Litcius/Paper detail

Which diversification trajectories make coffee farming more sustainable?

Valérie Poncet, Piet van Asten, Claude Patrick Millet, Philippe Vaast, Clémentine Allinne

2024Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Annual global coffee consumption growth (1–2%) has been largely met (>50%) mainly by Brazil and Vietnam through high-input monocrop system adoption. Smallholders account for >80% of global producers and >60% of global supply despite limited farm sizes (<2 ha), yields, and input usage. Production concentration in areas with high-yielding systems has fulfilled global demand growth while keeping coffee prices low. However, climate shocks demonstrate the vulnerability of all supply models, strengthening the voice of those advocating more resilient and diversified systems. We review current agroforestry knowledge to identify key trade-offs and synergies between sustainability/performance indicators (i.e. economic, environmental, and social) and explore pathways for a more sustainable coffee future with three examples representative of global coffee production system diversity.

Topics & Concepts

Diversification (marketing strategy)MonocroppingSustainabilityBusinessAgricultureNatural resource economicsAgricultural diversificationProduction (economics)Vulnerability (computing)Environmental resource managementEnvironmental economicsAgricultural economicsAgroforestryEconomicsEnvironmental scienceGeographyCroppingEcologyComputer scienceMacroeconomicsArchaeologyMarketingBiologyComputer securityAgriculture, Land Use, Rural DevelopmentOrganic Food and AgricultureCoffee research and impacts