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Browse all articles tagged with "climate-resilient coffee"
NewsAuthor: Qahwa World Source: Mongabay (Meena Menon) Date: June 1, 2026 Climate Resilient Coffee: Excelsa and Liberica Offer Hope Executive Summary: Mongabay published this story. Arabica and Robusta face growing threats from rising temperatures and erratic rainfall. Lesser known coffee species like Excelsa and Liberica are gaining attention for their resilience and adaptability. British planter</p>
NewsQahwa 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</p>
NewsAli Alzakary – Dubai | Source: BusinessTech Executive Summary Coffee species: Coffea racemosa – one of the rarest in the world Location: KwaZulu-Natal North Coast, South Africa (Ballito and Hluhluwe) Key grower: Charles Dennison, founder of Cultivar Coffee and Racemosa Coffee Current cultivation: ~15,000 trees propagated over 10 years Annual output (2025): ~350 kg (equal</p>
NewsAn annual update from CEO Vern Long highlights scientific progress, global partnerships, and climate resilience Dubai – Qahwa World World Coffee Research (WCR) has described 2025 as a defining year for the organization and the wider coffee industry, citing accelerated innovation, strengthened global partnerships, and tangible progress in developing climate-resilient coffee varieties. In his annual</p>
NewsDubai, 12 August 2025, (Qahwa World) – A landmark study published in Nature Plants (DOI: 10.1038/s41477-025-02073-y) has redrawn the coffee world’s genetic map.Researchers led by A.P. Davis have confirmed—through high-resolution genomic, morphological, and ecological analyses—that what was long considered a single species, Coffea liberica, is actually three distinct species: C. liberica (Liberica) C. dewevrei (Excelsa)</p>