Climate Edge

Climate Edge Pic 1_0.jpg

Climate Edge

Providing support for the adaption to climate-smart agriculture for 4000 smallholder coffee farmers by 2022.

 

BCTA MEMBERSHIP STATUS
Alumni


SECTOR
Agriculture, Food & Beverage


HEADQUARTERS
United Kingdom


REGION OF INITIATIVE
Africa, Latin America & Caribbean


SDG CONTRIBUTION


RELATED NEWS

 

Climate monitoring service Climate Edge joined Business Call to Action in December 2018 with a commitment to quadruple its reach to 4000 smallholder coffee farmers in Nicaragua, Honduras, Tanzania and Uganda by 2022, increasing its networks’ smallholder farmer yield by up to 25 percent through frequent climate and weather alerts. Through the use of on-farm and remote climate monitoring, Climate Edge will also support the adaption to climate smart agriculture for 1000 smallholder coffee farmers in Nicaragua and Tanzania.

In any given month, over 600,000 tonnes of coffee is exported from the tropics. Astonishingly, 80 percent of this is produced on smallholder farms of less than 10 hectares. In recent years, increasingly extreme and unpredictable climate patterns have devastated smallholder agriculture, which in turn affects the whole value chain. For example, temperature rises and increased humidity have resulted in fungus outbreaks which drastically diminished harvest sizes in Nicaragua, Honduras, Tanzania and Uganda.

Cimate Edge Pic 2.jpg

At the same time, it is anticipated that by 2050, the demand for coffee will double, while the area of land suitable for coffee cultivation will halve. To help smallholder farmers adapt to climate change while keeping up with demand, Climate Edge is helping to provide to-the-minute weather information to farmers through cooperatives who belong to aggregated producer organisations, such as Fairtrade International, Hans R. Neumann Stiftung (HRNS) and Sustainable Harvest. This will help reduce the risk to individual producers and to tap into existing networks and services that have been established by these organisations.

Through these networks, Climate Edge provides farmers with the key information needed to adapt to climate change. Its tropical agriculture specific weather stations (NEXOs) monitor conditions on-farm, which is analysed and turned into actionable climate smart adaptation information. A key difference in Climate Edge’s approach is its focus on monitoring on-farm data, rather than relying solely on remote-sensing approaches such as satellites. This means that it can gather nuanced information on the impact of different climate smart management approaches, and understand how best to apply them in a broader context. Climate Edge is using remote-sensing in a smarter way, to extrapolate results to reduce the overall implementation cost.

Climate Edge’s initial market consists of approximately 180,000 producers, aggregated into numerous cooperatives and organisations, to whom the company will to sell its agricultural weather stations and provide bespoke Climate Smart Adaptation services tailored to farmers’ needs. With more consistent and accurate weather information, farmers will become more resilient as they are able to prepare for shocks like pest plagues and extreme weather conditions, thus improving and increasing the consistency of quality and yield at harvests. Climate Edge estimates that such changes can result in a yield increase of up to 25 percent and loss prevention of up to 75 percent during extreme events, thus protecting revenues for farmers. Additional benefits include access to specialty markets, better input management, and more sustainable agricultural production depending on the regional and landscape context.

While Climate Edge is currently focusing its efforts on the coffee sector, its model is applicable across many different sectors, giving them the opportunity to grow their initiative and increase company profit, while at the same time benefitting those outside of this sector as well.