We know the impact of the climate emergency is growing on a global scale, with remote and rural regions often suffering most.
With extreme weather conditions intensifying, farming communities urgently need to build resilience against rising temperatures and the increasing risk of pests and diseases.
An emergency in East Africa
In recent years, eastern Africa has starkly demonstrated the economic, political and humanitarian consequences of severe drought. Since 2020, the region has had six consecutive rainy seasons with insufficient precipitation, affecting millions.
This prolonged drought resulted from a multi-year La Niña event, likely intensified by global climate change, as even slight variations in sea surface temperatures can significantly alter weather patterns.
Shared Interest Lending Manager, Immaculate Ochieno, said: “In our region, we have experienced frequent floods, with increased severity and also longer drought spells.
The downside is the effect this has on coffee seasons. Previously, we would see harvest periods of three months; these are becoming shorter as weather patterns change, and coffee matures later. However, the issues comes as the buyer expects coffee at a certain time.
These issues extend beyond coffee. In Rwanda, we currently support six producer organisations with finance, including fruit-and-vegetable producer Garden Fresh.
Speaking about challenges Garden Fresh are facing, Immaculate told us:
"In the fresh vegetable harvest, farmers are being required to install greenhouses to prevent cross-pollination when using pesticides ... If greenhouses are not installed, pesticides can blow onto crops from nearby fields, affecting the quality and spreading the chemical.
"In this case, farmers are forced to sell the product locally at a lower price, and so they lose money ... This underlines how essential investments in greenhouses are to prevent cross-pollination and produce organically certified coffee.”
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