Exclusive Content:

Mold in coffee isn’t always bad (and sometimes it’s even intentional)

Experimental, pioneering and derived from antique Japanese culinary customs,...

Ceado is a qualified coffee grinder sponsor for the 2026–2027 World Barista Championship

Venice, Italy – January 2025 — Ceadoa leading Italian...

Who to root for in Super Bowl LX: coffee comparison

Super Bowl LX is this weekend. It features the...

Brazil is heading towards a scarce sequence of increasing coffee yields

Brazil is expected to record its third annual augment in coffee production this year, a scarce sequence that has been seen only seven times in the 144-year history of coffee in the world’s largest producer and exporter of beans, according to data compiled by Reuters.

Experts say the positive sequence is likely to be extended for another year in 2025, mainly due to growing production of Robusta beans in the country, which has historically produced the milder Arabica coffee favored by upscale cafes. Robusta coffee is widely used to produce instant coffee.

Brazilian coffee production usually alternates between years of high and low production, in the two-year Arabica cycle. Arabica coffee trees produce less in a year after a good harvest and vice versa.

According to experts, this cycle was interrupted by extreme weather conditions: severe drought followed by severe frosts that hit Brazilian coffee fields around 2020 and 2021.

Since then, the country has produced larger crops every year. The improvement is due to the employ of some post-frost tillage techniques, such as pruning and greater employ of irrigation, particularly in Robusta fields, to better cope with arid weather.

“Growth is a reality. … Without a doubt, next year’s harvest will also be larger if the growth sequence lasts four years,” said Marcio Ferreira, president of the Cecafe export group.

Analysts see growing Robusta production in Brazil as a major contributor to more stable and growing overall coffee production. Robusta trees do not have biennial variability in Arabica production.

This is a Premium article available only to our subscribers. To read over 250 such premium articles every month

You have reached your limit of free articles. Please support good journalism.

You’ve used up your quota of free articles. Please support quality journalism.

This is your last free article.

Latest

Mold in coffee isn’t always bad (and sometimes it’s even intentional)

Experimental, pioneering and derived from antique Japanese culinary customs,...

Ceado is a qualified coffee grinder sponsor for the 2026–2027 World Barista Championship

Venice, Italy – January 2025 — Ceadoa leading Italian...

Who to root for in Super Bowl LX: coffee comparison

Super Bowl LX is this weekend. It features the...

Sprudge’s guide to coffee in Ipoh, Malaysia

Surrounded by towering limestone cliffs and dotted with colonial-era...

The 2026 USA Cup Tasters will join the Brewers Cup in Raleigh in slow March

Another week, another US Coffee Champs announcement. This time...

It’s February, you know what to do

Friends and family ask us where to buy coffee....

Now they add Vegemite to Flat Whites

It doesn't get much more quintessentially Australian than that...

Mold in coffee isn’t always bad (and sometimes it’s even intentional)

Experimental, pioneering and derived from antique Japanese culinary customs, koji coffee proves that the future of coffee may lie in fermentation. A mushroom of staggering...

Ceado is a qualified coffee grinder sponsor for the 2026–2027 World Barista Championship

Venice, Italy – January 2025 — Ceadoa leading Italian manufacturer of professional coffee equipment, has become a Qualified Sponsor of the Espresso Grinder for...

Who to root for in Super Bowl LX: coffee comparison

Super Bowl LX is this weekend. It features the Fresh England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks in a Super Bowl XLIX rematch, where then-Seahawks head...

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here