A
three-year research project conducted by UK-based fair trade company,
Cafédirect, evaluated the sensitivity to global warming of small-scale
coffee and tea farmers in Kenya, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Peru. The study
found that growers have already been moving to higher altitudes as
temperatures rise across the globe. Moreover, their yields have been
noted to fall, such as in Peru, where annual coffee and tea harvests
have decreased by 40 percent, and Mexico which saw a 50 percent annual
loss in yields next to the country’s average seven percent decrease.
Citing
some of the specific global warming effects, Cafédirect’s Chief
Executive Officer Anne MacCaig said, “A huge number of growers are now
experiencing increased instances of pestilence and disease from rises
in temperature. They are also facing prolonged drought and changing
weather patterns.”
According to the study, 30 million small farmers could be impacted with up to a 90 percent drop in income.
Cafédirect
researchers, we appreciate your work that clearly documents the
damaging consequences of climate change. Let us step quickly toward
sustainable lifestyles so that all beings may once again prosper.
Ever-concerned
for humanity’s survival, Supreme Master Ching Hai addressed the warming
effects faced by farmers and indeed the world during a May 2009
videoconference in Togo, while also highlighting what everyone can do
to solve them.
Supreme Master Ching Hai: There
are water crises that make it difficult to plant crops, thus adding to
food shortages and prices rising. Add to this, desertification and
deforestation that further degrade the land.
Increased
temperatures mean erratic rainfall If you’re a farmer, you already can
feel that the climate is in trouble. There are more frequent droughts,
heat waves, floods, storms, frosts, freezes, and locusts than before.
If the world becomes vegan as a group, we can remedy the disasters that affect us globally.
Supreme Master Ching Hai: This is something all citizens of the world can do. Be vegan. Be a world-saver.
Referencehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/oct/10/climate-change-fairtrade-foodhttp://www.cafedirect.co.uk/our_business/press/contactus/