Skip links

Roughly a billion people enjoy coffee daily, and more than 100 million people rely on it for income. However, the coffee industry is the sixth-largest driver of deforestation and is also rife with human rights abuses, including the labor of enslaved persons and children. But it doesn’t have to be this way, says this guest on the Mongabay Newscast. Etelle Higonnet is the founder of the NGO Coffee Watch, having formerly served as a senior adviser at the U.S. National Wildlife Federation with a focus on curbing deforestation, and before that as campaign director at Mighty Earth, focusing on advocacy for zero deforestation with an emphasis on the cocoa, palm oil, rubber, cattle and soy industries. The main commodity on her radar now is coffee. On this podcast episode, she explains how the industry can — and should — reform its practices. “It’s so simple … pay a living [a] living income wage,” she says, “ and a lot of human rights violations will just dry up.” To target deforestation, Higonnet says the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) is “a beautiful law” that “simply put, would bar imports of coffee into the European Union if that coffee is tainted by deforestation or illegality. So, two things that are illegal off the top of my head are slavery and child labor.” The bill is perhaps the first of its kind to target illegality linked to coffee, which has historically been absent from similar legislation targeting other commodities such as palm oil, timber…This article was originally published on Mongabay

Research

Featured News

‘No warning at all’: Texas flood survivors question safety planning and officials’ response

Hello July 7, 2025
0

People who lost everything describe leaving homes and express anger at poor preparedness and officials

Google undercounts its carbon emissions, report finds

Hello July 3, 2025
0

Research says Google’s carbon emissions went up by 65% between 2019-2024, not 51% as the

Wildfire kills 2 people in Spain as parts of Europe bake in heat wave

Hello July 3, 2025
0

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Spanish authorities say two people have died in northeastern Spain in

Droughts worldwide pushing tens of millions towards starvation, says report

Hello July 3, 2025
0

Water shortages hitting crops, energy and health as crisis gathers pace amid climate breakdown Drought

Assisted colonization could be our ally in adapting to climate change, study suggests

Hello July 3, 2025
0

From Shakespeare’s plays to William Wordsworth’s poetry to J.R.R Tolkien’s fantasy realms, Britain’s lush green

Young activists risk all to defend Cambodia’s environment

Hello July 3, 2025
0

One year ago, Cambodia jailed five activists from the award-winning environmentalist group Mother Nature for

‘It makes water wetter’: How Wimbledon keeps grass green in soaring temperatures

Hello July 3, 2025
0

Special soil spray is used to increase amount of water grass can absorb to prevent

Europe’s heatwave moves east as row erupts in France over air conditioning

Hello July 3, 2025
0

French far-right leader’s ‘grand plan’ to expand AC comes under attack, while Germany braces for