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How Nicaraguan coffee farmers are adapting to climate change

Some Nicaraguan coffee farmers are experimenting with a more diverse and sustainable mix of crops, which could prove to be more profitable and better equipped to handle rising temperatures.

By Anna-Catherine Brigida , Thomson Reuters Foundation
Jinotega, Nicaragua

Maria Gonzalez knows that growing coffee in Nicaragua鈥檚 northern mountains 鈥 as she has done since she was a little girl 鈥 gets harder and harder each year.

Rising temperatures are spoiling harvests when berries ripen too fast and a coffee leaf disease wiped out about half of the region鈥檚 crop between 2012 and 2014, killing most of Ms. Gonzalez鈥檚 plants.

Just as her new plants were starting to flourish, whipping winds and torrential rains from hurricanes Eta and Iota last November uprooted the bushes and shook the unripe berries to the ground.

With an initial hard few years now stretching into a decade, coffee farmers like Ms. Gonzalez face a tough decision: stay loyal to their coffee crop or find a new way to survive.

鈥淚鈥檓 experimenting with a lot of things because if I see that one is doing better, I鈥檒l stick with that,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd if not, we鈥檒l be there fighting for our coffee.鈥

Crumbling industry

More than 494,211 acres of food and other crops throughout Central America were devastated by the 2020 hurricanes that slammed the Nicaraguan and Honduran coasts and caused flooding and landslides across the region.

The storms destroyed an estimated 10-15% of this year鈥檚 coffee harvest for producers in Ms. Gonzalez鈥檚 co-operative, Soppexcca, according to its manager Fatima Ismael Espinoza.

As a result, Ms. Gonzalez expected to sell 10% less than the year before, making it harder to feed her children and fund their education.

Other parts of the country have reported higher losses. The Nicaraguan Association of Producers and Exporters registered a 40% decrease in coffee exports from October 2020 to January 2021, compared to the same period a year earlier.

鈥淭hat kind of a loss magnifies the challenges farmers were already facing,鈥 said Rick Peyser, senior director of private sector partnerships at aid agency Lutheran World Relief, who has worked in sustainable coffee for three decades.

Many are already struggling to get enough food and may go hungry for months when earnings from the coffee harvest run out.

鈥淭hese twin hurricanes make us even more vulnerable,鈥 said Ms. Espinoza. 鈥淎ll of this investment we had been doing is lost, and we have to start over with programs of reforestation, soil improvement, and diversification of crops.鈥

Curious about cocoa

Soppexcca works with more than 600 small-scale coffee farmers to develop and promote sustainable production methods.

The co-operative, which sells to fair-trade buyers in Europe and the United States, focuses on teaching farmers how to better care for the environment, particularly soils and forest cover.

Ms. Espinoza also emphasized the need to move from single crop agriculture that leaves coffee farmers vulnerable in a bad year.

She recommended trees that can provide shade, like guava, plantain, and banana, which also supply another product to sell.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 wait to take action until 2050,鈥 she said.

Jinotega, with average annual temperatures historically around 68-75聽degrees Fahrenheit, is known as an oasis from the scorching temperatures that can hit much of Nicaragua.

But in 2019, Jinotega鈥檚 average temperature was 0.9-1.8 F. higher than in previous years and is only expected to keep climbing, according to the Managua-based Humboldt Center, a nonprofit that promotes sustainable development.

Ms. Gonzalez will try just about anything, with her efforts to date including soil conservation, new crops, cultivating a vegetable garden, and even growing two small cacao plants.

A few years ago, a nongovernmental organization came to her home to explain the benefits of planting some cacao instead of coffee, saying cacao was less labor-intensive, better adapted to warming temperatures, and offered more stable prices.

But the farmer was concerned that swapping out too much coffee for cacao would leave her with nothing if the plants did not flourish.

鈥淚 was curious so I got two plants,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e testing to see how it goes.鈥

Other coffee farmers have resisted change, fearing their gamble will end badly.

鈥淚 want to see if it works for someone else,鈥 said Flora del Socorro Montenegro, a coffee farmer who lost at least 10% of her harvest to the storms.

Stay or go?

Ms. Gonzalez learned to harvest coffee from her father, but it鈥檚 unlikely her seven children will follow in her footsteps.

Instead, they have sought other opportunities. 鈥淲e feel like it鈥檚 not enough with the coffee we produce,鈥 Ms. Gonzalez said.

In 2017, her only son migrated to Costa Rica for temporary farm work. He came home after making enough money in eight months for his family, and now works as a taxi driver.

Ana Julia Montenegro often works long hours during the coffee harvest, from 3 a.m. to 9 p.m., to eke out a living.

But it still does not provide enough to support her three children, so her husband does a construction job to earn extra money.

Even though they struggle, leaving home seems too dangerous for her or anyone else in her family to take the risk.

鈥淚t鈥檚 better to figure out how to do things and to survive here,鈥 she said.

Ms. Montenegro is trying to diversify her crops and has planted fruit trees including banana and guava, but is not convinced cacao is worth the five-year wait before it bears fruit.

Future on the farm

Jinotega has not seen the same exodus of migrants as other parts of Central America in recent years.

Ms. Espinoza, of聽Soppexcca, is convinced families in the co-operative can have a sustainable future there.

鈥淭here is a percentage that dream of leaving, but we see a mainly stable youth, that are committed [to staying],鈥 she said.

鈥淥ur challenge is to create adequate conditions for progress and development so that the rural zone is attractive.鈥

Helping Nicaragua鈥檚 small-scale farmers overcome the challenges of climate change will need to include all parts of the supply chain, including co-operatives, exporters, and buyers, as well as national and local governments, according to Lutheran World Relief鈥檚 Mr.聽Peyser.

After the recent hurricanes, the central government announced a plan to support small coffee producers through workshops teaching skills to boost their harvests.

鈥淪mall-scale coffee farmers are probably the most resilient people I鈥檝e ever met,鈥 said Mr.聽Peyser. 鈥淏ut at the same time, they need assistance 鈥 and it鈥檚 only fair [they get it].鈥

鈥淓veryone can play some kind of role. But it really needs to happen soon because it鈥檚 not going to get better.鈥

This story was reported by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.