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Murray News

Drought, heat take toll on Brazilian coffee production

The nation’s harvest declined 1.6% from 2023 levels, reports Conab

01/23/2025


Brazil produced 54.2 million 60-kilo bags of coffee in the 2024/25 harvest, according to data released yesterday by the National Supply Company (CONAB). This volume is 1.1% below the agency’s previous estimate and represents a 1.6% decline compared to the 2023 harvest.

This was Conab’s fourth report on the 2024/25 cycle, which has concluded across all coffee-growing regions, including Espírito Santo’s later-harvesting areas. Despite the decline from 2023, the harvest is 6.5% higher than the 2022 cycle, another positive biennial harvest when productivity is naturally higher due to the crop’s alternating high and low-yield years.

The past four years have been challenging for Brazilian coffee growers, marked by adverse weather conditions, including frosts, extreme heat, droughts, and erratic rainfall. These events have severely impacted plant performance.

In 2024, average productivity across Brazilian coffee plantations dropped 1.9% from 2023, reaching 28.8 bags per hectare. This decline was largely attributed to unfavorable weather conditions in the prior year affecting central coffee-growing regions.

While the dry weather during winter and early spring helped accelerate bean ripening and harvesting, the hot, arid conditions caused uneven bean development, reducing quality. Many crops yielded a mix of green and ripe beans within the same batch.

In some areas, smaller beans—below standard size—needed to be harvested, requiring more beans to meet the commercial standard of 60 kilos per bag. Additionally, the yield of processed coffee fell, with lighter-than-usual beans exacerbating the situation.

In Minas Gerais, Brazil’s leading coffee-producing state, the harvest totaled 28.1 million bags, a 3.1% decline compared to 2023. Coffee plantations in the region faced significant challenges due to prolonged droughts and high temperatures after April when rainfall virtually ceased.

This weather pattern severely impacted conilon coffee production, which dropped 5.9% to 14.6 million bags. In contrast, arabica coffee production grew by 1.8%, reaching 39.6 million bags.

In Espírito Santo, another key coffee-producing state, the conilon harvest fell 3.1% to 9.8 million bags, largely due to episodes of intense heat between October and December 2023.

In São Paulo, coffee plantations fared better, with the harvest increasing 8.2% to 5.4 million bags. However, this was lower than the 11.5% growth initially projected, as extended droughts and high temperatures impacted productivity.

Bahia also saw coffee production decline, with the harvest totaling 3.1 million bags, a 9.7% drop from 2023. The state’s main crop, conilon, fell sharply by 14.8% to nearly 2 million bags, while arabica coffee production increased slightly by 0.8%, reaching 1.1 million bags.

In Rondônia, coffee production faced a significant downturn due to adverse weather at the end of 2023 and a reduced cultivation area. As a result, conilon output in the state plummeted 31.2% to just over 2 million bags.

*By Gabriella Weiss  — São Paulo

Source: Valor International

https://valorinternational.globo.com/

23 de January de 2025/by Gelcy Bueno
Tags: Brazilian coffee production
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