Comprehensive guide to coffee climate adaptation — from molecular responses to drought and heat stress (up to 42°C), genotype-specific resilience (Icatu, Conilon CL153), physiological management strategies, and regenerative agriculture practices for sustainable production.
Climate change has intensified the frequency, severity, and simultaneous incidence of drought and heat events, threatening the sustainability of agricultural systems worldwide. This implies the use of resilient plant genotypes able to activate defense mechanisms and overcome stress damage [2][6][10].
Since the industrial revolution in the 18th century, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations have greatly increased due to anthropogenic activities, leading to perceptible increases in air temperature and changes in temporal and regional rainfall distribution patterns [2]. Recent research shows that warming per se, by increasing the atmospheric evaporative demand, amplifies drought severity by an average of 40% globally, hitting typically dry regions but also wet areas [2][6].
According to FAO Director-General QU Dongyu (2025): "The climate crisis is redrawing the coffee map. By 2050, up to half of the current coffee-growing land may no longer be viable. The threat is no longer distant — it is happening now, with rising temperatures, unpredictable rainfall, and pest outbreaks." [3]
The two main coffee-producing species—Coffea arabica and Coffea canephora—have distinct climate requirements [2][6]:
A landmark 2025 study by Ramalho et al. examined leaf transcriptomic, proteomic, and membrane lipid responses in two cultivars—C. arabica cv. Icatu and C. canephora cv. Conilon Clone 153 (CL153)—subjected to single and combined exposure to severe water deficit and heat (up to 42°C/30°C, day/night) [2][6][10].
This page integrates the latest research (2024-2026) on coffee climate adaptation, including molecular stress responses, genotype-specific resilience, physiological management strategies, and regenerative agriculture practices.
Single and combined stresses trigger complex response networks
PIPs TIPs DH1 DREB1D-F1 ELIP
Drought (with or without heat superimposition) constituted a greater response driver than heat in both genotypes [2][6][10]
day/night severe stress treatment [2][6][10]
HSP70 Chape 20 Chape 60
De-novo synthesis of lipids, altered fatty acid profile and unsaturation degree of chloroplast membranes [2][6]
Drought (with or without heat superimposition) constituted a greater response driver than heat in both genotypes [2][6][10]
warming amplifies drought severity globally [2][6]
Each stress combination triggers unique responses different from additive effects of single stresses [2][6]
Complex interconnected network with genotype- and stress-specific responses [2]
Transcriptomic, proteomic, and membrane lipid responses in Coffea arabica cv. Icatu and Coffea canephora cv. Conilon Clone 153 (CL153) [2][6][10]
Aquaporins (PIPs) Aquaporins (TIPs) Chaperonin 20 Chaperonin 60 Dehydrin (DH1) DREB1D-F1 ELIP HSP70 APXs CAT
Comparison of Icatu (Arabica) and Conilon CL153 (Robusta) responses [2][6][10]
Markedly greater abundance of transcripts and/or proteins to imposed stress conditions [2][6]
Strong responses but generally less abundant than Icatu [2][6]
recovery period (Rec14) after reestablishing temperature/water [2][6]
observed at Rec14
genes/proteins exhibited lasting effects by Rec14 [2]
7th edition focusing on 2025/2026 harvests, La Niña forecasts, and physiological management [1][5][9]
UN Food Systems Summit Stocktake (UNFSS+4) High-Level Panel [3]
FAO is empowering rural communities, especially women and youth; leveraging biodiversity for economic transformation; and accelerating climate action through sustainable production [3].
JDE Peet's calls for industry-wide adoption to boost supply chain resilience [7]
farmers reached since 2015 [7]
responsibly sourced green coffee globally [7]
farms with regenerative practices (soil management, water conservation) [7]
Study of Ethiopia and Tanzania coffee sectors: resilience at sectoral, country, community, and household scales [8]
Need for more farmer-centric climate change interventions that strengthen:
Stockholm Environment Institute project on Brazilian coffee adaptation [4]
Partners: Department of Political Science, Stockholm University; funded by Formas [4]
Practical recommendations from UFLA and Cooxupé [5][9]
Prof. José Donizeti Alves (UFLA) will present strategies for physiological management at Cooxupé Forum, addressing:
Ramalho et al.: Molecular stress responses (42°C/30°C heat, SWD) [2][6][10]
FAO QU Dongyu: 50% coffee land may be unviable by 2050 [3]
Cooxupé Forum: 7th edition, La Niña forecasts, physiological management [1][5][9]
JDE Peet's: Regenerative Agriculture Roadmap launch [7]
Grabs et al.: Multi-scalar resilience framework (Ethiopia, Tanzania) [8]
SEI: Public-private adaptation governance in Brazil [4]
Cooxupé 2026 harvest forecasts with La Niña analysis [5][9]
Ramalho J.C., Marques I., Pais I.P., et al. (2025). Frontiers in Plant Science 16:1623156 [2][6][10]
Transcriptomic, proteomic, lipid responses; Icatu vs CL153; drought > heat driver; oxidative stress genes (APXs, CAT, HSP70, dehydrin); recovery lasting effects; membrane lipid dynamics.
View AbstractGrabs J., Yadessa G.B., Durán M.C., et al. (2026). World Development 200 [8]
Multi-scalar resilience framework; importing countries focus on sectoral resilience; farmers need diversification; household-level capacities; Ethiopia and Tanzania case studies.
View AbstractQU Dongyu, FAO Director-General (2025) [3]
50% land may be unviable by 2050; climate resilience first; FAO working with Honduras, Guatemala, Uganda; Investment Centre with World Bank in Brazil, Costa Rica, Honduras.
View Statement(2025). JDE Peet's [7]
835,000+ farmers reached; 83.2% responsibly sourced; 50% regenerative practices; 3+ million farmers projected; 30% export increase; 3.5M tons CO₂e reduction.
View AnnouncementCultivar Magazine (2025) [1][5][9]
14 August 2025 forum; La Niña forecasts; physiological management; 360+ municipalities; UFLA plant physiology; climate resilience strategies.
View ArticleStockholm Environment Institute (2026) [4]
Brazil coffee adaptation; public-private governance; local value addition; specialty coffee brands; economic resilience; Formas-funded project.
View ProjectPeer-reviewed sources and authoritative references cited in this research
* Additional references available in the complete Publications Database. All sources are peer-reviewed or authoritative.