Starbucks Expands Global Effort to Protect Future of Coffee with Two New Coffee Farms
03 October 2024 - 8:00PM
Business Wire
In collaboration with coffee farmers around the
world, Starbucks to scale solutions to ensure the future of coffee
for all; adds two new coffee innovation farms located in Guatemala
and Costa Rica with future farm investments in Africa and Asia.
Investments build on Starbucks work with
farmers to help increase productivity on farms, increase
profitability for farmers and mitigate the impact of climate change
on coffee.
Starbucks today announced an expansion of its collaborative
coffee innovation network, further connecting farmers from around
the world with resources to protect the future of coffee. Building
on the groundbreaking global agronomy innovation at Hacienda
Alsacia, Starbucks first company-operated coffee farm, the company
added farms located in Guatemala and Costa Rica with future farm
investments in Africa and Asia. The learning on these farms aims to
find solutions to increase productivity on farms, support increased
profitability for farmers and build climate resilience.
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Starbucks agronomist at Hacienda Alsacia
(Photo: Business Wire)
“Starbucks works with more than 450,000 farms that grow the
highest quality Arabica coffee in the world,” said Michelle Burns,
Starbucks evp of Global Coffee and Sustainability. “Our promise to
those farmers and their communities is that we will always work to
ensure a sustainable future of coffee for all. Our solution is to
develop on-farm interventions, share seeds, research and practices
across the industry to help farmers mitigate the impacts of climate
change.”
Starbucks buys three percent of the world’s coffee, sourcing and
roasting only Arabica coffee beans, a variety known for its rich
and complex flavors. Climate change is impacting the availability
of high-quality coffee around the world and farming communities are
feeling the impact on productivity, crop quality and their
livelihoods. Rising temperatures that cause drought, coffee leaf
rust disease and other related climate challenges are impacting the
availability, quality and taste of coffee as it’s known today.
At Hacienda Alsacia, Starbucks is working to mitigate the
impacts of climate change. The company has created best practices
to make growing coffee more profitable; developed the next
generation of disease-resistant, quality coffee; and shared it all
with farmers around the world. For example, since making the
commitment to distribute 100 million coffee trees by 2025,
Starbucks has distributed approximately 90 million
climate-resistant coffee trees and more than 53 million coffee
seedlings to farmers. Additional coffee innovation farms will
enable more research in new geographies to better mitigate the
threat of climate change.
The new farms in Costa Rica and Guatemala will both study hybrid
coffee varieties under different elevations and soil conditions,
which is a critical step in the research of new genetic material.
The farm in Costa Rica, located next to Hacienda Alsacia, will also
be designed to explore the use of mechanization, drones and other
technologies to help support labor availability challenges that
farmers in Latin America are facing. In Guatemala, one of Starbucks
most important origins, the farm in the Antigua Valley will
replicate a smallholder farming design with conditions that mirror
challenges that many farms face today.
With future farm investments also planned for Africa and Asia,
Starbucks will have a coffee innovation network spanning the three
main growing regions of the “Coffee Belt” – Latin America, Africa,
and Asia Pacific – and be equipped to study the varied cultures,
landscapes and growing methods that all contribute to coffee
flavor.
Research on Starbucks innovation farms will be scaled through
the company’s coffee innovation network, a multi-pronged approach
to ensuring a sustainable future of coffee for all. In addition to
innovation farms, the network includes 10 Farmer Support Centers in
coffee-growing regions around the world, where world-class
agronomists collaborate directly with farmers on research and best
practices, and 70 “model farms” within Starbucks supply chain,
where solutions are put into action. The network’s focus on
learning and innovation will continue through the sustainability
learning and innovation lab at Hacienda Alsacia, which will break
ground in December.
“Through these innovation farms, we will develop solutions that
will not only improve coffee productivity and quality but also
empower farmers with the tools and knowledge needed to thrive in a
changing world and challenging climate,” said Roberto Vega,
Starbucks vice president of Global Coffee Agronomy, R&D and
Sustainability. “This work is done on behalf of coffee farmers
everywhere with findings that can be applied across other
industries and crops that are also impacted by climate change.”
For more information about Starbucks sustainability initiatives
and coffee sourcing practices, please visit
https://stories.starbucks.com/.
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Starbucks Media Relations press@starbucks.com 206-318-7100
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