
Specialty Coffee Farmers' Climate Change Concern and Perceived Ability to Adapt
Climate change studies predict that rising temperatures and water shortages will negatively
impact coffee production suitability at lower elevations (Rivera et al., 2015). As climate change
becomes increasingly severe, an assessment of coffee producers’ ability and willingness to adapt
would be especially valuable to those hoping to create adaptation strategies and policies. This had led
to a significant growth of research surrounding the livelihood of farmers, as well as their perceptions of
climate change and adaptation. However, research focused specifically on specialty coffee is still
lacking. With higher quality considerations, different value chains, and lower price volatility, specialty
coffee farmers are an especially interesting area of study (Vellucci, 2015). This study aims to fill this
knowledge gap. To do this, a survey was conducted among Costa Rican specialty coffee producers in
order to identify whether their concern about climate change and their perceived ability to adapt are
affected by perceptions of climate change risk, financing, farmer demographics, coffee management
practices, biophysical factors, access to information, or perceived adaptation methods. Survey
responses were coded, quantified, and analyzed through statistical software using analysis of variance
and linear regressions.
Previous studies show more concern about coffee price volatility than climate change (Tucker
et al., 2009; Eakin et al., 2006; Gay et al. 2006). However, this study found greater concern about
climate change than falling coffee prices among surveyed farmers, reinforcing that specialty coffee
farmers may be better positioned than nonspeciality
growers to handle market volatility. Nevertheless,
respondents felt less prepared to face the impacts of climate change. This study hypothesized that
farmers with higher levels of climate change concern would have the lowest levels of perceived ability
to adapt. However, it was found that farmer’s concern about climate change did not correlate with their
feelings of preparedness to address it. These few results among others detailed in the report signal a
need to address the climate change concerns and adaptation capacity of speciality coffee growers. As
Costa Rican policy makers, development organizations, and coffee importers and exporters build
multistakeholder
strategies to support this key segment of farmers, they should prioritize the
implementation of tools that build adaptive capacity in addition to traditional market based
mechanisms like promotion and trade policies. These results encourage the development of future
studies to explore which specific tools at the farm, household, landscape, or political level would most
enhance adaptive capacity of speciality coffee growers.
Battiste, Micaela
Gacioch, Matthew
Gross, Michelle
Rahman, Shoaib