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Gallery|In Pictures

South Sudan farmers pin hopes on rare climate-resistant coffee

Discovered more than a century ago, excelsa coffee is exciting cash-strapped locals and drawing interest globally.

Climate South Sudan Coffee
A worker turns excelsa coffee beans to dry near Nzara, South Sudan. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
By AP
Published On 3 Mar 20253 Mar 2025

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Catherine Bashiama runs her fingers along the branches of the coffee tree she has nurtured from a seedling, anxiously searching for its first fruit buds since planting it three years ago. When she finds the small cherries, Bashiama beams with pride.

The farmer had never grown coffee in her village in western South Sudan but now hopes that a rare climate-resistant variety will help lift her family out of poverty.

“I want to send my children to school so they can become the future generation,” said Bashiama, a mother of 12.

Excelsa coffee, discovered more than a century ago in South Sudan, is exciting cash-strapped locals and drawing international attention amid a global coffee crisis largely driven by climate change. As major coffee-producing countries face challenges in cultivating crops due to increasingly erratic weather, prices have surged to their highest levels in decades, and the industry is scrambling for solutions.

Experts estimated that Brazil, the world’s largest coffee producer, could see a 12 percent drop in this year’s harvest due to drought.

“What history shows us is that sometimes the world doesn’t give you a choice, and right now, many coffee farmers are suffering from the effects of climate change,” said Aaron Davis, head of coffee research at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in London.

Excelsa could play a pivotal role in adapting to these challenges.

Native to South Sudan and a handful of other African countries, including the Central African Republic and Uganda, excelsa is also cultivated in India, Indonesia and Vietnam. Its deep roots, thick, leathery leaves and large trunk enable it to thrive in extreme conditions such as drought and heat, in which other coffee varieties fail. It is also resistant to many common coffee pests and diseases.

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However, excelsa makes up less than 1 percent of the global market, far behind arabica and robusta, the two most widely consumed coffee species. Experts believe excelsa must prove its practicality on a larger scale to help fill the market gap created by climate change.

For now, though, it represents a chance at a better future for locals.

Bashiama said she began planting coffee after her husband was injured and unable to help cultivate enough maize and groundnuts to sustain the family. Since the accident, she has struggled to afford her children’s school fees or buy sufficient food.

Another farmer, 37-year-old Taban John, hopes to use his coffee earnings to buy a bicycle, making it easier to sell his other crops, including groundnuts and cassava, in town. He also wants to afford school uniforms for his children.

Community leaders see excelsa as an opportunity for financial independence. They note that people often rely on government or foreign aid, but when that support is not forthcoming, they struggle to care for their families.

But for coffee to truly thrive in South Sudan, locals say a long-term mentality is needed – and that requires stability.

Elia Box lost half of his coffee crop to a fire in early February. Although he plans to replace it, he is discouraged by the effort involved and the lack of law and order to hold people accountable.

“People aren’t thinking long-term when it comes to crops like coffee, especially during war,” he said. “Coffee needs peace.”

Climate South Sudan Coffee
Excelsa coffee cherries are harvested at a farm near Nzara. Unlike neighboring Ethiopia or Uganda, oil-rich South Sudan has never been known as a coffee-producing nation. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
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Climate South Sudan Coffee
A worker tends to excelsa seedlings inside a greenhouse. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
A food vendor prepares coffee in Yambio. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
Excelsa coffee tastes sweet, unlike robusta, with notes of chocolate, dark fruits and hazelnut. It’s more similar to arabica but generally less bitter and may have less body. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
Excelsa is an opportunity for the community to become more financially independent, community leaders say. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
Increasing the production of coffee could be challenging in South Sudan, where lack of infrastructure and insecurity make it hard to get the coffee out. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
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Climate South Sudan Coffee
Workers turn excelsa coffee beans to dry. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
Women walk to the market near Nzara. Alison Barnaba, the state agriculture minister, said there are plans to rehabilitate old coffee plantations and build an agricultural school. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
Women sell their goods at Nzara's open market. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]
Climate South Sudan Coffee
People work at a coffee farm near Nzara. [Brian Inganga/AP Photo]


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