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Directions: Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need.A. removed; B. guaranteed; C. quality; D. ranks E. threats; F. access; G. long-term; H. unproductive I. effective; J. overlooking; K. characterize |
Coffee’s Climate Crisis
Howard Schultz wants to know if I drink coffee. The Starbucks boss is sitting on a balcony 1 the company’s leafy farm in the Costa Rican province of Alajuela, where I’m told the coffee — harvested and roasted on-site — is a must-try. Like more than 60% of Americans, I drink coffee at least once a day. The Costa Rican blend Schultz pours me has a special taste that mixes citrus and chocolate flavors.
But the future of my cup of Costa Rican Arabica is not 2 , Schultz says. After nearly four decades at Starbucks, he is leaving at the end of June, and in the role of executive chairman for almost 15 months, he has been looking past Starbucks’ day-to-day operations to its 3 challenges and opportunities. Climate change 4 high among them. As temperatures rise and droughts intensify, good coffee will become increasingly difficult to grow and expensive to buy. Since governments are reacting slowly to the problem, companies like Starbucks have stepped in to save themselves, reaching to the bottom of their supply chains to ensure reliable 5 to their product. “Make no mistake,” Schultz tells me, “climate change is going to play a bigger role in affecting the 6 and integrity of coffee.”
This farm, with its verdant vistas and a trickling waterfall, seems far 7 from the rising sea levels, unbearable heat and destructive storms that 8 climate change. But global warming is exactly why Starbucks bought the 600-acre plot in 2013, and why Schultz makes the 3,500-mile trip from Seattle a few times a year as he has done on this March day. The farm is Starbucks’ field laboratory into the 9 posed to coffee by climate change and its testing facility for how it can adapt to the challenge. Schultz hopes that the research here will inform agricultural practices for millions of farmers across the globe, including the ones that supply the company. “We have to be in the soil, growing coffee, to understand firsthand how to fix the situation,” he says. Study after study has laid out the threat climate change poses to the coffee industry. Rising temperatures will bring drought, increase the range of diseases and kill large swaths of the insects that pollinate coffee plants. About half of the land around the world currently used to produce high-quality coffee could be 10 by 2050, according to a recent study in the journal Climatic Change.