Hazard Risk Resilience Magazine Volume 1 Issue1 | Page 17

17 These areas will have to diversify their food sources, by importing their crop of choice from other areas or grow alternative food crops that are more suited to the modified climate. For coffee farmers, diversification is far more complex. Growers of coffee are dependent upon the crop for an income, not just for subsistence living as many farmers of food crops are in developing nations. Coffee plants take several years to mature, so farmers must wait until their investment starts to payback. Given the time to reach maturity, growers are unable to switch between crops on an annual basis. Coffee farming is usually the main activity for many families throughout large regions that are capable of producing, so if the harvest fails or is poor, an entire community and their associated dependents are affected. Establishing insightful information to determine which coffee producing regions are most threatened by future climatic changes is critical, so that communities can begin to plan, diversify and mitigate the risk posed by a changing climate. To begin to investigate these issues our project explored the past and future suitability of arabica coffee in eight East African countries. Threat of climate change Like all crops, a bountiful coffee harvest is dependent to a great extent upon climatic conditions. Arabica coffee is a climatically sensitive plant: it requires temperatures that are not too hot, not too cold, perfectly timed precipitation and no frost. Without these exact conditions, yields fall, quality declines and disease amongst plants can become endemic. Over the next century, climate scientists predict that global temperatures will rise, that precipitation will become increasingly erratic, and that extreme events such as floods and droughts will become more commonplace. Such changes in our weather systems will affect agricultural productivity and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has identified that agriculture-based industries will be amongst the most affected by future climatic changes. Indeed, several studies have addressed the risk posed by climatic change on stable food crop yields in key producer regions, and in some areas it is predicted that the yields of wheat, maize, rice and millet may be negatively affected by predicted changes in temperature and rainfall. Over the past 40 years the mean annual temperature in East Africa has risen by 1.2°C and annual precipitation has declined by 150mm. During the same period of time, the total area of land cultivated with arabica coffee has fallen. Using annual climate data, we established a model to identify locations within the eight East African countries that were climatically suitable for arabica coffee. To distinguish between regions that were very suitable and had near perfect climatic conditions for coffee production and areas that were within the physiological limits of arabica coffee plant development, but were not ideal, we established two different classifications of suitable locations – those that were climatically ‘optimal’ and areas that would be climatically ‘tolerable’. We found that the number of optimal and tolerable coffee growing locations had declined during the past 40 years, which suggests that changes in climate have already begun to affect coffee producers. CONTINUED >