There is no realistic chance of staying below 1.5°C anymore”, was the sobering statement by Dr. Peter Baker. Whereas the overall global temperature rise is now 1.1 to 1.2 °C, the global land temperatures are already at 2°C above pre-industrial levels. Baker outlines how the impacts of climate change lead coffee farmers to migrate or diversify out of the coffee business and also threaten their livelihoods through extreme weather events and socio-politic implications. Baker claims that by now, every country should ideally already have a comprehensive climate adaptation and disaster management team assembled, plans developed and under implementation. Only with immediate action, there is a chance to avoid catastrophic impacts on the sector as a whole. However, according to him, efforts of the coffee industry to support farmers so far are often piecemeal and of an inadequate scale:
“c&c follows exactly such a holistic approach: we innovate, disseminate and implement climate-smart tools and practices in coffee production, provides them to coffee farmers and supports these in diversifying their production. In doing so, we supports farming families in six regions worldwide to effectively respond to climate change and to safeguard their livelihoods. c&c’s strategy furthermore includes building up whole climate smart coffee regions and establishing carbon neutral and zero-deforestation coffee supply chains. “There is a lot of work to be done”, says Ruge. “That’s why we encourage coffee companies and development organizations to join c&c. We want to work together to build a climate-friendly coffee sector.”