Climate

Climate-resistant coffee trees could save Mozambique’s rainforest

Park warden Pedro Muagura sees hope for the future as he picks a ripe handful of cherry red coffee beans from a more resistant variety of coffee trees introduced to communities farming around Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park.

The prospect of a more reliable harvest from the crop, which thrives in the shade of indigenous trees, has given people living around Gorongosa a longer-term incentive to protect a rainforest that has lost more than 100 hectares of tree cover per year over the past four decades.

Gorongosa is still recovering from a civil war that killed about 1 million people between 1977 and 1992.

The park, once considered one of Africa’s finest, became a conflict site and lost almost all of its wildlife.

Population growth and urbanisation in surrounding communities undermined restoration efforts as remaining animals were poached and forests cut down for firewood, agriculture and housing.

“We realised that if we keep talking as a park, keep talking that we need to do reforestation without having immediate tangible benefits … (progress) was very slow,” Muagura said.

Gorongosa Park’s sustainable development department has been studying coffee tree varieties from around the world that are resistant to pests, disease, drought and prolonged rainy seasons. It planted up the variety Muagura was looking at in 2020.

Weather patterns have grown increasingly erratic in Mozambique, where climate shocks including repeated cyclones have offset livelihoods in one of the world’s poorest countries.

“Sometimes (there is a) very long rainy season, sometimes very short,” Muagura said. “We want to try to have species which can cope.”

Last year, communities around Gorongosa planted more than 260,000 coffee trees and 20,000 indigenous trees.

The park now has 815,000 coffee trees planted over 243 hectares of land.

More than 800 small-scale farmers, 40% of who are women, pick the green coffee, dry the beans and sell them.

“I have gained a lot. I am able to send my children to school, and even though sometimes we experience drought with coffee we are always harvesting and having money,” said Fatiansa Pauline, who is now permanently employed by the coffee project.

Reuters

Recent Posts

Wakiso High Court kicks off Criminal Session with focus on integrity and backlog reduction

Wakiso High Court has today commenced its criminal session with a pre-session meeting bringing together…

5 days ago

Sovereignty & International Development Aid: Why Uganda needs precision, not blanket restrictions – Babirye Lilliane

The proposed National Sovereignty Bill presents an important moment for legislative reflection, particularly for those…

2 weeks ago

President Museveni, please appoint wealth creators as Cabinet Ministers in your next government

AKAMPA RUGABA Tanbullakampabi@gmail.com Well, there are fake cabinet lists already circulating online. Some are just…

3 weeks ago

Why are You silent while Uganda is being Destroyed?

By Bwanika Joseph In every society, leadership reflects not only the character of those in…

4 weeks ago

Commitment in the Capital: Whisper Eye lawyer Emmanuel Kayemba Ddungu engages Kikobye Mary Josephine

In the heart of Nairobi's vibrant skyline, where the city's pulse beats strongest amid gleaming…

4 weeks ago

Victory at the ‘Bar’: aspiring Lawyers celebrate as LDC releases long-awaited results

Social media in Uganda was a sea of black gowns and scales of justice today…

1 month ago