Fabricio Scocco Fioravante: Incremental Progress on a Regulation That Needed Recalibration

Netherlands – Ali Azakary | Qahwa World

On May 4, the European Commission published its “simplification” package for the Deforestation Regulation. Some saw it as genuine relief. Others called it cosmetic.

Qahwa World concludes its interview series with industry experts. After Dr. Steffen Schwarz, Kim Thompson, Burke Campbell, John Seroney, and Michael Trung, our sixth and final guest is Fabricio Scocco Fioravante, founder of Takumi Collective in the Netherlands.

Fabricio is a specialty coffee importer and roaster who works directly with smallholder producers in Latin America and Africa. He represents the voice of the European importer dealing with micro-lots and direct trade relationships, offering a different perspective from his more critical counterparts.

Here is what he said.

  • What is your overall take on the EU simplification decision? Does it truly reduce the burden, or is it mostly cosmetic?

Fabricio Scocco Fioravante: I think it’s a step in the right direction, but honestly, it’s incremental progress on a regulation that was already overdue for recalibration.

The burden reduction for small operators is real and welcome. But the structural complexity hasn’t disappeared. For those of us working with micro-lot and direct-trade supply chains, traceability was already part of how we operate. The issue was never the principle. It was the bureaucratic weight that falls unevenly across the chain.

  • Who benefits the most from this simplification in your opinion?

Fabricio Scocco Fioravante: Interestingly, large companies with compliance infrastructure absorb this more easily than anyone else. Small independent roasters and importers like us still face disproportionate administrative overhead relative to our volume.

The biggest real-world benefit goes to low-risk country exporters and small producers who now have clearer, lighter obligations. That part I genuinely welcome.

  • Soluble coffee is now fully covered, after being excluded before. How do you see this affecting coffee traders and roasters worldwide?

Fabricio Scocco Fioravante: This closes a loophole that was always philosophically inconsistent. If the regulation is about deforestation risk in the supply chain, soluble coffee was never exempt from that risk. It was just exempt from the paperwork.

Including it levels the playing field and forces industrial processors to operate under the same traceability logic that specialty roasters were already working towards. Long overdue.

  • Is the global coffee supply chain truly ready for the December 30, 2026 deadline? If not, which part of the industry will take the biggest hit?

Fabricio Scocco Fioravante: No, not fully. The geolocation requirement is technically sound but practically uneven.

In well-organized origins like Colombia or parts of Ethiopia, this is manageable. In fragmented smallholder landscapes – certain regions of Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, parts of Asia – plot-level geolocation is still a serious challenge.

The part of the industry that will take the biggest hit is mid-tier importers working with aggregated lots from complex origins who don’t have direct farm relationships. Direct-trade and specialty channels are better positioned, but even we feel the pressure.

Qahwa World – With this, we conclude our six-part interview series. Thank you for following.

Read the related stories:

Michael Trung: EUDR Simplification Offers No Real Value – Just a Compliance Tax

John Seroney: The Real Cost is Farm Mapping and Digital Registration

Burke Campbell – “European Simplification is Cosmetic. The Burden Exported to Honduras Has Not Changed”

Kim Thompson: Sustainability Rules Must Not Punish the Producers Who Need Market Access Most

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: EUDR Simplification Remains an Administrative Monster

EUDR Simplification: Six Voices from the Coffee Industry Speak

European Commission Simplifies Deforestation Regulation.. What’s New?

 

Michael Trung: EUDR Simplification Offers No Real Value – Just a Compliance Tax

Vietnam – Ali Azakary | Qahwa World

On May 4, the European Commission published its “simplification” package for the Deforestation Regulation. Some saw it as genuine relief. Others called it cosmetic.

Qahwa World continues its interview series with industry experts. After Dr. Steffen Schwarz from Germany, Kim Thompson from Dubai, Burke Campbell from Honduras, and John Seroney from Kenya, our fifth guest is Michael Trung.

Michael is a specialty coffee consultant, SCA certified trainer, and founder of iO Coffee Vietnam. With 25 years of experience in international logistics and global trade, he brings a unique perspective on supply chain complexity, data sovereignty, and the real costs of compliance. He is known for his sharp critique of regulations that create administrative burdens without delivering meaningful value to farmers or consumers.

Here is what he said.

  • What is your overall take on the EU simplification decision? Does it truly reduce the burden, or is it mostly cosmetic?

Michael Trung: Personally, I do not believe this EUDR “simplification” provides real value to farmers or consumers. From my 25 years in international logistics, it appears the geolocation requirements and increased documentation complexity will lead primarily to one outcome: increased costs for the entire supply chain.

The intention may be noble, but the instrument is flawed. Instead of empowering the farmer, these regulations act as a “compliance tax.” The producer pays for the paperwork, the middleman pays for verification, and the consumer pays a higher price – but the farm-gate profit rarely sees a meaningful increase.

  • Who benefits the most from this simplification in your opinion?

Michael Trung: I see a clear and concerning parallel here with USDA and EU Organic certifications. Historically, those certifications have proven that while the intent is noble, the administrative and logistical costs often swallow the premiums.

The real beneficiaries are not the farmers. They are the compliance technology vendors, the auditing firms, and the large corporations that can spread these costs across massive volumes. Small and medium players get crushed by the overhead. The simplification does not change this structural reality.

  • Soluble coffee is now fully covered, after being excluded before. How do you see this affecting coffee traders and roasters worldwide?

Michael Trung: Adding soluble coffee closes a loophole, but it also adds another layer of complexity to an already overburdened system. Soluble coffee supply chains are often multi-origin and fragmented. Requiring polygon-level traceability for every component will drive further consolidation.

The ones who will suffer are the smaller traders and processors who lack the infrastructure to meet these demands. They will either be forced into expensive partnerships or pushed out of the market entirely. The coffee itself will not become more sustainable – it will simply become more expensive to document.

  • Is the global coffee supply chain truly ready for the December 30, 2026 deadline? If not, which part of the industry will take the biggest hit?

Michael Trung: No, the global supply chain is not ready. From my experience in logistics, the geolocation requirements and the need for verified polygon data across millions of small plots is a logistical nightmare.

The hardest hit will be the smallholder farmers and the small to medium exporters in countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, and parts of Africa. They lack the digital infrastructure and the financial resources to comply. The EUDR, with its mandatory geolocation, feels like “Organic Certification on steroids.” It moves beyond simple quality standards into a realm of data sovereignty and technical barriers that the global supply chain is simply not prepared for.

We need to ask: who controls this data? Who bears the cost? And what happens to the farmers who cannot afford to play the game?

Qahwa World – Episode Six tomorrow with Fabricio Scocco Fioravante from the Netherlands.

Read the related stories:

John Seroney: The Real Cost is Farm Mapping and Digital Registration

Burke Campbell – “European Simplification is Cosmetic. The Burden Exported to Honduras Has Not Changed”

Kim Thompson: Sustainability Rules Must Not Punish the Producers Who Need Market Access Most

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: EUDR Simplification Remains an Administrative Monster

EUDR Simplification: Six Voices from the Coffee Industry Speak

European Commission Simplifies Deforestation Regulation.. What’s New?

 

WCR CEO Dr. Vern Long: The best coffee in the world hasn’t been grown yet

Qahwa World – Dubai |
May 15, 2026 |
4 min read

Dr. Jennifer “Vern” Long, CEO of World Coffee Research, said in two simultaneous messages – one in the organization’s annual report and another in an Instagram video – that “the best coffee in the world hasn’t been grown yet. It’s coming soon.” She confirmed that the innovative “coopetition” model between competing companies and governments has produced elite coffee genetics now growing in research fields on 4 continents.

In her annual report message, Long explained that WCR’s member companies built something unprecedented when they created World Coffee Research – a global collaborative organization that is creating the genetic infrastructure of the 200 billion dollar coffee industry. Genetics are the foundation of coffee’s future, she said, and the next generation of climate-resilient, high-quality varieties advancing through this system will expand what coffee agriculture can deliver.

Long described WCR’s collaborative networked nature as unparalleled. Governments that historically did not share directly with each other contributed their unique genetics and scientific knowhow to a single shared pool. Companies that compete in the marketplace banded together and contributed patient capital to drive the work forward, understanding that tree breeding operates on 10 to 15 year cycles. This coopetition model has delivered: elite genetics are now in research fields on 4 continents.

Regarding next steps, Long said WCR will explore what it takes to scale up and deploy these trees to farmers’ fields. The organization will continue innovating, using the same collaborative spirit that built the global genetics pipeline to design a model capable of ensuring last-mile distribution to farmers and sustaining research in perpetuity. “Better plants are coming. We’ll be ready,” she concluded.

In a separate Instagram video featuring Long’s voice, she said WCR continued in 2025 to create the future of coffee by uniting the global coffee industry to drive science-based agricultural solutions. “The future of coffee is arriving. The entire coffee sector is built from the harvest of the plant itself. When we get the plant right, everything else multiplies,” she said.

Long highlighted WCR’s work areas including coffee breeding networks, trial sites, improved seed systems, and global leadership programs. She invited the public to explore the report’s highlights and be part of WCR’s ongoing effort to create the future of coffee.

“The best coffee in the world hasn’t been grown yet. It’s coming soon. Our members and partners make it happen, and will help us define what comes next.”

— Dr. Vern Long, CEO of World Coffee Research

Source: World Coffee Research Annual Report 2025 + WCR official Instagram account
Prepared by: Qahwa World – Dubai
Publication date: May 15, 2026

 

World Coffee Research releases 2025 annual report

 

Qahwa World – Dubai |
May 14, 2026 |
7 min read |
Source: WCR Annual Report 2025

Executive Summary

  • World Coffee Research released its 2025 annual report covering January 1 to December 31, 2025
  • Innova Global Coffee Breeding Network named a TIME Best Invention of 2025
  • Network expands to include robusta coffee with six partner countries producing 64% of global robusta
  • 11 countries now in Innova network, producing 40% of world’s coffee supply
  • WCR aims to reduce breeding timeline from 30 years to 8 years using genetic markers
  • 10-year IMLVT trial results: Up to half of arabica land could become unsuitable by 2050 due to climate change
  • $4.96 million in industry contributions; $9.85 million total financial position
  • Seed system expansions in Peru, Uganda, Guatemala, Honduras to produce millions of new trees annually
  • WCR helped secure $175 million in U.S. funding for agricultural R&D including coffee

World Coffee Research (WCR) announced the release of its 2025 annual report on December 31, 2025, detailing the expansion of its TIME-recognized Innova Global Coffee Breeding Network into robusta coffee, new data showing that half of current arabica land could become unsuitable by 2050, and seed system expansions across four producing countries.

The report, which covers the period between January 1, 2025 and December 31, 2025, confirmed that WCR’s Innova network has expanded to include Coffea canephora (robusta) breeding, adding Vietnam and Ghana as new national partners. Six countries now participate in robusta breeding: Vietnam, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Rwanda, and Uganda, which together produce 64 percent of the world’s robusta supply. Overall, 11 countries make up the Innova network, producing 40 percent of global coffee supply.

An independent panel of global breeding experts commissioned by WCR’s board of directors reviewed the organization’s breeding programs in early 2025 and described the approach as a “radical step forward” that sets a new bar for coffee breeding worldwide. The Innova network was subsequently named a TIME Best Invention of 2025. The robusta breeding program combines multiple genetic groups, including a collection provided by French research institute CIRAD. Propagation began in 2025, and starting in 2027 each robusta partner will receive 1,000 unique new trees from WCR.

The report detailed that WCR is working to reduce coffee breeding timelines from the traditional 30 years to just 8 years. In 2025, the organization initiated a collaboration with Cenicafe, one of the world’s leading national coffee research institutions, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Tropical Agricultural Research Station (USDA TARS) in Puerto Rico to develop low-cost genetic markers for Coffee Leaf Rust (CLR), the world’s most economically devastating coffee disease. In 2026, WCR will expand this work to cover Coffee Berry Disease (CBD), Coffee Fruit Rot (CFR), and Coffee Berry Borer (CBB). Once validated between 2025 and 2028, these markers will be publicly released through scholarly publication.

According to the report, 10-year results from the International Multilocation Variety Trial (IMLVT), launched in 2015 with 31 arabica varieties shared by 11 breeding programs, confirmed that coffee leaf rust resistance depends on both genetics and environment. A 2015 study by WCR and CIAT that guided site selection for the trial network identified that up to half of today’s arabica land could become unsuitable for coffee production by 2050. The IMLVT has identified high-performing varieties with strong rust resistance and stable yields. In 2026, WCR will launch CafeClima, a free online platform integrating climate modeling with IMLVT variety performance data to help farmers make data-driven replanting decisions.

WCR installed 10,000 F1 hybrid plantlets across 10 trial sites in Peru, Guatemala, and Costa Rica, planted directly in farmers’ fields through member-led trials. The report also detailed seed system expansions across four countries. In Peru, 10 new arabica seed lots were installed with 8 cooperatives, targeting 15 seed lots by 2028 producing up to 6 million seeds annually. In Uganda, 11 mother gardens for disease-resistant robusta were installed or expanded with national coffee institute NaCORI, targeting over 40 mother gardens by 2028 producing 560,000 trees per year. In Guatemala and Honduras, 12 new seed lots will be installed in 2026, producing 5.4 million seeds annually starting in 2029.

The report highlighted advocacy wins including $175 million secured in FY26 “hard earmarks” for international agricultural R&D through coordinated advocacy by U.S. member companies, with a legal requirement that a portion support coffee research. A separate coalition mobilized $850,000 for Uganda’s coffee future from UNIDO, JDE Peet’s, Lavazza Foundation and The J.M. Smucker Co.

According to the financial section of the report, total contributions earned from the coffee industry in 2025 was $4,962,000. The total year-end financial position reached $9,852,000. Figures are pre-audit. WCR confirmed the commitment of its 194 member companies from 30 countries, with 59 additional companies and individuals providing financial support in 2025. WCR’s knowledge products, including the Coffee Varieties Catalog, Sensory Lexicon, and nursery manuals, were viewed 239,722 times in 195 countries during 2025. The organization also installed a small-batch processing facility at its research farm in El Salvador, custom-designed for breeding programs to process samples from thousands of individual trees.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Innova Global Coffee Breeding Network?

It is the most ambitious and globally coordinated coffee breeding program in history, bringing together 11 countries to transform coffee breeding and create enhanced genetics at an accelerated pace.

What recognition did WCR receive in 2025?

The Innova network was named a TIME Best Invention of 2025, and an expert panel described WCR’s breeding approach as a “radical step forward” for coffee.

How will climate change affect coffee production according to the report?

A 2015 study by WCR and CIAT that guided the IMLVT trial network found that up to half of today’s arabica land could become unsuitable by 2050.

Which countries are part of the Innova robusta breeding program?

Vietnam, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Rwanda, and Uganda — which together produce 64 percent of the world’s robusta.

How many member companies does WCR have?

194 member companies from 30 countries, with 59 additional companies and individuals providing financial support in 2025.

What is CafeClima?

A free online platform launching in 2026 that integrates climate modeling with variety performance data to help farmers make data-driven replanting decisions.

Source: World Coffee Research Annual Report 2025
Report period: January 1, 2025 – December 31, 2025
Author: Qahwa World – Dubai
Publication date: May 14, 2026

 

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: EUDR Simplification Remains an Administrative Monster

Dubai – Ali Al Zakry | Qahwa World

On May 4, the European Commission published its “simplification” package for the Deforestation Regulation. Some saw it as genuine relief. Others called it cosmetic. Dr Steffen Schwarz described the EUDR as an administrative monster.

Qahwa World opened this file from the beginning. We spoke to six experts from four continents. We published a preliminary investigation summarizing their views. Now we publish the full episodes, one expert per episode, with complete, unedited answers.

Our first guest is Dr. Steffen Schwarz, an applied coffee science expert from Germany and co-founder of Applied Coffee Science. He describes the simplified regulation as “still an administrative monster for many small actors.”

Here is the full interview.

  • What is your overall take on the EU simplification decision? Does it truly reduce the burden, or is it mostly cosmetic?

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: My overall view is that the simplification helps at the margins, but it does not solve the core problem. The EUDR remains an administrative monster for many small actors in the coffee chain.

The intention is absolutely right. Nobody in coffee can seriously argue against forest protection. The question is whether the instrument is proportionate and intelligent enough. At the moment, I fear that it mainly simplifies the system for those who already have the structures to deal with it: large importers, large exporters, certification bodies, and companies with compliance departments.

For small roasters, small importers, and direct trade relationships, the fundamental burden remains. Coffee is not only a bulk commodity. Many of the most valuable coffees in Europe come from small farms, old varieties, rare cultivars, agroforestry systems, and micro-lots. These coffees may be fully deforestation-free, but proving that in the required administrative format can become disproportionately expensive.

So yes, simplification is welcome. But if the system still makes it easier to import large, standardized volumes than small, diverse, direct-trade lots, then we have not fixed the real problem.

  • Who benefits the most from this simplification?

The biggest beneficiaries will probably be large companies and low-risk exporting countries with organized documentation systems. They can spread compliance costs over large volumes and integrate the EUDR into existing legal, digital, and certification structures.

Small producers may benefit on paper, especially where simplified declarations or reduced obligations apply. But many smallholders outside the EU will still feel the pressure indirectly. The legal obligation may sit with the European operator, but the demand for geolocation data, legality evidence, and traceability will travel upstream to the farm level.

That is where the danger lies. A small farmer who grows coffee under shade, preserves old varieties, and has never cleared forest may still be excluded if the paperwork is too difficult or too expensive. The system may not intentionally discriminate against smallholders, but its practical effect could do exactly that.

In my view, the real winners are those who can industrialize compliance. The potential losers are those whose strength lies in quality, diversity, and relationship-based trade rather than administrative capacity.

  • Soluble coffee is now fully covered, after being excluded before. How do you see this affecting coffee traders and roasters worldwide?

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: From a regulatory logic, including soluble coffee makes sense. If the aim is to prevent deforestation-linked coffee from entering the European market, then it would be inconsistent to regulate green and roasted coffee but leave soluble coffee outside.

However, soluble coffee is often based on complex, high-volume, multi-origin supply chains. It may involve large blends, several processing stages, and coffee from many farms, regions, or countries. That makes traceability more complicated.

For large soluble coffee manufacturers, this will create additional compliance work, but they are generally better equipped to manage it. For traders supplying the soluble industry, the pressure will increase significantly. They will need cleaner documentation, stronger segregation, and better origin data.

The risk is that soluble coffee supply chains will become more consolidated. Suppliers who cannot provide the required documentation may simply be removed from the chain. Again, the coffee may not necessarily become better or more sustainable. It may simply become easier to document.

Is the global coffee supply chain ready for the December 30, 2026 deadline? If not, which part of the industry will take the biggest hit?

Dr. Steffen Schwarz: No, not fully. Some parts of the industry are ready, especially larger exporters, organized cooperatives, multinational traders, and companies already working with detailed traceability systems. But the global coffee sector as a whole is not ready.

The biggest hit will be taken by small producers, small exporters, small importers, and independent roasters working with direct-trade lots. These actors often have the most transparent human relationships, but not always the administrative infrastructure required by the EUDR.

Geolocation is a good example. In theory, it is a powerful tool. In practice, collecting, verifying, storing, and transmitting accurate plot-level data across thousands of small farms is a major challenge. Keeping the December 2026 deadline means that many supply chains will have to make fast decisions.

The easiest decision will often be to reduce complexity: fewer origins, fewer small suppliers, fewer micro-lots, fewer experimental coffees.

That is my main concern. Europe may end up protecting itself legally, while weakening some of the most meaningful forms of sustainable coffee trade.

The EUDR asks the right moral question: should Europe consume coffee linked to deforestation? Clearly, no. But the next question is just as important: can Europe protect forests without pushing small farmers, old varieties, direct trade, and coffee diversity out of the market?

At present, I am not convinced that we have achieved that balance.

Qahwa World – Episode Two tomorrow with Kim Thompson, Co-Founder of RAW Coffee Company in Dubai.

Read Related stories:

EUDR Simplification: Six Voices from the Coffee Industry Speak

European Commission Simplifies Deforestation Regulation.. What’s New?

 

 

Arabica Coffee Prices Drop on Outlook for Large Brazilian Harvest

Dubai – Qahwa Word

Arabica coffee futures fell to a two-week low on Thursday, weighed down by growing expectations of a bumper crop in Brazil. These developments have had a significant impact on arabica coffee prices, especially given Brazil’s bumper crop forecasts. Meanwhile, robusta prices edged higher. In fact, arabica coffee prices may fluctuate in response to Brazil bumper crop news.

July arabica coffee (KCN26) settled down 10.60 points, or 3.73%, while July ICE robusta coffee (RMN26) gained 19 points (+0.56%).

Brazilian Production Forecasts Weigh on Prices
Several recent projections point to a significantly larger Brazilian coffee harvest in 2026/27, putting pressure on arabica markets. Notably, arabica coffee prices are closely tied to Brazil bumper crop expectations, making these forecasts crucial for analysts.

  • The Coffee Trading Academy estimated last Thursday that Brazil’s 2026/27 crop could rise 12% from the previous year to 71.4 million bags. Moreover, fluctuations in arabica coffee prices strongly reflect Brazil’s bumper crop predictions.

  • On March 19, Marex Group Plc projected a record 75.9 million bags, slightly above Sucafina’s forecast of 75.4 million bags (a 15.5% year‑on‑year increase).

  • StoneX raised its estimate for Brazil’s 2026/27 production to a record 75.3 million bags on March 12, up from a November forecast of 70.7 million bags. This kind of Brazil bumper crop forecast is a key driver for arabica coffee prices.

StoneX also predicted that the global coffee surplus in 2026 would grow to 10 million bags, up from 1.8 million bags in 2025 – the largest surplus in six years. As a result, arabica coffee prices, Brazil, and bumper crop numbers remain intertwined topics for market participants.

Vietnam’s Strong Exports Pressure Robusta
Robusta prices face headwinds from surging Vietnamese shipments. Vietnam’s National Statistics Office reported on Saturday that the country’s coffee exports from January to April 2026 rose 15.8% year‑on‑year to 810,000 metric tons. For the full year 2025, Vietnamese exports jumped 17.5% to 1.58 million metric tons. Additionally, Vietnam’s 2025/26 coffee production is expected to climb 6% year‑on‑year to a four‑year high of 1.76 million metric tons (29.4 million bags).

Strait of Hormuz Closure Creates Supply Concerns
The ongoing shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted global coffee supply chains, supporting prices broadly. Higher shipping rates, insurance premiums, and increased costs for fertilizer and fuel have tightened available supplies, raising expenses for coffee importers and roasters. All these factors can indirectly affect arabica coffee prices, especially if Brazil expects another bumper crop.

Tight Inventories and Lower Brazilian Exports Provide Support
Signs of limited immediate supplies are also underpinning the market:

  • ICE arabica coffee inventories dropped to a 2.5‑month low of 483,292 bags on Thursday. This reduction coincides with a growing focus on Brazil bumper crop forecasts and arabica coffee prices.

  • ICE robusta inventories hit a 16.25‑month low of 3,755 lots last Tuesday.

Brazil’s export figures have also trended lower. On April 14, Cecafe reported that Brazil’s green coffee exports in March fell 10% year‑on‑year to 2.65 million bags. Earlier, on April 7, the country’s Trade Ministry noted that total March coffee exports declined 31% year‑on‑year to 151,000 metric tons. Therefore, arabica coffee prices in Brazil remain sensitive to both export volumes and bumper crop projections. It’s worth noting that Brazil’s bumper crop continues to make arabica coffee prices extremely volatile.

Global Export and Production Outlook
On November 7, the International Coffee Organization (ICO) said global coffee exports for the current marketing year (October to September) slipped 0.3% year‑on‑year to 138.658 million bags.

Looking further ahead, the USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) projected in its December 18 biannual report that world coffee production in 2025/26 would rise 2.0% year‑on‑year to a record 178.848 million bags. Within that total, arabica production is forecast to decline 4.7% to 95.515 million bags, while robusta production is expected to increase 10.9% to 83.333 million bags. The global market continues to monitor arabica coffee prices, Brazil, and potential bumper crop impacts for the coming years.

For Brazil, the FAS sees 2025/26 production falling 3.1% to 63 million bags, while Vietnam’s output is projected to grow 6.2% to a four‑year high of 30.8 million bags. Ending stocks for 2025/26 are forecast to decrease 5.4% to 20.148 million bags, down from 21.307 million bags in 2024/25. In summary, arabica coffee prices, Brazil, and the bumper crop outlook will remain central themes for the global coffee market throughout 2026.

China Pushes Taiwan Off Coffee’s Global Stage

Dubai – Qahwa World

A quiet change in the records of the World Coffee Championships has sparked controversy across the specialty coffee industry after “Taiwan” was replaced with “Chinese Taipei” in the official listing of the 2026 World Latte Art Champion.

The change came days after Taiwanese barista Bala claimed victory at the World Latte Art Championship held in San Diego, earning 531 points with intricate latte creations featuring animals including a raccoon, giraffe and red pandas.

According to Asia Times, the original championship announcement identified Bala as representing Taiwan. About a week later, however, the World Coffee Championships records were quietly updated to list him under “Chinese Taipei,” without any public explanation from the organizers.

The report also noted that historical ranking PDFs previously available on the competition’s website were later removed, raising concerns among observers about the erasure of past national representations in coffee competitions.

While the change may appear minor, critics say it reflects the growing reach of geopolitical pressure into global cultural and professional industries — including specialty coffee. The incident has also renewed debate over how international private organizations respond when caught between political sensitivities and claims of neutrality.

Taiwan’s specialty coffee community has spent nearly two decades building its reputation on the world stage. Since first appearing in the World Barista Championship in 2007, Taiwanese competitors have secured multiple international titles across brewing, roasting, tasting and latte art competitions.

Bala’s 2026 victory marked the latest achievement in a long line of Taiwanese successes that helped establish the island as one of Asia’s leading forces in specialty coffee.

 

The Coffee That Was Never as “Robust” as Its Name Promised

By: Dr. Steffen Schwarz, Coffee Consulate

There is a word in coffee that has done more damage than most people realise. It is short, convenient, commercially familiar, and scientifically careless. The Coffea canephora Robusta myth is a prime example of how a term can become misleading in the world of coffee.

For decades, the global coffee industry has used the name “Robusta” as if it described a species, a flavour profile, a production system, a price category, and a climate promise all at once. It is a compression of botany into marketing. Like many convenient mistakes, it has quietly shaped how people think.

“Robusta” is not just a name. It is a mindset that has shaped how the industry underestimates Coffea canephora.

Say the word often enough and the assumption follows. Canephora must be robust. Tougher. Simpler. Less fragile. Less complex. Less deserving of precision. Less worthy of sensory ambition. Less in need of science.

But Coffea canephora is not a slogan. It is a species with deep genetic history, regional diversity, ecological vulnerability, breeding potential, and a future that may become central to the survival of coffee as we know it.

The false name has made the industry lazy. Worse, it has made the industry dangerously confident.

When Language Meets Climate Reality

The irony is difficult to ignore. At the moment coffee is entering one of the most unstable climatic periods in its cultivated history, the species most often described as “robust” is revealing how misleading that label can be.

Canephora can be productive. It can be vigorous. It can tolerate conditions under which many Arabica systems struggle. Yet drought does not read marketing language. Heat stress does not respect trade vocabulary.

Climate does not respond to terminology. Drought and heat expose biological reality, not branding.

Across Africa, Asia, and Latin America, the real question is no longer whether Canephora sounds strong. It is whether the right genetics, farming systems, nursery practices, disease resistance, root architecture, flowering behaviour, pollination compatibility, and processing ambitions can be brought together fast enough to make the crop resilient in the world that is arriving.

A Species of Diversity, Not Simplicity

Coffea canephora is not a single blunt instrument. It is a complex diploid species, largely outcrossing, genetically diverse, and historically rooted in the tropical forests of Central and West Africa.

Its major genetic groups, often described as Congolese and Guinean, express very different traits. Growth habit, caffeine content, bean weight, drought response, disease resistance, maturation timing, and agronomic behaviour vary across the species. The Brazilian conilon group adds further complexity, shaped by hybridisation and farmer selection.

This diversity is not a complication. It is the foundation of Canephora’s future.

The future of Canephora will not be built from a single type, but from its genetic diversity.

Progress depends on understanding which genetic resources carry the traits that matter, where they perform best, under which production systems, and for which market demands.

The Cost of Assumptions

The problem with calling a species “robust” is not linguistic. It is strategic.

It encourages underinvestment in fragility. It replaces measurement with assumption. It links lower market prices with lower intellectual attention.

Climate change is now exposing the cost of that mindset.

Assumed resilience is one of the most dangerous risks in a climate-unstable future.

Prolonged drought, higher temperatures, irregular flowering, shifting pest pressure, and changing disease dynamics cannot be addressed with outdated assumptions. They require precision.

Climate Stress Is Not Singular

Drought is perhaps the clearest example. Canephora does not simply tolerate dry conditions without consequence.

Water deficit reduces photosynthesis, increases oxidative stress, and disrupts flowering and fruit development. When combined with heat, the effects intensify.

In Uganda, prolonged drought and high temperatures have been linked with increased vulnerability to black coffee twig borer and Coffee Wilt Disease. In Asia and Brazil, drought stress and elevated soil temperatures increase the impact of root knot nematodes.

Climate stress rarely acts alone. It weakens plants, favours opportunistic pests and pathogens, and turns manageable challenges into systemic risks.

Coffee Wilt Disease and the Limits of Rhetoric

Coffee Wilt Disease remains one of the most powerful reminders that Canephora’s future cannot be secured through language alone.

Resilience is not a label. It is a result of science, systems, and execution.

Caused by Fusarium xylarioides, the disease devastated production in Uganda in the 1990s and early 2000s. Nearly half of the country’s Canephora trees were lost, with economic damage estimated at around 100 million US dollars.

This was not theoretical. It was a national agricultural crisis.

Uganda’s response was significant. Research institutions developed and released ten Coffee Wilt Disease resistant KR varieties. It was a major achievement in applied breeding.

But resistance alone does not solve the problem.

The Nursery Bottleneck

Canephora’s biology complicates propagation. As an outcrossing species, seed propagation produces variability. Seedlings do not reliably retain the characteristics of the parent plant.

For disease resistance, uniformity, and quality, clonal propagation becomes essential.

This shifts attention to nurseries, where the success or failure of breeding programmes is determined in practical terms.

The future of coffee can depend on something as simple as how a mother plant is bent.

A 2025 study examining KR1, KR3, and KR4 varieties demonstrated how simple interventions can transform outcomes. By adjusting the bending angle of mother plants and applying targeted NPK fertilisation, researchers significantly improved suckering performance.

Horizontally bent mother plants produced the strongest results. Fertiliser further enhanced growth. The interaction between variety, plant architecture, and nutrient management proved decisive.

This is not a minor technical detail. It is the logistics of resilience.

Where Science Becomes Operational

Applied coffee science is most powerful when it connects theory with practice.

Breeders may develop resistant genotypes. Pathologists may understand disease mechanisms. Geneticists may map diversity. Yet without effective nursery systems, these advances do not reach farmers.

A horizontally bent mother plant may not appear as significant as genomic innovation, but it can determine how quickly improved material is deployed at scale.

Rethinking Canephora Quality

The long standing perception of Canephora as inherently inferior in cup quality is no longer defensible.

High quality Canephora is not a contradiction. It is a frontier.

Selective breeding for cup potential, improved harvesting practices, better post harvest processing, controlled fermentation, and precise roasting are all necessary.

Canephora does not need to replicate Arabica. It has its own sensory identity, including structure, body, spice, cocoa, nutty profiles, and tactile depth.

A System That Must Work Together

The future of Canephora depends on coordination across the value chain.

Breeders, farmers, nurseries, processors, roasters, researchers, and buyers must operate within aligned systems. Without this, progress remains fragmented.

Why Naming Still Matters

Calling the species Coffea canephora is not a matter of academic correctness.

It is about restoring clarity.

Accurate language drives accurate thinking. Accurate thinking drives better coffee systems.

Accurate thinking drives investment. Investment enables science. Science shapes outcomes in the field.

The Decade Ahead

Canephora is not invincible. It is not inferior.

It is diverse, vulnerable, productive, promising, and still insufficiently understood.

  • Can breeding cycles be shortened without losing rigour?
  • Can resistant varieties be multiplied efficiently?
  • Can quality become a primary breeding objective?
  • Can climate adaptation become proactive rather than reactive?

Conclusion

The coffee industry has spent decades hiding Canephora behind the wrong name.

That era is ending.

Coffea canephora must be understood as it is. A species with its own biology, its own challenges, and its own future.

Its resilience will not be assumed. It will be built through science, precision, and attention.

And that begins with calling it by its proper name.

Why Coffee Is One of the Healthiest Drinks

Dubi – Qahwa World

After reviewing hundreds of studies and the latest 2025–2026 evidence, one thing is clear: when consumed in moderation, coffee stands out as one of the most beneficial beverages for long-term health. Its combination of caffeine and powerful antioxidants delivers real, evidence-based advantages that go far beyond just waking you up.

  • How Coffee Works

Coffee contains over 1,000 bioactive compounds. Caffeine blocks adenosine receptors to reduce fatigue and boost alertness, dopamine, and physical performance. At the same time, polyphenols such as chlorogenic acids fight inflammation, support insulin sensitivity, and protect cells from oxidative damage. Many benefits appear with both regular and decaf coffee.

You may read: Japanese Scientists: Coffee Protects Gums from Inflammation

Key Evidence-Based Benefits

  • Boosts Energy and Exercise Performance Caffeine reliably increases alertness, reduces perceived fatigue, and improves endurance, power output, and even gait speed in both athletes and older adults.
  • Lowers Risk of Type 2 Diabetes Each additional daily cup is associated with approximately 6–9% lower risk. People drinking 3–4 cups per day show around 25% reduced risk, thanks to better insulin sensitivity, preserved pancreatic beta-cell function, and lower inflammation. Both caffeinated and decaf coffee work.
  • Supports Brain Health Regular coffee consumption is consistently linked to lower risks of Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s, dementia, and age-related cognitive decline. Newer studies suggest 2–3 cups of caffeinated coffee daily may offer particularly strong protection.
  • AIDS Weight Management Coffee promotes fat breakdown, supports physical activity, and positively influences the gut microbiome. Higher intake is often associated with less body fat over time.
  • Reduces Depression Risk Drinking 2–4 cups daily is associated with lower rates of depression compared to low or no consumption, thanks to its effects on mood and inflammation.
  • Additional Powerful Advantages
  • Protects the Liver One of coffee’s strongest benefits. It reduces liver stiffness, fibrosis, cirrhosis risk, and even liver cancer. These protective effects apply to both regular and decaf coffee.
  • Benefits Heart Health 3–5 cups per day are linked to about 15% lower risk of heart disease and a meaningful reduction in stroke risk. Recent data show that drinking coffee mainly in the morning may provide even stronger benefits.
  • Extends Longevity Large reviews find that 2–4 cups daily are associated with 10–17% lower all-cause mortality, including reduced deaths from heart disease and some cancers. The sweet spot often appears around 3–3.5 cups per day.
  • Enhances Fitness Coffee improves athletic performance, power output, and functional ability in older adults.

You may also read: Study Links Moderate Coffee Consumption to Brain Health

  • Moderation Guidelines

For most healthy adults, 3–4 cups per day (roughly 300–400 mg of caffeine) is the ideal range—safe and associated with maximum benefits.

Special notes:

  • Pregnant or nursing women should limit intake to less than 200 mg of caffeine per day (about 1 cup).
  • People sensitive to caffeine should start with smaller amounts.
  • Very high intakes beyond 400 mg daily may not bring extra benefits.

Final Word from Qahwa World

Moderate coffee consumption is a simple, enjoyable habit that supports energy, metabolism, brain function, heart health, liver protection, mood, and even a longer life.

Your daily cup (or three) is not just a pleasure — it’s genuinely good for you.

Belarusian “Americano”: Lukashenko Proposes a National Version

Minsk – Qahwa World

In Belarus, an unusual initiative is under discussion: President Alexander Lukashenko has suggested creating a national version of the popular Americano coffee. The proposal could affect all fast-food establishments across the country.

The idea was announced during Lukashenko’s visit to the “Mak.by” chain, which positions itself as a Belarusian alternative to international fast-food brands. The president emphasized that it is important to build national traditions even in small details, such as the names of beverages. He proposed that, initially, the new name could be shown alongside the familiar one in parentheses, allowing customers to gradually adapt to the change.

You may read: “Candiano”: From a Simple Joke to a National Debate on Identity and More

Supporting domestic brands in the food service sector has become a priority for Belarusian authorities. Renaming the Americano could become part of a broader campaign to promote national products and strengthen Belarusian cultural identity. However, the initiative may spark debates among coffee lovers accustomed to international standards and names.

The exact name for the Belarusian version of the Americano has not yet been revealed. Nevertheless, the proposal has already prompted lively discussion among entrepreneurs and café visitors: some see it as a way to highlight Belarusian uniqueness, while others view it as an unnecessary formality.

 

Shock in the Coffee Market: Colombia’s Production Drops 36%

Dubai – Qahwa World

Coffee production in Colombia, the world’s largest producer of washed Arabica coffee, recorded a sharp drop in February 2026. Production reached 869,000 bags, with each bag weighing 60 kilograms, marking a decline of 36% compared with the same month last year. This decrease reflects a continuing negative trend that is putting pressure on the global coffee supply.

  • Noticeable Drop in Annual Production

When looking at the total production over the last 12 months, from March 2025 to February 2026, the total reached 12.72 million bags. This represents a decline of 14% compared with the previous cycle.

German Bahamon Jaramillo, the general manager of the National Coffee Federation (FNC), said that the current situation requires urgent action to protect the stability of the sector and maintain farm productivity, according to the Argentine newspaper Infobae.

You may like: Colombian Coffee Day Celebrated at Dubai Coffee Museum

The main recommendations include improving fertilization to restore plant strength and renewing coffee farms to ensure sustainable production in the medium term. There are also calls for direct support measures for farmers to help them deal with lower profits caused by reduced production.

  • Exports Also Decline

The drop in production has also affected exports. Coffee exports in February fell by 32%, reaching 807,000 bags.

During the beginning of the agricultural season, from October to February, total exports reached 5.06 million bags. This is a decline of 14% compared with the same period in the previous cycle.

  • Production Under Pressure

Experts say this decline shows how vulnerable coffee production is to climate changes and farm management problems. It also puts pressure on global prices and may increase the cost of coffee for consumers. At the same time, it makes it more difficult for small farmers to maintain sustainable businesses.

  • Main Reasons for the Decline

Several factors are behind the drop in production.

Climate changes:
Continuous heavy rain and thick cloud cover affected flowering and plant growth. This also led to the spread of diseases such as coffee leaf rust, although detection rates remain low thanks to resistant coffee varieties.

Read Also: Historic Colombian Coffee Harvests Face Labour Shortages

Farm management challenges:
Coffee plants are showing signs of exhaustion after several years of strong production. The 2024/2025 season recorded the highest production level in 30 years. In addition, higher costs for inputs such as fertilizers and labor have increased pressure on farmers.

Weak start to 2026:
The decline follows a 34% drop in January 2026, when production reached 893,000 bags, making the start of the year one of the weakest in recent years.

  • Suggested Actions

Experts suggest several steps to address the situation.

Short term:
Improve fertilization to strengthen plants and provide direct financial support for small farmers, who produce about 70% of the country’s coffee, to help offset income losses.

Medium term:
Renew coffee farms to ensure long-term sustainability and adopt varieties that are more resistant to climate conditions. Price-stabilization mechanisms are also recommended to reduce market volatility.

Long term:
Address climate change through global strategies. A report from the International Coffee Organization (ICO) and other groups expects that global coffee production could be affected by up to 50% by 2050 if adaptation measures are not taken.

  • Impact on Global Supply

Colombia represents about 10% to 12% of global Arabica production. Because of this, any decline in its output puts pressure on the global supply, especially when production also drops in countries like Vietnam or Indonesia during some periods.

However, some of this pressure may be eased by expectations of a record Brazilian crop in the 2026/2027 season, estimated at 66.2 million bags, an increase of 17.2%. This could push global production to around 180 million bags.

Still, climate volatility keeps supply fragile. As a result, major international buyers, including the United States and Europe, may look for temporary alternatives.

  • Price Movements

Arabica prices recently fell from record levels above $4 per pound in November 2025 to about $2.80 to $3.00 per pound today, mainly because of strong crop expectations in Brazil.

However, the decline in Colombian production has helped push prices up by about 2% to 5% in recent weeks. This increase is linked to concerns about global supply and geopolitical tensions, including shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.

The World Bank expects Arabica prices to fall by 13% to 15% during 2026 overall. But this outlook could change if production in Colombia continues to decline.

For consumers, coffee prices in the market may rise by about 5% to 10% in the short term, especially in Europe and the United States.

The World’s 100 Best Coffee Shops 2026 Unveiled in Madrid

A defining moment for global specialty coffee

Madrid – Qahwa World × Buna Kurs – Media Partners

Madrid once again became the epicenter of global specialty coffee as CoffeeFest Madrid 2026 hosted the official presentation of The World’s 100 Best Coffee Shops. Now in its second edition, the ranking continues to position itself as the definitive global benchmark dedicated exclusively to recognizing excellence in specialty coffee shops.

Qahwa World and Buna Kurs observed firsthand the level of anticipation surrounding this year’s announcement—a list that has quickly evolved into one of the most closely followed references in the global coffee industry.

  • The 2026 Podium

At the top of the 2026 ranking stands Onyx Coffee Lab (USA), recognized as the world’s best coffee shop. Based in Arkansas, Onyx earned the distinction for its rigorous commitment to specialty coffee standards, technical precision, responsible sourcing at origin, solar energy use, roast control systems, and continuous barista development. Its philosophy, “Never Settle for Good Enough,” is reflected across its operations and has resonated strongly with judges worldwide.

The podium is completed by:

  • Tim Wendelboe (Oslo, Norway): Long considered a global reference in specialty coffee.

  • Alquimia Coffee (Santa Ana, El Salvador): A micro-roastery deeply rooted in origin that promotes Salvadoran coffee through a contemporary and terroir-driven approach.

  • Global Trends and Spanish Success

Geographically, the 2026 ranking highlights the expanding map of excellence. The United States leads with nine coffee shops in the Top 100. Australia follows with seven, Peru secures five, while Spain, Honduras, and Taiwan each place four coffee shops.

Spain demonstrated strong positioning with two shops in the Top 20:

  1. Nomad Frutas Selectas (Barcelona): Reached position 16, recognized for its commitment to in-house roasting and quality-driven sourcing.

  2. Hola Coffee Lagasca (Madrid): Followed at position 19, representing a growing brand that combines education and coffee culture promotion.

Completing Spain’s representation are D·Origen Coffee Roasters (83rd) and Kima Coffee (93rd), confirming the maturity of the national scene.

  • Rigorous Evaluation Criteria

More than 15,000 coffee shops were analyzed by over 800 professional judges, alongside public voting that exceeded 350,000 votes. The evaluation covered:

  • Coffee quality and consistency.

  • Barista expertise and technique.

  • Sustainability practices and innovation.

  • Space design, atmosphere, and customer service.

The 2026 edition is supported by DaVinci Gourmet as Global and Title Sponsor, alongside Slayer, Markibar, Cropster, Fidatec, and the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia. The initiative is organized by Neodrinks.

For Qahwa World and Buna Kurs, serving as media partners is about participating in a global moment that redefines standards and expands the international specialty coffee conversation.

The full 2026 ranking is available at: www.worlds100bestcoffeeshops.com