Quality Coffee Lovers Welcome News of Near Extinct Stenophylla Beans From Sierra Leone

A Wild Species Coffee Bean Could Save Our Premium Taste Daily Brew Addiction AOC Sustainability

A wild species of coffee rediscovered by scientists in the forests of Sierra Leone may stabilize the growing concerns about the global supply of premium coffee in a world that is heating up. Coffee arabica, a plant that prefers mild average annual temperatures of around 66 degrees Fahrenheit and is favored by coffee connoisseurs like Anne, is particularly at risk to climate change. The bean currently accounts for over 60% of the world’s coffee production.

Coffea stenophylla is a wild coffee species from West Africa which, until recently, was thought to be extinct outside Ivory Coast.About two years ago, the plant was re-disco9vered growing wild in Sierra Leone, where it existed as a coffee crop a century ago

Currently modeling suggests that Stenophylla will tolerate global temperatures of around 77 degrees Fahrenheit, 11 to 12 degrees higher than Arabica, and 3.42 degrees higher than the less valued and more bitter Robusta.

"Being somebody who's tasted a lot of wild coffees they're not great, they don't taste like Arabica so our expectations were pretty low," Aaron Davis, head of coffee research at Royal Botanical Gardens Kew in the United Kingdom and lead author of the paper, tells BBC News. “We were completely blown away by the fact that this coffee tasted amazing.”

Still speaking with BBC News, Davis adds that finding a wild coffee with excellent flavor that is also heat and drought tolerant is “the holy grail of coffee breeding.”

Follow the story and more in-depth coffee learnings in AOC Sustainability.

Fossil Launches Kier Cactus Leather Totes Made of DESSERTO

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Desserto is everywhere in the month of April. The vegan leather made of cactus is blooming on Mother Nature’s flower show, most prolific in April in North America with a lesser flower from early May to mid-June, writes the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum.

Fossil brand is the latest fashion brand to use the vegan leather made in Mexico from organically-grown cactus leaves. The launch of the brand’s Kier Cactus Leather Totes is Fossil’s first venture into handbags. Priced at $298, the initiative represents Fossil’s first use of ‘pro-planet materials as part of its Make Time for Good commitment to sustainability.

Fossil’s Pro-Planet Commitment

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Cactus Power Rising

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Nora Attal and Lea Meylan in 'Viva Mexico' by Inez and Vinoodh in Vogue Paris April 2021 AOC Fashion

The good news is that DESSERTO® IS featured in Vogue Paris April 2021 and a H&M Collab Drops Soon

DESSERTO® and H&M

On Feb. 23, 2021 Mexican cactus-based leather company DESSERTO®and H&M announced a brand new concept, Innovation Stories, which sees a range of collections launch throughout 2021. Each drop will be celebrating forward-thinking sustainability processes.

DESSERTO® and LVMH

DESSERTO® was a finalist of 30, for the 2020 LVMH Innovation Award and second runnerup in the event. Watch the LVMH video below.