首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Heat Damages Colombia Coffee, Raising Prices Like most of the small landowners in Colombia’s lush mountainous Cauca region,
Heat Damages Colombia Coffee, Raising Prices Like most of the small landowners in Colombia’s lush mountainous Cauca region,
admin
2013-06-02
76
问题
Heat Damages Colombia Coffee, Raising Prices
Like most of the small landowners in Colombia’s lush mountainous Cauca region, Luis Garzon, 80, and his family have thrived for decades by supplying shade-grown, rainforest-friendly Arabica coffee for top foreign brands like Nespresso and Green Mountain. A sign in the center of a nearby town proclaims, "The coffee of Cauca is No. 1!"
But in the last few years, coffee yields have plummeted (暴跌) here and in many of Latin America’s other premier coffee regions as a result of rising temperatures and more intense and unpredictable rains, phenomena that many scientists link partly to global warming. Coffee plants require the right mix of temperature, rainfall and spells of dryness for beans to ripen properly and maintain their taste. Coffee pests thrive in the warmer, wetter weather.
The Consequences of Reduced Coffee Production
Bean production at the Garzons’ farm is therefore down 70 percent from five years ago, leaving the family little money for clothing for toddlers and "thinking twice" about sending older children to college, said Mr. Garzon’s 44-year-old son, Albeiro.
The shortage of high-end Arabica coffee beans is also being felt in New York supermarkets and Paris cafes, as customers blink at escalating (逐渐上涨的) prices. Purveyors (供应商) fear that the Arabica coffee supply from Colombia may never rebound—that the world might, in effect, hit "peak coffee. " Brands like Maxwell, Yuban and Folgers have increased the retail prices of many grinds by 25 percent or more since the middle of last year in light of tight supply and higher wholesale prices.
Profits of high-end coffee chains like Starbucks and Green Mountain have been eroded. Coffee futures of Arabica, the high-end bean that comes predominantly from Latin America, have risen more than 85 percent since last June, to $ 2.95 a pound, partly over concerns about supply, extreme weather and future quality, said George Kopp, an analyst at the International Futures Group in Chicago. Yet as stockpiles of some of the best coffee beans shrink, global demand is soaring as the rising middle classes of emerging economies like Brazil, India and China develop the coffee habit.
The Effects of Climate Change on Coffee Production
"Coffee production is under threat from global warming, and the outlook for Arabica in particular is not good," said Peter Baker, a coffee specialist with CABI, a research group in Britain that focuses on agriculture and the environment, noting that climate changes, including heavy rains and droughts, have harmed crops across many parts of Central and South America. A top coffee scientist, he has rattled trade forums by warning, Cassandra-like, of the possibility of "peak coffee." meaning that, like oil supplies, coffee supplies might be headed for an inexorable (不可阻挡的) decline unless growers make more concerted efforts to expand production globally.
Arabica and Robusta coffee account for virtually all consumption. With its more delicate taste and lower caffeine content, Arabica is more popular and more expensive, though generally more finicky (苛求的) in its weather needs. Robusta production dominates in Asia and Africa. Colombia is the No. 2 Arabica exporter after Brazil, where production is centered on larger, more mechanized farms and continues to grow.
The Colombian Coffee Growers Federation says high fertilizer prices have also dented (损害) yields. But it agrees with a 2009 report from the International Coffee Organization that concluded, "Climatic variability is the main factor responsible for changes in coffee yields all over the world." Average temperatures in Colombia’s coffee regions have risen nearly one degree in 30 years, and in some mountain areas the increase has been double that, says Cenicafe, the national coffee research center. Rain in this area was more than 25 percent above average in the last few years.
At the new, higher temperatures, the plants’ buds abort or their fruit ripens too quickly for optimum quality. Heat also brings pests like coffee rust, a devastating fungus (菌类) that could not survive the previously cool mountain weather. The heavy rains damage the fragile Arabica blossoms, and the two-week dry spells that prompt the plant to flower and produce beans occur less often, farmers say. Arabica beans take about seven months to mature.
"Half a degree can make a big difference for coffee—it is adapted to a very specific zone," said Nestor Riano, a specialist in agroclimatology for Cenicafe. "If temperature rises even a bit, the growth is affected, and the plagues and diseases rise."
While climate scientists agree that the increase in temperature is a clear signal of global warming and high ocean temperatures are generally associated with more frequent storms, scientists are uncertain whether the peculiar weather patterns in the area are directly related to warming, said Stephen E. Zebiak, director general of the International Research Institute for Climate and Society at Columbia University.
"It is hard to know whether this severe weather represents natural fluctuations or is a climate change signal, though from a risk management sense, there is good reason to consider how to cope with these extreme events," Dr. Zebiak said.
Restoring Coffee Output
In the hope of restoring coffee output, researchers at Cenicafe’s labs are toiling on a mission that seems as pressing a priority for Colombia as curing cancer is for medical researchers. Agronomists are teaching the farmers how to control the pests that arrived with the change in the weather. Climatologists are working to provide better local weather predictions. Geneticists are breeding plants that are more resistant to diseases or that can withstand torrential rains or a hotter environment.
The Coffee Growers Federation has advised farmers to switch to a newer, hardier strain of Arabica that has been developed by plant breeders at Cenicafe over the last two decades. While the federation says it tastes the same as traditional variants, farmers have resisted because they can ill afford to forgo the income of a yearly crop as they wait for new plants to mature. They have also been wary that a switch could affect flavor.
Taste, quality and supply are delicate issues for an industry whose aficionados (狂热爱好者) are notoriously picky. Coffee companies are "working with farmers across the region to address the impact of changing weather patterns that are a direct result of climate change," said Lisa Magnino, a spokeswoman for Starbucks. Starbucks has already bought enough coffee to last until 2012, she added. Luis Fernando Samper, a spokesman for Colombian Coffee Growers Federation, said that the beans that do make it to breakfast tables in the United States will yield coffee that is as good as ever. The problem is for Colombian farmers, who are producing far fewer beans over all and "more defective beans" that do not meet export standards.
For decades, said Luis Garzon, who started growing coffee at 7, it was dry from June 1 to Sept. 8 in Timbio. Several years ago, the perplexing weather arrived. "It can start raining at 6 a. m. and go on for 24 hours," he said.
First, yields declined. Then last year, the coffee rust fungus arrived at the Garzon farm, killing entire fields. "We learned our lesson," he said, stroking the mottled yellowed leaves of some damaged plants. Now, the family is planting the new, hardier Arabica variant, called castillo. The coffee federation hopes that such innovation will allow growers to keep expensive Arabica coffee on American tables.
According to the Colombian Coffee Growers Federation, coffee bean yields have dropped partly because______.
选项
A、modern coffee farms haven’t been built yet
B、scientists fail to develop new breeds of coffee in time
C、the destruction of some funguses has been underestimated
D、fertilizer is unaffordable for the coffee growers
答案
D
解析
同义转述题。由定位句可知,哥伦比亚咖啡种植者联盟表示,高昂的化肥价格也使咖啡豆产量有所下降。换句话说,咖啡豆产量下降的部分原因是种植者买不起化肥。D)是对原文的同义转述。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/alB7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowedthirtyminutestowriteashortessayentitledPressureinModernLife.Youshouldw
MostpeoplethinkoflionsasstrictlyAfricanbeasts,butonlybecausethey’vebeenkilledoffalmosteverywhereelse.Tenthou
MostpeoplethinkoflionsasstrictlyAfricanbeasts,butonlybecausethey’vebeenkilledoffalmosteverywhereelse.Tenthou
OnehundredandthirteenmillionAmericanshaveatleastonebank(36)______creditcard.Theygivetheirowners(37)______cred
A、Becausetheywanttosellcanteens.B、Becausetheywanttoeducatethetouristsaboutparkconditions.C、Becausethetourists
A、Itshowsgreatvarianceinlevelsofalertnessamongvolunteers.B、Itprovesthatcoffeeimprovesmemoryandattentiveness.C、
IntheCaucasusregionoftheSovietUnion,nearly50outofevery100,000peoplelivetocelebratetheir100thbirthday,andma
A、Sheenjoyshernewlife.B、Sheisregrettingmarryingthewrongman.C、Sheisn’tsatisfiedwithhermother-in-law.D、Shelikes
随机试题
()是企业在选定的行业中投放资源,提供特定产品或劳务,满足目标市场特定需求,迎接特定竞争,施展特定战略,追求理想效益的经营场所。
设总体X服从区间[1,θ]上的均匀分布,其中θ未知,且θ>1,x1,x2,…,xn为来自总体X的一个样本,为样本均值.求θ的矩估计.
根据尿道口异常。尿道下裂可分哪些类型
施工组织设计的核心部分是( )。
【背景资料】某施工单位承接了某一级公路M合同段路面施工任务,起点桩号K16+000,终点桩号K37+300。路面面层为26cm厚C30水泥混凝土,采用滑模机械摊铺施工。施工单位根据施工现场的具体条件,通过方案比较后绘制了施工平面布置示意图如下:图中拌
下列属于经济法部门的有()。
AfewyearsagoIhadan"aha!"momentregardinghandwriting.Ihadinmyhandasheetofpaperwithhandwritteninstructio
Whenanimportantholidaycomes,Iusuallythinkofwhatgiftstobuyorprepareformyfamilymembers.Itistheactitselfrat
38.结合材料回答问题:材料1“东亚许多国家都使用筷子,用筷子的人都知道,一根筷子很难吃着东西,两根筷子一起用才能夹到食物,一把筷子捆在一起就不易折断。”这是李克强总理在第八届东亚峰会上的形象比喻。李克强总理提出中国一东盟在防灾救灾、网络安全、
A、Mr.Johnson’sideasarenonsense.B、HequiteagreeswithMr.Johnson’sviews.C、Mr.Johnsonisgoodatexpressinghisideas.D
最新回复
(
0
)