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.

