báo cà phê—The effects of rising global temperatures are becoming increasingly visible across the planet. Environmental disruptions—from melting Arctic ice to unexpected vegetation appearing in Antarctica—have moved from scientific projections to everyday headlines. In this changing climate, one of the world’s most beloved agricultural products, coffee, is facing an uncertain future.
Traditionally grown in tropical regions, coffee—especially high-quality Arabica—thrives in specific environmental conditions: moderate temperatures, high altitudes, and often shaded environments. These narrow requirements make coffee particularly vulnerable to climate change. Many farms already operating at optimal elevations have little room to adapt as temperatures rise. What once seemed like pessimistic forecasts about declining production are now becoming realistic scenarios.
Producers and researchers are exploring several mitigation strategies. These include developing new coffee varieties that can tolerate heat, implementing smarter irrigation systems, and adopting more sustainable soil and water management practices. However, these solutions are expensive and slow to implement. Transforming agricultural systems, breeding new cultivars, and adjusting farming practices can take many years before meaningful results appear.
For coffee-producing regions located in mountainous areas near the Equator—such as parts of Central America and Africa—the situation is particularly challenging. In many of these countries, coffee farms already occupy the highest suitable altitudes. Without higher land available for expansion, and with limited financial resources or credit for agricultural transition, producers have few options. Migration to other regions or replacing coffee with different crops may become the only viable alternatives.
Against this backdrop, an unexpected development has drawn attention in the coffee world: Nepal’s entry as a producer member of the International Coffee Organization. Nestled between China and India and home to several of the world’s highest mountain peaks, Nepal was long considered an unlikely coffee-producing nation.
On one hand, Nepal’s membership is encouraging for local communities. The country has a surprisingly mature and consistent domestic coffee culture, and recognition within the international coffee sector could help support its small but growing group of farmers. It also signals that Nepal may move beyond being viewed as an exotic micro-origin and gradually increase its production.
On the other hand, the development carries a symbolic warning for the global coffee industry. Until recently, it would have seemed unthinkable that a country defined by extreme altitudes and high latitudes would aim to expand coffee production. The fact that this is now plausible highlights just how dramatically climate conditions are shifting.
In practical terms, Nepal is unlikely to become a major global competitor in coffee production anytime soon. The country faces numerous constraints: a fragile economy, rugged terrain, limited infrastructure, and challenging logistics. In addition, a significant portion of the young rural workforce migrates abroad—often to India or Gulf countries—seeking employment, frequently in precarious sectors such as construction.
Still, certain regions in western Nepal, including the birthplace of Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha), lie at relatively lower elevations and feature tropical vegetation and wildlife. The rhinoceros, for instance, is one of the country’s national symbols and even serves as the mascot for Nepal’s cricket team—the country’s most popular sport.
Looking ahead, climate change could further reshape Nepal’s agricultural landscape. Rising temperatures and melting glaciers may create new areas suitable for cultivation at higher elevations, while increased flooding in valleys could force communities to relocate. Rice remains the country’s primary crop, but other agricultural products such as chili peppers, maize, wheat, and barley also play significant roles in rural livelihoods.
Neighboring Bhutan shares many of Nepal’s geographical and economic characteristics. Located deep within the Himalayan range between India and China, much of Bhutan’s population also lives at high altitudes under harsh climatic conditions. As temperatures shift, Bhutan could potentially follow a similar path toward coffee production.
Meanwhile, both China and India already cultivate coffee, though in regions far from Nepal’s borders. Unlike Nepal, these countries possess vast economic resources, large populations, and strong investment capacity. If climate conditions continue to evolve, their ability to expand coffee cultivation could pose meaningful competition to established producing nations.
Ultimately, the global coffee industry is entering a period of profound transformation. Climate change is forcing the relocation of crops, the reinvention of farming methods, and the emergence of new producing regions. While coffee production may decline in some traditional areas, it is likely to expand in others.
Coffee itself has proven remarkably resilient. The plant has existed on Earth for nearly a million years, surviving and adapting through far more hostile environmental conditions than those we face today. Whether humanity can demonstrate the same capacity for adaptation remains an open question.
