In brief
- Nestlé is helping coffee farmers adapt to climate change by developing high-yielding, climate resilient coffee varieties.
- New research shows that planting a mix of six robusta varieties can increase yields by up to 86% while improving cup quality.
- This work contributes to farmer livelihoods and helps ensure the future supply of coffee.
New research conducted in Côte d'Ivoire shows that planting a mix of six rigorously tested and validated robusta coffee varieties can increase yields by up to 86 percent, using the same inputs as the commonly used local plant variety.
Coffee production in Côte d'Ivoire plays an important role in farmer livelihoods, but the sector is increasingly exposed to climate variability and productivity constraints. Improving the performance and reliability of coffee production has therefore become a priority for local research and development efforts.
The new findings come from multi-year research carried out by the Nestlé Institute of Agricultural Sciences in collaboration with the Centre National de Recherche Agronomique (CNRA). Since 2018, plant science experts from both organizations have studied 18 robusta varieties across four coffee-growing regions in Côte d'Ivoire. They evaluated yield, flavor, bean quality, drought tolerance, and overall performance under climate stress. The six best-performing varieties, two developed by Nestlé and four by CNRA, were then tested to see how they perform together.
Further trials showed that planting a combination of these six varieties delivers the strongest results by boosting yield while enhancing performance under climate stress and overall cup quality. Sensory tests confirmed that coffee made from this robusta mix has a smoother flavor, with less bitterness and fewer woody notes typically associated with robusta coffee.
The mix of 6 coffee varieties have 86% higher yield than the commonly used local variety
The six varieties have now been officially registered in Côte d'Ivoire, and the varietal mix will be made available to farmers through cooperatives under the Nescafé Plan, Nestlé's sustainable coffee sourcing program.
"Côte d'Ivoire, the third-largest coffee producer in Africa, is feeling the effects of climate change, with shifting rainfall and rising temperatures impacting crop health and yield," said Hubert Coffi, Agronomy Manager for the Nestlé Institute of Agricultural Sciences in Côte d'Ivoire. "Together with partners such as CNRA, we are exploring resilient coffee varieties to help protect farmers' livelihoods and ensure consumers can continue to enjoy great-tasting coffee in the future."
Nestlé's coffee plant breeding work in Côte d'Ivoire is led by experts at its experimental farm in Zambakro, in collaboration with local research partners and the Nestlé Institute of Agricultural Sciences Plant Sciences Department in Tours, France.
In parallel, Nestlé's experts work closely with local farmers to improve agricultural practices. At Zambakro, farmers receive hands-on training in regenerative agriculture, supporting the long-term viability of coffee production.
These efforts build on Nestlé's work using classical breeding methods to develop high-yielding, disease- and drought-tolerant coffee plant varieties suited to evolving local growing conditions in key coffee-producing countries. The varieties are developed, tested under real farm conditions, and made available to farmers. Other recent examples include the development of Roubi 1 and Roubi 2, two robusta varieties delivering up to 50% higher yields in Mexico, and Star 4, a novel Arabica variety with larger beans and resistance to coffee leaf rust, registered in Brazil.
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