Coffee Atlas of Ethiopia
By (Author) Aaron P. Davis
By (author) Tim Wilkinson
By (author) Zeleke Kebebew Challa
Royal Botanic Gardens
Kew Publishing
5th April 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Travel maps and atlases
Food and drink: non-alcoholic beverages
Reference works
633.73
Hardback
128
Width 210mm, Height 297mm
This richly illustrated volume is the first complete atlas of coffee production in Ethiopia, birth-place of coffee drinking and the main home of wild arabica coffee (Coffea arabica). Around 15 million Ethiopians are coffee farmers, and Ethiopia is Africa's largest coffee producer and one of the most important coffee-growing regions of the world, renowned for its diversity of flavour profiles, including those of the celebrated coffees of Harar, Limu, Sidamo, and Yirgacheffe.
The aim of the Coffee Atlas of Ethiopia is to inform the reader about the coffee landscape of Ethiopia. It shows where coffee is grown, where the natural coffee forests are located, and where coffee could be grown. The atlas maps are accompanied by information on coffee farming, environment and climate, and a description of the main coffee areas. Also included in the atlas are key coffee origins, coffee towns and coffee delivery centres, as well as other useful items. The atlas can be used to assess the potential and vulnerability for coffee farming in Ethiopia, as well as provide a logistics resource for the coffee sector and those otherwise working with, or interested in, coffee. It is also an essential reference for resource managers.
Aaron Davis is Senior Research Leader in Plant Resources at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, where his research focus is on coffee with a regional focus on tropical Africa, Madagascar and Asia.