Climate-Smart Agriculture Basics
Company Engagement in Climate-Smart Agriculture
Take Action
Increasingly, companies recognize the need to plan for climate change to mitigate risk and realize commitments to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) or other sustainability targets. Coffee companies in particular ultimately seek to translate climate risk intelligence into practical, operational strategies to build supply chain resilience. Diagnostic and decision-making tools are being created and accessible to users on this website as well as the toolbox.coffeeandclimate.org
Smallholder coffee sourcing entails working with many, diverse farming communities around the globe, each with its own agricultural practices, cultural context, and risk exposure. Depending on the role the coffee company plays in the supply chain, they may lack fine-grain visibility into smallholder performance, or they may seek guidance on how to translate fine-grain data on climate risk and smallholder performance into targeted action plans across their sourcing geographies.
To take action, coffee companies may follow a simple process laid out in the Introduction to Assessing Climate Resilience in Smallholder Supply Chains. This guide, created by the Sustainable Food Lab and Root Capital, breaks down the complex concept of resilience into manageable themes following a five-step process that coffee companies can follow (laid out below), including links to tools and resources offered by leaders in the field. The initiative for coffee & climate toolbox also contains actionable tools by a number of expert research organizations to address these steps.
Take Action
- Know your RiskIdentifying threatened geographies and the cost of inaction
- Know your FarmersIdentifying where risk sits in your supply chain
- Know your ResilienceMatching risk to resilience capacity
- Know how to Build ResilienceDesigning strategy or targeted interventions in response to diagnostic findings
- Know your ProgressMonitoring through continuous measurement
About
About
This website was developed by the Sustainable Food Lab and CIAT. Thank you to the many organizations who provided tools and resources to the climate smart coffee website. Photos for this website were provided by CIAT, the Sustainable Food Lab and World Coffee Research.
Our Research Partners
Led by the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) is a collaboration among all 15 CGIAR Research Centers, including IITA. With help from the Rainforest Alliance, Root Capital and the Sustainable Food Lab, provide the evidence-based science behind climate smart coffee. To learn more about individual contributes read below.