News

Uganda’s smallholders still face challenges—from climate change to market volatility, from outdated infrastructure to limited ...
Up here in the mountains of eastern Uganda, coffee is the most important thing they grow. Anthony and Vincent Khabala's family have been growing coffee on their farm about 4,000 feet up the slopes ...
Coffee farming is traditionally a job passed down generations, but that’s changing. Can this challenge be turned into new ...
Coffee is Uganda's most valuable industry, but climate change could cut production by half by 2050. Small farmers there are already feeling the effects, as they document in these photos.
If we embrace this momentum with the right policies, investments, and partnerships, Uganda can become a global leader ... Thank you for reading Nation.Africa Show plans In 2024, the European Union (EU ...
However, their true passion lay in coffee, leading them to return to Uganda and establish their own coffee farm in 2015. “Even if someone has a big investment, starting smaller is okay.
In the hills of eastern Uganda, women coffee farmers are gaining long-overdue financial power and respect through a bold initiative that pays them more than men for their harvests ...
Women harvest coffee cherries at a farm in Mbale, Uganda, March 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Hajarah Nalwadda) A truck is loaded with coffee berries lugs in Kampala, Uganda, March 15, 2025.
President Museveni's proposal to deploy Uganda People's Defence Forces (UPDF) soldiers to protect coffee farms against theft has sparked criticism from coffee farmers, political leaders, and ...