High hopes, keen interest as new coffee plant discovered in Sierra Leone • FRANCE 24 English
In Sierra Leone, a team of researchers and agronomists have found traces of a wild coffee known as Coffea stenophylla. Farmed until the beginning of the 20th century, it used to be served to European high society. But due to its scarcity, it was gradually replaced by arabica and robusta strains. Forgotten by farmers, Coffea stenophylla was thought to have completely disappeared by 1954. The new find has generated much excitement in Sierra Leone because of its potential to revolutionise the global coffee sector. Our team reports.

▶︎
Sierra Leone's unique specialty coffee beans to be sector game-changer

▶︎
Why sustainable coffee taste better (Uganda coffee documentary)

▶︎
Norway vs. England Highlights FIFA World Cup 2026 | Sportschau

▶︎
Rediscovering the lost coffee

▶︎
Clara Mattei: capitalism is not natural - it’s enforced

▶︎
Tasting The Lost Species That Might Save Coffee

▶︎
FREETOWN, SIERRA LEONE vlog - Visiting Freetown as a tourist

▶︎
Argentina vs. Switzerland Highlights FIFA World Cup 2026 | Sportschau

▶︎
Naomi Klein On Heatwaves, China, and The Danger Of Technofixes

▶︎
How the Indo-Europeans conquered the world

▶︎
These Giant Stones Were Sealed for 185 Million Years – Here’s What We Found Whilst Fossil Hunting!

▶︎
Briquettes Made From Coconut Waste Could Reduce Deforestation | World Wide Waste

▶︎
Incredible Process of 24k Pure Gold Extraction From Old PC RAM | How to Make Gold Into RAM

▶︎
Climate-Proof Beans Are the Future of Coffee

▶︎
DIRTY DIAMONDS - The Child Miners of Sierra Leone 🇸🇱

▶︎
Argentinien – Schweiz Highlights | Viertelfinale, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

▶︎
Why the Food System Is About to Collapse

▶︎
Turning menacing hyacinth into manure | DW English

▶︎
Why Frankincense And Myrrh Are So Expensive | So Expensive

▶︎
