Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Coconuts: The World’s Most Useful Fruit
Episode Date: June 5, 2026Tell me your favorite episode for the 6th anniversary show! The coconut is one of the most useful plants on Planet Earth. It can provide food, drink, oil, fiber, fuel, building materials, and even in...come for millions of people across the tropics. It can float across oceans, take root on distant shores, and become the foundation of entire island economies and cultures. From ancient seafarers to modern supermarket shelves, the coconut has a story far bigger than its shell. Learn more about coconuts on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED TrueWerk Get 15% off your first order at truewerk.com with code everything DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code everything for 20% off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The coconut is one of the most useful plants on planet Earth.
It can provide food, drink, oil, fiber, fuel, building materials,
and even income for millions of people across the tropics.
It can float across oceans, take root on distant shores,
and become the foundation of entire island economies and cultures.
From ancient seafarers to modern supermarket shelves,
the coconut has a story far bigger than just its shell.
Learn more about coconuts.
On this episode, of Everything Everywhere Day.
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That was easy.
The humble coconut might not seem like much, but it's actually one of the most remarkable plants on the planet, both botanically and economically.
The coconut tree is the fruit of the coconut palm, Cocos Nucifera, a member of the palm family.
Botanically, it is not a true nut. Rather, it's classified as a droop, like a peach or a cherry, but it's much larger and more fibrous.
Often called the tree of life in many tropical countries, it's a flowering plant in the family
Ericasey and is the sole species in the genus Cocos. While there are two variants, more on that
in a bit, there's only a single coconut species around the entire world. The familiar brown
coconut is only the inner part of the fruit. In nature, the full fruit has a smooth,
usually green outer skin, a thick, buoyant husk, a hard shell, a white inner flesh, and a hollow
center filled with coconut water. Inside a young coconut, the liquid, aka the coconut water, is the
endosperm, a nutrient-rich tissue that helps nourish the developing embryo. At first, this endosperm is
mostly liquid, but as the coconut matures, some of that liquid endosperm turns into the solid
white flesh lining the inside of the shell. So coconut water is not stored rain water or seawater
filtered by the tree. It's produced by the plant inside the fruit as part of the seed formation.
It serves several purposes. It provides water and dissolve nutrients for the developing coconut
embryo. It helps the seeds interior keep moist while the fruit matures, and it gives the seed a
reserve that can help it begin germinating once conditions are right.
Coconut meat starts as a soft jelly-like endosperm in young coconuts.
As the coconut matures, more of the liquid coconut water is converted into solid endosperm,
which then lies the inside of the shell.
Over time, that white layer gets thicker, denser, oilier, and more fibrous.
That's why young coconuts have soft, spoonable meat, while older coconuts have firm, hard meat
that can be grated, pressed, or dried into copra.
If you do not live in a tropical area where coconuts grow, your experience with coconuts is
probably only with the brown, hard shell and hard white meat on the inside.
If you live in a tropical area with coconuts, you're probably more accustomed to larger
green coconuts with soft coconut meat on the inside that can be scooped out and eaten.
There are, however, the exact same thing.
One is just more mature, with firmer meat.
The coconut palm thrives in tropical and subtropical regions,
within roughly 20 degrees of latitude on either side of the equator.
It's most abundant in Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Pacific Islands, the Caribbean,
and along the coastlines of East Africa and Central and South America.
The original homeland of the coconut is actually still debated,
but the strongest evidence points to the Indo-Pacific,
specifically maritime Southeast Asia, Melanesia, and nearby tropical islands.
From there, coconut spread naturally by ocean currents,
and, more importantly, by human migration and trade.
Coconutes reproduce exclusively through seeds, which are the coconuts themselves.
When a mature coconut falls from a tree or washes ashore, the embryo inside begins to sprout,
drawing on the white flesh and coconut water stored within the shell as a nutrient reserve.
A sprout emerges from one of the three eyes at the base of the nut,
and the seedling can sustain itself from these internal reserves for several months,
before it establishes its own root system, giving it a remarkable survival advantage in nutrient-poor sandy
environments. A coconut can probably survive floating at sea for several weeks to a few months,
with the commonly cited upper figure being 110 to 120 days under favorable conditions.
An older experimental study found that coconuts with living embryos floated in seawater for up to 116 days,
although the author was cautious about whether they would have fully germinated upon planting.
Under cultivation, coconuts are propagated by selecting healthy mature nuts
and placing them in nursery beds until they sprout.
They are then transplanted to their permanent location.
A coconut palm begins bearing fruit after five to seven years
and can remain productive for 60 to 80 years,
with some trees living well over a century.
A single productive palm tree can yield between 50 and 200,
coconuts per year, depending on variety, soil quality, and climate.
Cross-pollination is carried out by winds and insects, and the palm produces both male and
female flowers on the same tree, though self-pollination is also sometimes possible.
While there is only one species of coconut, there are two main varieties, tall and dwarf.
Tall varieties are the traditional large-growing palm trees that most people picture when they
think of of a coconut tree. They are the dominant form in commercial production, prized for
hardiness, longevity, and high oil-yielding fruit. The West African Tall, East African Tall,
Jamaican Tall and Sri Lankan Tall are all among the most widely cultivated. Tall palms are
generally cross-pollinating and take longer to reach maturity, but they're more resistant to
environmental stressors. Dwar varieties, by contrast, grow to much shorter height, only about three to five
meters, bare fruit earlier, sometimes within three to four years, and tend to be self-pollinating.
They're popular in home gardens, and for ornamental use, and their nuts often contains sweeter,
higher-volume coconut water. Beyond the two main varieties, there's also many other hybrids.
King coconut, especially associated with Sri Lanka, is prized for drinking water.
Macapuno, especially found in the Philippines, has a genetic trait that produces soft jelly-like
flesh and is used in desserts. Some varieties are selected for oil, some for water, some for
water, some for coir fiber, and some for disease resistance. Almost every part of the coconut
palm tree is useful. Fresh coconut water drawn from young green coconuts is a natural electrolyte-rich
drink consumed directly across the tropics and increasingly bottled for global export. The meat
or white endosperm is eaten fresh, shredded, dried, or pressed. It's used in curries, desserts,
candies, bake goods, sauces, and countless tropical cuisines.
Coconut milk and coconut cream are made by grating mature coconut meat and then pressing it with water.
These are central ingredients in Southeast Asian, South Asian, Caribbean, Pacific Island, and East African cooking.
Copra is dried coconut meat.
It's crushed to produce coconut oil.
The remaining press can then be used as animal feed.
Coconut oil is used for cooking, frying, margarine,
soaps, cosmetics, shampoos, lotions, and industrial products. It has a high saturated fat content,
which makes it stable and useful for many applications. The outer husk fiber called coir is used for
ropes, mats, brushes, mattress stuffing, potting material, and door mats. Coir is naturally resistant
to salt water, which historically made it valuable for maritime rope and riggings. The hard inner shell
serves as a raw material for activated charcoal, which is widely used in water purification and
industrial filtration, as well as bowls, buttons, and decorative objects.
I have many coconut-related stories from my travels. One of the earliest was when I was in the
island of Ronell in the Solomon Islands. I was taken to a remote beach that no one on the
island had visited in several years. My guide had nothing with him except a machete, and at the time,
I had no idea what it was for.
But when we arrived at the beach, which was about an hour's hike,
he expertly climbed a palm tree,
lopped off a bunch of coconuts,
and then opened one with his machete.
He also sliced off a bit of husk,
which could then be used as a spoon
to scoop out the soft meat on the inside.
With just a machete,
we were able to find something to eat and drink
without having to carry any food or water.
When I was in Kerala, India,
the group I was with visited a very small coconut processing plant,
inside a man was feeding copra into a small machine with rollers that pressed it to extract
coconut oil. The process was extremely simple and I could easily see what cold press meant in oil
production. They also produced coir at the plant and I actually purchased a small coir
door mat that I still have today. Because everything on a coconut can be used, the economic
importance of coconuts is larger than most people realize. The coconut economy is large, but it's not
the same scale as, say, wheat, corn, soybeans, or rice. The coconut industry supports the livelihoods of
an estimated 10 to 12 million farming families worldwide. The vast majority of them are small landowners
in developing countries. Many coconut producing households farm only a few acres. For them,
coconuts are not just an export crop. They're a source of daily food,
cooking oil, building material, fuel, animal feed, and cash income.
The global coconut market is valued in the tens of billions of dollars
and spans a complex chain of raw materials, processed goods, and specialty products.
The largest national coconut industries are in Indonesia, the Philippines, and India.
Approximately 62 to 65 million metric tons of coconuts are produced worldwide each year.
That averages out to tens of billions of coconuts being harvested annually.
The market has changed significantly in recent decades.
Historically, the main international coconut products were copra and coconut oil.
More recently, higher value products such as coconut water, virgin coconut oil,
coconut milk, coconut cream, coir products, and activated carbon have become more important.
A 2016 review of the coconut sector noted that Copra,
crude coconut oil and derivatives were traditionally the main international outputs, but the market
is now diversified. Coconut oil prices can be highly volatile. Reuters reported in 2025 that coconut oil
prices had surged in Asia due to shrinking supply, adverse weather, pests, aging trees,
underinvestment, and rising demand, especially in the food, cosmetics, and skincare markets.
That points to one of the sector's biggest problems. Many coconut
palm trees are old. In some producing countries, palms planted decades ago are now less
productive, but farmers lack the money to replant them. Replanting is difficult because new palm
trees take several years before they bear commercially useful fruit. Typhoons, drought, pests,
lethal yellowing disease, and poor rural infrastructure also threatened production.
Coconuts are intricately woven into the cultural fabric of many tropical societies.
featuring prominently in traditional medicine, religious ceremonies, island economic systems,
wedding rituals, and indigenous architecture.
The culinary and spiritual significance of the coconut can vary by region.
It serves as a sacred offering in Hindu rites,
defines the distinct flavors of Caribbean and coastal cuisines,
and remains fundamental to food security and daily survival across the Pacific Ocean.
While it doesn't get the attention of staple crops such as rice or wheat,
coconuts are actually a very important commodity.
They can be grown in places where almost nothing else will grow.
They have a wide variety of uses, and every part of the coconut has some value.
They can be harvested by small farmers with little or no expensive equipment,
and once planted, coconut trees will produce for decades.
This single species, which has propagated by floating its seeds on the open ocean,
has become one of the most economically and culturally important plants in the tropical world.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
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