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TradeAfrica

EU deforestation law means uncertainty for African coffee

January 28, 2024

The EU aims to outlaw products sourced from deforested areas, but critics have said the new law could penalize so-called smallholder coffee farmers in Africa.

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 A man picks red coffee beans from a coffee plant, in Ethiopia, Africa
Some African traders argue the EU anti-deforestation law is dissuading European companies from purchasing their coffee.Image: Ben Langdon/robertharding/picture alliance

Many African smallholder coffee farmers, who primarily sell their harvest to European markets, now find their main source of income in jeopardy.

In 2023, the European Union (EU) established mandatory rules for companies dealing in commodities such as coffee, palm oil, and cocoa. The rules are designed to ensure that products imported to Europe do not originate from deforested land, land acquired forcibly from local and/or indigenous communities, or whose cultivation involves labor and/or human rights abuses. To avoid heavy fines, companies must prove compliance by the end of 2024.

"We're not seeing many buyers this year," Tsegaye Anebo, general manager of Ethiopia's Sidama Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union, told DW. Typically, farmers receive orders for beans that will be sold in supermarkets and shops months later, but Anebo said the unclear consequences of the new EU regulations have created a "sense of ambiguity in the market." His observation is shared by several other African traders, such as the Oromia Coffee Farmers Cooperatives Union, which has raised concerns over EU companies shunning their products.

The EU's anti-deforestation law, known as EUDR, has garnered praise from environmental organizations, including Greenpeace, for assuring Europeans that the items in their shopping carts are not sourced from deforested areas. However, critics argue the new laws may penalize smallholder coffee farmers around the world, particularly in Africa, possibly resulting in a coffee shortage in Europe.

How to know if coffee comes from deforested land

Coffee production significantly contributes to deforestation, with approximately 130,000 hectares of forest lost annually due to land clearing for cultivation, according to the 2023 Coffee Barometer — a biannual report produced by the NGOs Solidaridad Network and Conservation International that assesses the sector's state of sustainability. The trend has persisted for the past two decades as demand for the popular drink has grown and farmers continued to strive to make ends meet. Many coffee regions are also situated in areas grappling with issues such as slavery-like labor abuse, corruption, and smuggling, as well as land grabbing.

 Coffee plantation encroaching on the Atlantic Forest ecosystem
While coffee production is often cited as a significant driver of deforestation, experts believe it is not the root cause.Image: Mark Moffett/Minden Pictures/picture alliance

To ensure commodities traded in Europe are not tainted by these issues, anti-deforestation regulations aim to make products 'traceable' back to their production origins.

"Traceability makes the entire supply chain transparent," said Jennifer Mbuvi, a Kenya-based sustainability expert who works for the farm assurance program GLOBALG.A.P. "It allows us to check if the lands claimed by the company as the source can truly produce the amount of coffee they sell or if additional supply is sourced from undisclosed and potentially deforested areas," she told DW.

The EUDR requires companies to collect the geographic coordinates of land where commodities are produced, using mobile apps and computer-based tools.

However, the law overlooks the production side, making it difficult to determine the impact or opportunities for farmers, according to Maria A. Naranjo, a researcher on green economy and land use at Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Naranjo told DW the law treats all sectors, regions, and products in the same way, even though they differ in how they contribute to deforestation. "There is a strong need to conduct country-level assessments on the readiness to fulfill the new EU legislation, and especially on how smallholder coffee farming families would be affected," she said.

Can smallholder farmers comply with the EU's anti-deforestation law?

Approximately 25 million smallholder farmers produce about 80% of the coffee consumed worldwide. Many of them live in remote places with patchy internet.

In Ethiopia alone, around 2.2 million farming families produce most of the country's coffee, earning a significant portion of their income from exports, according to World Bank data. However, a lack of infrastructure and support hinders their ability to prove compliance and adapt to the new regulations.

A woman smiles as she performs the Ethiopian coffee ceremony in Lalibela.
The majority of Ethiopia's income is derived from the coffee produced by its smallholder farmers.Image: Sergi Reboredo/picture alliance

"We have already begun to submit the geolocation data of our member farmers, but we probably need longer than December to finish it," Anebo said, adding that many other farmers do not have the opportunity or means to submit their data. "Many of those who sell their harvest to middlemen might not even know where to start," he said.

Could EU anti-deforestation measures actually contribute to deforestation?

Members of the Sidama Union have been implementing environmental standards for years, with their products bearing several international sustainability certificates. For millions of other coffee farmers across Africa, that's not the case.

For sustainability expert Jennifer Mbuvi, the situation highlights a major loophole in the EUDR. "Regions and producers who have already been following sustainability rules will find it easier to prove their compliance with the new regulations," she said, adding, "the other producers will most likely lag behind and might start looking for more lax markets."

If that happens, the EUDR might have "zero or negative impact on deforestation," Mbuvi said.

Coffee farmers sell beans at a market in Gomma of Oromia, Ethiopia,
Coffee production itself is not the primary driver of deforestation. Lacking alternatives, the growing population might be forced to turn more forests into farms to grow food.Image: Michael Tewelde/Xinhua/picture alliance

Naranjo and Mbuvi both emphasize that coffee expansion is not the root cause of deforestation; rather, it is driven by population growth and the associated need for food and income. "The growing population might continue transforming forests into agricultural land to produce other crops," Mbuvi noted.

Will EU anti-deforestation rules lead to coffee shortages and higher prices in Europe?

"The current coffee prices aren't good for farmers," Tsegaye Anebo told DW, emphasizing that "many of them are already having a tough time making enough money." He pointed out that "some coffee farmers are looking for buyers outside Europe" because of the extra costs EUDR rules compliance means for them.

For Europe, it might mean coffee becomes harder to procure. Vanúsia Nogueira, executive director of the International Coffee Organization (ICO), expressed concerns in a December 2023 Bloomberg interview, stating that Europe might face a coffee shortage due to the lack of clarity surrounding the implementation of deforestation regulations.

A woman, seated in a cafe, stares out a window while holding a cup of coffee
Coffee prices in Europe have been on the rise in recent years. The International Coffee Organization (ICO) suggests that uncertaintiy over the EU's deforestation law might further drive prices upImage: Michael Weber/imageBROKER/picture alliance

In coffee regions outside of Africa, farmers not only grapple with the hurdles of EUDR but also contend with El Nino, a weather pattern capable of causing extreme conditions. Forecasts, including a 2023 ICO market report, suggest the phenomenon will persist until summer — posing threats of drought and high temperatures for coffee plants in parts of South America and Asia and potentially resulting in lower yields. This, too, could contribute to the rising cost of Europe's favorite drink.

How climate change impacts farming in Africa