for them.

Rod Evans
Reply to  Rud Istvan
November 8, 2025 12:19 am

With organisations like the Blatantly Biased Corporation or BBC for short to fall back on, the climate alarmist propaganda well will never be empty. It will remain full of rubbish, as has been the case for the past thirty plus years.

NotChickenLittle
November 7, 2025 5:52 pm

“These people” are just plain nuts. Bonkers. Both the ones making this “stuff” up, and the ones believing it.

Is it just because I’m getting old, or is the world much crazier now than it used to be and with less common sense? Even when I was young and dumb I was never this dumb.

John Hultquist
November 7, 2025 7:28 pm

At several research centers grapes have been studied with modern science for the last 50 years. How they grow and how best to grow them in differing spots is much much better known. There has been an infusion of money, talent, and technology*. In the USA, at least, there have been in the last few years, changes in drinking habits. The combined result of these trends is that there are grapes going unpicked and aging owners of small facilities are finding it difficult to exit the business – other than just shutting down. 
*
History of Mechanical Harvesters

Rod Evans
November 7, 2025 11:36 pm

Any publisher that calls itself Independent, needs to reveal what it is independent of?
In the case of a newspaper advancing the concept of SAI or any other geoengineering practice that attempts to control insolation/climate and local weather patterns it would suggest the paper is independent of facts.
Bill Gates was a big advocate for seeding the atmosphere to effect climatic impact. It would be reassuring to hear he has cancelled that idea, in light of his more rounded/sensible (recent) views about climate and the risk to humanity.
Removing safe reliable essential energy systems and access to cheap power is fairly catastrophic. Wiping out rare birds and other flying creatures unable to avoid the wind turbine blades with tip speeds of hundreds of miles/hr. is diabolical and unforgiveable. Clear felling forest habitat to feed wood chips into power stations and carpeting thousands of agricultural acres with solar panels that produce power less than 20% of the time is verging on the insane.
Those are crazy endeavours, But, those who think polluting the skies with chemicals intending to control the weather is a good option are simply criminally insane.
We must never allow that policy to gain approval.

Bruce Cobb
November 8, 2025 4:37 am

So, they first invent a “threat” to the planet, so-called manmade climate change, then invent an absurd, costly, and possibly dangerous “solution” to the fake threat, then claim that their own proposed “solution” to their own fake “threat” won’t work.
You really can’t make this stuff up.

November 8, 2025 6:06 am

I reviewed the past decade of agricultural commodity prices. Many had a large spike that coincided with the energy crisis ramping up across 2021, often peaking when the Ukraine War started in February 2022.. For wheat that is very understandable given the importance of Ukrainian grain exports historically. There is perhaps some linkage to fertiliser costs reliant on gas feedstock, but some of it is pure market sympathy. Most have returned to normal levels since.

Both coffee and cocoa are subject to other influences of disease and local weather events. The article should have acknowledged these, while separating out e.g. Brazilian drought and Vietnamese typhoon damage as weather events, not climate. Cocoa virus has blighted major crops, but now we are seeing planting in other countries beginning to mature to alleviate shortages, with prices having halved from the peak.

November 8, 2025 1:45 pm

If chocolate production is up, does anyone know why the price of chocolate has gone up so much over the last couple years, and why supplies seem to be limited? I make specialty chocolates and I’ve been dealing with this first-hand.

Reply to  Tony_G
November 9, 2025 8:49 am

The article is somewhat disingenuous because the FAO data only go to 2023. For a more up to date view, showing the sharply lower harvests in 2024 and 2025 see

https://www.icco.org/wp-content/uploads/Production_QBCS-LI-No.-1.pdf

The problem is the cocoa swollen shoot virus, but as this report explains it is now sufficently under control so that prices have halved from the peak in anticipation of better harvests next year.

https://www.ecofinagency.com/news-agriculture/0511-50136-drc-cocoa-prices-drop-40-amid-global-surplus-local-quality-issues

You can see the price history here

https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/cocoa

Select 10Y below the chart. The crisis started becoming evident in the latter part of 2023. You can find lots of reports on the impact of CSSV easily by searching.

Further sharp price falls can be expected as the uncertainty in crop yield reduces. It will take a while before that echoes into retail prices which depend on physical supply. Perhaps chocolate will be more affordable in 2027 once supply chains fill up with new harvests.

Reply to  It doesnot add up
November 9, 2025 9:14 am

Thanks for the info! That matches my experience – especially since I haven’t bought any for a while, I wouldn’t have seen any recent drops.

Sparta Nova 4
November 10, 2025 9:53 am

We can solve all of this by “decarbonizing” soda, beer, wine, and sparkling water.

/sarc