Climate change is threatening coffee crops. But there are some wild variants that show signs of robustness:)
The NYT has the story:
What Climate Change Could Mean for the Coffee You Drink By Somini Sengupta
"The two types of coffee that most of us drink — Arabica and robusta — are at grave risk in the era of climate change.
"Now the good news. Farmers in one of Africa’s biggest coffee exporting countries are growing a whole other variety that better withstands the heat, drought and disease supersized by global warming.
"For years, they’ve just been mixing it into bags of low-priced robusta. This year, they’re trying to sell it to the world under its own true name: Liberica excelsa.
...
"If it works, it could hold important lessons for smallholder coffee farmers elsewhere, demonstrating the importance of wild coffee varieties in a warming world. Liberica excelsa is native to tropical Central Africa.
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"While Arabica and robusta are the two widely cultivated species of coffee, more than 100 species grow in the wild."
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