Zürcher Nachrichten - Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs

EUR -
AED 4.334861
AFN 75.542652
ALL 95.904155
AMD 442.01972
ANG 2.112701
AOA 1083.566757
ARS 1603.541336
AUD 1.646094
AWG 2.121543
AZN 2.001015
BAM 1.96007
BBD 2.377259
BDT 145.151121
BGN 1.968955
BHD 0.445255
BIF 3499.756519
BMD 1.180356
BND 1.501622
BOB 8.156078
BRL 5.89458
BSD 1.180311
BTN 110.236345
BWP 15.837037
BYN 3.368724
BYR 23134.98407
BZD 2.373862
CAD 1.621013
CDF 2720.720942
CHF 0.922437
CLF 0.026555
CLP 1045.146958
CNY 8.047964
CNH 8.043574
COP 4269.23081
CRC 541.698412
CUC 1.180356
CUP 31.279443
CVE 110.599921
CZK 24.338889
DJF 209.772988
DKK 7.473125
DOP 70.673804
DZD 155.938007
EGP 61.335999
ERN 17.705345
ETB 185.433136
FJD 2.621337
FKP 0.870257
GBP 0.869846
GEL 3.17489
GGP 0.870257
GHS 13.042618
GIP 0.870257
GMD 87.346183
GNF 10357.626345
GTQ 9.023887
GYD 246.937351
HKD 9.245017
HNL 31.420657
HRK 7.53221
HTG 154.441675
HUF 363.564507
IDR 20246.770166
ILS 3.538587
IMP 0.870257
INR 110.230232
IQD 1546.266792
IRR 1553496.474984
ISK 143.802482
JEP 0.870257
JMD 186.255746
JOD 0.83688
JPY 187.43706
KES 152.504434
KGS 103.222178
KHR 4739.130681
KMF 493.388914
KPW 1062.323089
KRW 1740.707132
KWD 0.364577
KYD 0.983576
KZT 559.95881
LAK 25932.428323
LBP 105700.909097
LKR 372.380672
LRD 217.510125
LSL 19.345708
LTL 3.485285
LVL 0.713986
LYD 7.471838
MAD 10.899115
MDL 20.183653
MGA 4883.134373
MKD 61.657084
MMK 2479.020319
MNT 4221.406633
MOP 9.525915
MRU 47.131865
MUR 54.591509
MVR 18.236128
MWK 2050.279209
MXN 20.361677
MYR 4.663597
MZN 75.489665
NAD 19.345727
NGN 1587.201178
NIO 43.342964
NOK 11.086302
NPR 176.377203
NZD 1.99724
OMR 0.453844
PAB 1.180316
PEN 4.061018
PGK 5.099434
PHP 70.887462
PKR 329.171851
PLN 4.235242
PYG 7543.689081
QAR 4.303284
RON 5.089813
RSD 117.340363
RUB 89.115423
RWF 1724.500598
SAR 4.428055
SBD 9.500196
SCR 16.8326
SDG 709.394307
SEK 10.807868
SGD 1.499967
SHP 0.881255
SLE 29.096104
SLL 24751.477538
SOS 674.55421
SRD 44.174883
STD 24430.992903
STN 24.964536
SVC 10.327498
SYP 130.528976
SZL 19.346074
THB 37.794656
TJS 11.154024
TMT 4.137149
TND 3.403562
TOP 2.842015
TRY 52.822246
TTD 8.011759
TWD 37.301629
TZS 3063.025009
UAH 51.400773
UGX 4361.64938
USD 1.180356
UYU 47.473418
UZS 14365.533264
VES 564.190106
VND 31078.782171
VUV 140.474253
WST 3.223206
XAF 657.411407
XAG 0.014783
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.189973
XCG 2.127197
XDR 0.816687
XOF 656.277786
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.632022
ZAR 19.323138
ZMK 10624.621547
ZMW 22.632166
ZWL 380.074257
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.71

    +0.31%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.82

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    -1.0900

    87.86

    -1.24%

  • GSK

    -1.3700

    57.81

    -2.37%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    98.56

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    17.6

    -0.34%

  • BTI

    -0.8300

    56.68

    -1.46%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    46.12

    -0.11%

  • RELX

    0.9700

    35.68

    +2.72%

  • CMSD

    0.2000

    23.03

    +0.87%

  • BCC

    -2.8100

    78.91

    -3.56%

  • JRI

    0.0935

    12.88

    +0.73%

  • AZN

    -3.1700

    201.21

    -1.58%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    15.59

    -0.19%

Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs
Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs / Photo: ANGELA WEISS - AFP/File

Brewing crisis: java-loving NY confronts soaring coffee costs

New Yorkers run on coffee. From high-end experimental boutique cafes to the humble sidewalk cart, millions of cups of java are sold every day.

Text size:

But coffee-lovers are facing increasing pain as they pay for their simple espresso shots and elaborate pumpkin spiced lattes as the cost of beans has jumped 21 percent between August 2024 and August 2025 in the United States -- the world's largest market for coffee.

Climate shocks drove the cost of arabica soaring, with the beans hitting an all-time high in February 2025. That has been compounded by elevated transport costs and the 50 percent tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump since August 6 on many products from Brazil.

Brazil, the largest coffee producer, has been sanctioned by the Trump administration for its prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro for a coup attempt. It supplies 30 percent of the United States's unroasted beans.

"It's having a major impact on us, on small business owners, on farmers, across the board," Jeremy Lyman, co-founder of the New York-based chain Birch Coffee, told AFP.

Founded in 2009, the brand has 14 outlets citywide, roasting its own specialty coffee in Queens since 2015.

"The price of coffee on the market has just been on a steady incline over the last probably year. I think it's gone up about 55 percent from this time last year...it's impacting the prices that we charge," Lyman said.

He said that Brazil's production had become "unaffordable" forcing Birch to look elsewhere for beans with its importer "pushing pause" on its orders unless specially requested.

Cecafe, the Council of Coffee Exporters of Brazil, reports that exports to the United States have dropped almost 53 percent as of September compared to the year before with importers looking instead to Mexico, Peru and Ethiopia.

- United by coffee -

Lyman acknowledges market forces have meant price hikes for his customers, with Birch adding 50 cents to cups sold in-store, and $2 to $3 per bag of roasted coffee sold online.

"Typically, it'll be small, incremental (increases) because it also helps us get a little bit more time to navigate how we're going to be sourcing," he said, adding that he tried to give customers two weeks of warning.

Other cafes have adopted a novel approach: adding an adjustable premium to the base price of each cup according to what level Trump has set tariffs that day, Lyman said.

But customers will only swallow so much, the Birch founder warned, warning of a real risk of losing customers.

Jason Nickel, 45, said that while he still seeks out a daily caffeine hit, he is "a little more careful about where I go."

He cannot imagine paying more than $6 a cup, including tip, for cortado -- an espresso shot with a dash of milk foam.

Anna Simonovsky, 32, said that her upper limit had gone from $7 for a latte -- a milkier, frothier drink than a cortado -- to as much as $10. She enjoys coffee as a treat for special occasions, like a visit with a friend.

Trump recently threw a lifeline to the two-thirds of Americans who drink coffee daily when he placed coffee on a list of products not cultivated by US farmers in sufficient quantity -- potentially exempting it from tariffs, alongside tea and cocoa.

And in a rare glimmer of bipartisanship, coffee-loving Republicans and Democrats are jointly sponsoring a bill intended to protect coffee products.

A.Ferraro--NZN