The smart ag projects helping Brazil’s coffee farmers save up to 30% of their water

Coffee-growing regions complain that rising temperatures and erratic rainfall patterns are reducing yields, diminishing quality, and increasing the prevalence of pests and diseases. 

This is particularly problematic in the coffee belt. This stretches across five continents and includes around 70 coffee-producing countries. Here, even slight climate variations can have substantial effects on production.

Since 2019, the Cerrado Water Consortium (CCA), in collaboration with the likes of the Brazilian coffee cooperative Expocacer, has led the Conscious Producer Investment Programme (PIPC). This aims to ensure greater water security and mitigate the socio-environmental impacts the sector faces due to climate change challenges.

The programme offers producers specialised services in three areas: restoration, climate-smart agricultural practices, and efficient water resource management. So far, PIPC initiatives have been used by 150,000 farmers in the Cerrado Mineiro region. Soil and water health strategies have been implemented across 1,143 hectares (or 2,824 acres), achieving, among other results, an 86.63% carbon management index.

The CCA promotes conservation and sustainable development in the Cerrado region, with a particular focus on water resources. “We recently launched the first line of funding for water resilience and initiated an irrigation project with electronic sensors, which achieved a 30% water savings in the pilot project,” said CCA’s president Marcelo Urtado.

In total the CCA has implemented climate-smart agriculture strategies on 2,981 hectares (or 7,366 acres) of crops, conserving 195 hectares (or 481 acres) of native vegetation and planting 68,000 native species. CCA services are provided across 116 rural properties in three basins: Patrocínio, Serra do Salitre, and Coromandel, covering a total area of 99,571 hectares (or 493,150 acres).