logo
Chinese tea hub branches into coffee as tastes change

Chinese tea hub branches into coffee as tastes change

Japan Today05-05-2025

A worker raking coffee beans during the drying process at the Xiaowazi, or Little Hollow, coffee plantation in Pu'er
By Matthew WALSH
At a mountainside cafe in southwestern China, Liao Shihao brews handfuls of locally grown beans into steaming cups of coffee, a modern twist on the region's traditional drink.
For centuries, Pu'er in Yunnan province has given its name to a type of richly fermented tea -- sometimes styled "pu-erh" -- famous across East Asia and beyond.
But as younger Chinese cultivate a taste for punchy espressos, frothy lattes and flat whites, growers are increasingly branching out into tea's historic rival.
"People are coming to try our hand-drip coffee... and more fully experience the flavours it brings," Liao, 25, told AFP.
"In the past, they mostly went for commercialised coffee, and wouldn't dabble in the artisanal varieties," he said.
Liao's family has run the Xiaowazi, or Little Hollow, coffee plantation for three generations.
Nestled in a shady valley, spindly coffee trees line its steep hillsides, their cherry-like fruit drying on wooden pallets outside.
When AFP visited this month, clusters of tourists sipped boutique brews in the airy cafe overlooking its verdant slopes.
"It's very good," said Cai Shuwen, 21, as he perched on a bar stool lifting sample after sample to his lips. "Even though some beans are more astringent than I imagined, others have exceeded my expectations."
Every year, Pu'er's plantations sell tens of thousands of tons of coffee to major Chinese cities, according to government data.
In metropolises such as Beijing and Shanghai, a thriving cafe scene has emerged in recent years, driven by people aged between 20 and 40.
To Liao, a trained roaster and barista, coffee from his home region possesses "a creamy flavor with a silky, viscous mouthfeel".
Modern commercial plantations only sprang up in Pu'er in the 1980s, and the area is still better known for its centuries-old tea trade.
Liao's grandfather, Liao Xiugui, said "nobody knew anything about coffee" when he arrived in Pu'er a few decades ago.
At the time, the older man was one of very few people in China who had studied coffee cultivation.
But the region's relatively high altitude and temperate climate were well-suited to the unfamiliar crop, the now 83-year-old told AFP.
"The quality of the coffee we plant here is strong but not too bitter, floral but not too heady, and slightly fruity," he added.
Free from artificial pesticides and interspersed with other species for biodiversity, Little Hollow yields about 500 tons of raw coffee fruit per year.
Liao Xiugui himself drinks two or three cups a day, and credits the caffeinated beverage for keeping him spry in his advanced years.
"Drinking coffee can make you younger and healthier... and prevent aging," he smiled. "Also, everyone is tired at work these days... and they want to give their brains a boost."
China's coffee output has risen dramatically in recent years, though it still lags far behind traditional powerhouses such as Brazil, Vietnam and Colombia.
Yunnan, near three borders with Southeast Asian nations, accounts for virtually all of China's coffee production, much of it concentrated in Pu'er.
On a visit to Yunnan last month, President Xi Jinping said the province's coffee "represents China", according to state media.
Keen to further expand the sector, officials have rolled out policies to improve production, attract investment and boost exports, according to government statements.
They have also merged coffee production with tourism, dovetailing with a central government push to increase domestic consumption.
Longtime farmer Yu Dun, 51, said she had opened new income streams with plantation tours, homestays and a restaurant fusing coffee with the cuisine of her native Dai ethnicity.
Her prospects were bright, she said, adding that she also earned "10 times" more revenue from her beans since learning to process and roast them herself.
"We used to say only rich people could drink coffee, but that's all changed now," she said.
© 2025 AFP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kyodo News Digest: June 12, 2025
Kyodo News Digest: June 12, 2025

Kyodo News

timean hour ago

  • Kyodo News

Kyodo News Digest: June 12, 2025

KYODO NEWS - 4 minutes ago - 09:45 | All, World, Japan The following is the latest list of selected news summaries by Kyodo News. ---------- Trump says U.S. aiming for trade deals with Japan, S. Korea next WASHINGTON - U.S. President Donald Trump said Wednesday that his administration is engaging with Japan and South Korea to strike quick trade deals. Trump made the remarks when asked which country he expects to clinch a trade agreement with next. He also said the administration will unilaterally send out letters in "about a week and a half (or) two weeks" to many countries informing them what their trade deals would look like. ---------- China fighter jet has near miss with SDF patrol plane: Japan gov't TOKYO - A Chinese military aircraft had a near miss with a Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force patrol plane over the high seas in the Pacific, flying just 45 meters away after taking off from a moving aircraft carrier, the Japanese Defense Ministry said Wednesday. China's J-15 warplane from the aircraft carrier Shandong made other dangerous maneuvers on Saturday and Sunday, such as passing in front of an MSDF P-3C aircraft at the same altitude and with a distance of about 900 meters between the planes, the ministry said, adding that the government lodged a protest with China and demanded an end to such flights. ---------- Japan opposition likely to forgo motion against PM, dual elections TOKYO - Japan's main opposition party is leaning toward not submitting a no-confidence motion against Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's Cabinet and triggering double Diet elections, party sources said Wednesday. With the current 150-day regular Diet session set to end in late June, whether the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan will move to submit a no-confidence motion against the Cabinet has become a key focus, as it is the only opposition force in the powerful House of Representatives capable of doing so. ---------- German pres. to visit Japan for Expo, meet with novelist Murakami TOKYO - German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier is scheduled to visit Japan next week to attend the World Exposition in Osaka, the Japanese government said Wednesday, with his country saying he also plans to meet renowned novelist Haruki Murakami. During his three-day stay through June 20, he is also slated to hold separate meetings with Emperor Naruhito and Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, according to the government. ---------- Bessent says 90-day tariff pause could be extended for key partners WASHINGTON - The United States could extend a 90-day pause on the implementation of steep tariffs on goods from its major trading partners if they continue to negotiate "in good faith," U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Wednesday. "It is highly likely that those countries -- or trading blocs as is the case with the EU -- who are negotiating in good faith, we will roll the date forward to continue the good-faith negotiations," Bessent said during a congressional hearing. "If someone is not negotiating, then we will not." ---------- Trump "receptive" to communicating with N. Korean leader: White House WASHINGTON - U.S. President Donald Trump remains "receptive" to communicating with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, the White House said Wednesday. White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt made the statement when asked about a media report that North Korean diplomats in New York have repeatedly refused to accept a letter from Trump and deliver it to Kim. ---------- Football: Urawa to represent J-League at revamped Club World Cup TOKYO - Urawa Reds will fly the flag as Japan's sole representative at the new 32-team Club World Cup kicking off Saturday in the United States, where hefty bonuses await the winner of each match, let alone the entire month-long tournament. Earning entry via their 2022-23 Asian Champions League triumph, Reds fittingly became Japan's inaugural entry in the overhauled event as winners of three continental titles, more than any other Japanese club. Video: War-bereaved families' final voyage to former battle sites in memory of loved ones who died at sea

Trump says US gets rare earth minerals from China and tariffs on Chinese goods will total 55%
Trump says US gets rare earth minerals from China and tariffs on Chinese goods will total 55%

The Mainichi

time2 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Trump says US gets rare earth minerals from China and tariffs on Chinese goods will total 55%

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that China will make it easier for American industry to obtain much-needed needed magnets and rare earth minerals, clearing the way for talks to continue between the world's two biggest economies. In return, Trump said, the U.S. will stop efforts to revoke the visas of Chinese nationals on U.S. college campuses. Trump's comment on social media came after two days of high-level U.S.-China trade talks in London. Details remain scarce. Trump didn't fully spell out what concessions the U.S. made. Beijing has not confirmed what the negotiators agreed to, and Chinese President Xi Jinping and Trump himself have yet to sign off on it. What Trump described as a "deal'' is actually less than that: It's a "framework'' meant to set the stage for more substantive talks. And Trump's own comments created confusion about what was happening to his taxes - tariffs -- on Chinese imports, generating uncertainty about more than $660 billion in annual trade between the two countries. On social media, Trump declared: "WE ARE GETTING A TOTAL OF 55% TARIFFS, CHINA IS GETTING 10%. RELATIONSHIP IS EXCELLENT!" But a White House official, who was not authorized to discuss the terms publicly and insisted on anonymity to describe them, said the 55% was not an increase on the previous 30% tariff on China because Trump was including pre-existing tariffs, including some left over from his first term. "We have no idea what the rules are," said Rick Woldenberg, CEO of the educational toy company Learning Resources, who is part of a lawsuit challenging Trump's authority to impose the tariffs. In a follow-up social media post, Trump said he and Xi "are going to work closely together to open up China to American Trade. This would be a great WIN for both countries!!!" The framework emerged late Tuesday in London after intense talks involving U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Rep. Jamieson Greer. Leading the Chinese delegation was Vice Premier He Lifeng. Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has deployed tariffs aggressively, seeing them as a way to raise money for the federal government, protect American industries, lure factories back to the United States and pressure other countries into bending to his will. He has imposed baseline 10% tariffs on imports from almost every country on earth after having introduced and then suspended for 90 days bigger tariffs on countries based on the size of U.S. trade deficits last year. To American trading partners and to businesses calculating their import tax bills, the president's mercurial approach to trade policy can be baffling. For example, he recently doubled his steel and aluminum tariffs to 50%, likely increasing costs for U.S. manufacturers and construction companies that rely on the metals as raw materials. Likewise, he threatened a 50% tariff on the European Union under the belief that it would jumpstart talks with the bloc, only to back down as his self-imposed 90-day negotiating period is set to expire around July 9. But his approach to China has been especially bewildering. After imposing a 20% tariff on Chinese imports, the American president quickly upped the ante, raising the levy to 54% to offset what he said were China's unfair trade practices. Then, enraged when China retaliated with tariffs of its own, he increased those levies to a staggering 145%. Beijing counterpunched with 125% tariffs on U.S. imports. Those triple-digit tariffs threatened to effectively end trade between the United States and China, causing a hair-raising selloff in financial markets. At a meeting in Geneva last month, the two countries agreed to back off: America's tariffs went back down to a still-high 30% and China's to 10%. In April, the Chinese announced licensing requirements that slowed the supply of desperately needed rare earth minerals to the United States. Furious about the move, Trump threatened to call off the Geneva arrangement, setting the stage for talks Monday and Tuesday in London. And there the Chinese agreed to speed up the rare earths shipments. The agreement came as an international rights group said that several global brands are among dozens of companies at risk of using forced labor through their Chinese supply chains because they use critical minerals or buy minerals-based products sourced from the far-western Xinjiang region of China. The report by the Netherlands-based Global Rights Compliance says companies including Avon, Walmart, Nescafe, Coca-Cola and Sherwin-Williams may be linked to titanium sourced from Xinjiang, where rights groups allege the Chinese government runs coercive labor practices targeting predominantly Muslim Uyghurs and other Turkic minorities. Many analysts complained that all the drama hadn't accomplished much. Dan Kritenbrink, who was assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific Affairs in the Biden administration, said the London meeting produced "a fragile truce." "Both sides have now demonstrated that they know where the other's weak points are," said Kritenbrink, now a partner at the Asia Group. "They demonstrated that they both have leverage and tools they can use to inflict damage on the other.'' The Chinese know that when it comes to rare earths they "can turn that spigot on and off at will... They really have incredible leverage over the United States in the global economy with rare earths, and they're not afraid to use it.'' Still, he welcomed the London ceasefire because "the alternative is no truce at all, and a supply chain war that threatens not just U.S. and Chinese economies but the global economy as well." Danny Russel, vice president for international security and diplomacy at the Asia Society Policy Institute, said Trump's latest pressure campaign on China appeared to "be ending with a whimper, not a bang." "The U.S. found it needed to back off the restrictions it had thought would generate leverage,'' he said, "and in exchange, they get merely a promise by the Chinese to dole out critical minerals a bit more quickly." Veronique de Rugy, senior research fellow at George Mason University's Mercatus Center, dismissed the London truce as "a handshake deal ... It can change at any time.''

'Applied AI' set to dominate France's Vivatech trade fair
'Applied AI' set to dominate France's Vivatech trade fair

Japan Today

time4 hours ago

  • Japan Today

'Applied AI' set to dominate France's Vivatech trade fair

By Mona GUICHARD Drawing high-powered tech CEOs and a presidential visit, Paris's Vivatech trade fair opening on Wednesday will spotlight hoped-for economic benefits from AI. The top attraction on the opening day of this year's four-day show will be Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang, looking to make a mark in Europe for the company that builds the most computing hardware for artificial intelligence. President Emmanuel Macron, a regular at Vivatech, will also attend the event at the southern Paris convention centre, the Elysee Palace said, with a walking tour and chats with "French Tech" startups on the agenda. Tech watchers expect more products than ever embedding AI into everyday life to be shown off in the exhibition halls. "What's changed from previous years is that we've moved from AI as science fiction to applied AI," Vivatech managing director Francois Bitouzet told AFP. He trailed around 30 sectors with concrete AI-powered products on show, from luxury to insurance, health, energy, cars, logistics and more. Around 14,000 startups and more than 3,000 investors are expected to travel to Paris from around the world, while organizers forecast total visitor numbers to at least equal last year's 165,000 people. Nvidia's Huang -- likely sporting his trademark leather jacket -- has top billing with an opening presentation slated to last more than an hour. Bitouzet said it was a "source of pride" to bring aboard semiconductor heavyweight Nvidia, whose high-powered GPUs (graphics processing units) are widely used to power the latest generative AI models. "It proves that the European market in general and the French market in particular are attractive and that today (Nvidia) has ambitions for this market," the Vivatech boss added. EY's European tech, media and telecoms chief Cedric Foray predicted that "there will definitely be announcements targeted at Europe" from Nvidia. The US firm has seen export restrictions slapped on its top-performing chips by both the Joe Biden and Donald Trump administrations, with U.S. politicians leery of ceding their country's lead in generative AI. Huang has warned that China is nevertheless making swift strides to catch up. There was little sign of impact from export restrictions on Nvidia's chip sales in its May earnings release. But the company has warned the braking effect may be larger in the current quarter. U.S. politics preoccupies many European tech leaders and policymakers too. Concerns range from Trump's mercurial tariff policy to the continent's ability to stand on its own without U.S. giants -- and the massive gap in funding for AI development between the two sides of the Atlantic. "Sovereignty, which wasn't as important in the conversation just a year or two years ago, has become an absolutely strategic priority," Bitouzet said. Macron is expected to again emphasise "European technological sovereignty", the Elysee said. Such remarks from the president would build on his hyping of French and European openness to AI at a Paris global summit in February. Top French firms at Vivatech -- where around half the exhibitors are local companies -- will include Mistral AI, a French competitor to much-bigger OpenAI. Mistral's founder Arthur Mensch is set to discuss AI with Macron and Huang at a roundtable at the end of the first day of the event. © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store