UA creates Monsoon Fantasy game | News | glendalestar com glendalestar.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from glendalestar.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
TUCSON (KVOA) - Some say a bad day without coffee is better than a good day without it.
A production crisis in the coffee industry due to COVID-19 has some researchers worried that a cup of Joe could be harder to come by in the future.
Zackry Guido is a coffee lover and an assistant research professor for the Arizona Institutes of Resilience. It s one of the main, main trading global commodities, like huge amounts of revenue are generated in basically every country that drinks coffee, and that s pretty much every one of them, said Guido.
He s been studying the effects of COVID-19 within the coffee industry.
A new study explores the socioeconomic impacts of COVID-19 on global coffee production. Research, Innovation and Impact and Rutgers University Today Over the past year, COVID-19 has become a new threat to the coffee industry by acting as potential trigger for renewed epidemics of coffee leaf rust – the most severe coffee plant disease in the world.
The socioeconomic effects of COVID-19 will likely cause another severe production crisis in the coffee industry, finds a new study co-authored by University of Arizona researchers.
Coffee is one of the most widely traded agricultural commodities in the world, supporting the livelihoods of about 100 million people globally, especially in low-income countries. But the industry has long struggled with many stresses, including institutional reforms, market price volatilities, extreme climate events, plant diseases and pests. Over the past year, COVID-19 has become a new threat to the coffee industry by acting as potential trigge
Monsoon Madness: Professional and Amateur Forecasters Invited to Bet on Much-Needed Rain arizona.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from arizona.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Through an agreement with Tucson Electric Power, UArizona will get all of its purchased energy from two sources: the Oso Grande Wind Farm in southeastern New Mexico and the Wilmot Energy Center solar-plus-storage system south of Tucson.