this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2025
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[–] Odelay42@lemmy.world 14 points 1 day ago

Spoiler alert: they can't!

Starbucks has been spending tens of millions of dollars a year trying to figure out how to grow coffee in non-traditional coffee growing regions like hot lowlands where it doesn't get cool at night.

These farmers will be abandoned by their colonial overlords, and replaced with new farmers in different areas.

[–] shifty@leminal.space 5 points 1 day ago

How climate change threatens coffee production | DW Documentary

There's some great documentaries about stenophylla, resdiscovering a forgotten strain of coffee that's resistant to heat.

Coffee and climate change: rediscovering stenophylla

In the video Dr Aaron Davis describes coffee as the "canary in the coalmine, as the litmus for climate change, particularly for woody crops like coffee, cocoa, tea, wine. Crops that have to stay in the ground a long time. And what we're seeing is that the issues facing coffee also affect many other woody perennial crops"

Tasting The Lost Species That Might Save Coffee - James Hoffman

Saving Coffee From Extinction | Planet Fix | BBC Earth Science

We'll probably see some issues with stonefruit too:

A couple of years ago, no stone fruits grew in New England. Peach, nectarine, plum, and apricot trees in the region had been fooled into flowering in February because of record warm weather. When winter resumed for another few weeks, the buds died, ruining the harvest.