Fair Trade 101 – Your Supermarket

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Fair Trade Your Supermarket: Fair Trade 101
What is Fair Trade?

Fair Trade is a system of exchange that honors producers, communities, consumers, and the environment. Fair Trade helps ensure that farmers and artisans throughout the developing world receive a fair price for their products, have direct involvement in the marketplace, and uphold environmental and labor rights standards. The system builds real and lasting relationships between producers in developing countries and businesses and consumers around the world.

What are the Principles of Fair Trade?

While there is not one set list of the principles of Fair Trade, and there are different approaches to implementing them, Fair Trade ensures the following general principles are met:

1. Creating opportunities for economically disadvantaged producers

Fair Trade supports small scale producers, those at the bottom of the economic ladder or from marginalized communities that otherwise do not have access to economic opportunities or mobility.

2. Payment of a fair price

Fair Trade ensures democratically organized producer groups receive a guaranteed minimum floor price for their product, enough to cover the costs of food, shelter, clothing, education, and medical care, within the local context.

3. Community Development

For each Fair Trade product sold, the cooperative or producer group also receives a set amount of money, called the social premium, which is invested in community development projects democratically chosen by the cooperative or Fair Trade committee.

4. Fair Labor Conditions

Fair Trade producers enjoy freedom of association, safe working conditions, and living wages. Forced child labor is strictly prohibited and women’s empowerment, such as maternity leave, is emphasized.

5. Direct, long-term trading relationships

With Fair Trade, importers purchase from Fair Trade producer groups as directly as possible, eliminating unnecessary middlemen and empowering farmers to develop the business capacity necessary to compete in the global marketplace. Producer groups are also often eligible for pre-harvest or pre-production credit so that they do not have to incur debt during production.

6. Democratic, transparent, worker-owned cooperatives

Fair Trade encourages and supports the cooperative system where each producer owns a portion of the business, has equal say in decisions, and enjoys equal returns from the market. Workers decide together how to invest the social premium democratically.

7. Environmental Sustainability

Harmful agrochemicals and Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) are prohibited in favor of environmentally sustainable farming methods that protect farmers’ health and preserve valuable ecosystems for future generations.

What Fair Trade Products are Available in the US?

As far as food products go, we can now find Fair Trade coffee, tea, cocoa, fruit, sugar, honey, rice, quinoa, vanilla, olive oil, flowers, spices, and wine in the US.

We can also find Fair Trade cotton and artisan goods such as jewelry, tablecloths, purses, and apparel.

Check out our Brands to Look For page to know which items to look for in your supermarket.

How can I identify Fair Trade products?

When you are shopping, look for the label! The following labels will help you identify Fair Trade products:

Fair Trade USA (formerly Transfair) is a third-party certifier for Fair Trade products imported to the United States. If a product bears the Fair Trade Certified™ label (shown here) you know that the producer received a fair price for the product and that strict socioeconomic criteria have been met in production. The Fair Trade Certified label often applies to food and agricultural commodities. For more information on this, visit http://www.fairtradeusa.org.

Fair for Life Fair Trade Certification is a third-party certification program administered by the Institute for Marketecology (IMO). Fair For Life certification protects human rights at any stage of production and ensures that workers in hired labor situations enjoy good and fair working conditions and that smallholder farmers receive a fair share. The Fair For Life label applies to a variety of products including fresh fruit, coffee and tea, and essential oils used for body care products.

The Fair Trade Federation is an organization of fully-committed Fair Trade businesses. Members of the federation include retailers, wholesalers and suppliers that have been carefully screened to ensure they support the principles of Fair Trade throughout their supply chain. FTF members sell a variety of products, from handmade and artisan goods such as clothing and jewelry, to food products such as rice and tea, as well as body-care products. For a list of Fair Trade items commonly found in supermarkets visit our Brands to Look For page.

Fair Trade Labeling Organizations International (FLO) is a network of organizations whose role is to develop and review Fair Trade standards for certification. These standards apply to all Fair Trade producers and companies who market Fair Trade products, such as importers, exporters and licensees. The US-based member of FLO is TransFair USA.

The World Fair Trade Organization is a global network businesses and organizations that are fully committed to the principles of Fair Trade.

Want to learn more about Green America’s Fair Trade Work? Please visit http://www.fairtradeaction.org.

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HOW TO BUY FAIR TRADE CHOCOLATE

FairTradeUSA

HOW TO BUY FAIR TRADE CHOCOLATE

FIRST – CHECK YOUR LOCAL GROCERY.  KROGER, RANDALLS, ETC ALL ARE NOW CARRYING FAIR TRADE.  LOOK FOR PAUL NEWMAN’S BRAND, RAINFOREST AND OTHERS.

SECOND – “HEALTH FOOD” OR MORE HEALTHIER SELECTION STORES LIKE WHOLE FOODS AND CENTRAL MARKET HAVE MANY BRANDS FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE

WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS- GOOGLE FOR FAIR TRADE CHOCOLATE NEAR YOU.

HERE’S WHAT’S IN STORE (AND YES, SHAMELESSLY REPEATING THAT PHOTO OF PAUL NEWMAN)!

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Paul Newman stands for Fair Trade

FAIR TRADE ABC’S


Starting with the second most heavily traded commodity and something near and dear to our hearts- coffee!
Starting with the “A’s”…
These products have the FAIR TRADE certification from Fair Trade USA.
35 North Coffee Company
A & E Custom Roastery
Abednego Coffee Roasters
Adina World Beat Beverages
Adventure Coffee Roasters
Aldi
Allegro
Alter Ecos
Alterra Coffee Roasters America’s Best Coffee Roasting Company
Archer Farms (that’s Target)
Asbury Park Roastery

Stay tuned for the “D’s” – yes, Dunkin’ Donuts is on the list
(yea – PHS!)


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Welcome to Fair Trade Trends! (via Fair Trade Trends)

Fair Trade Trend’s succint account of why Fair Trade matters.

We, at Fair Trade Trends, are Curators of Cool.  We seek to share the hippest, tastiest, & most fantastic Fair Trade finds with you, our loyal reader. Why Fair Trade? Because trade isn’t fair.  But it can be.  And it should be. By buying fair trade products, you are saying NO! to: Human Trafficking Enforced Child Labor Cyclical, Inescapable Poverty Environmental Degradation And, you are saying YES! to: Fair Prices for Workers Fair Working Con … Read More

via Fair Trade Trends

JUSTICE….JUST LIKE IT SAYS IN THE CONSTITUTION*

LET ALL TRADE BE FAIR TRADE

*What I am for is justice for everyone, just like it says in the Constitution. 
Richard Pryor

     Fair trade products are now readily available and often not more expensive than the mass marketer retailers where product origins can be traced to human trafficking, child labor and sweat shops.  Coffee, chocolate and sugar are a few that are on every grocery and big box store shelves.  Look for the Fair Trade Certification label.  

     I envision a future where disbelief that slavery still exists is replaced with shock that products grown, made, and manufactured with the blood and sweat of slave and child labor were available and purchased in the 21st century.

     Fair trade – it just tastes better.

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RAISING AWARENESS ONE SIP AT A TIME

THINK BEFORE YOU DRINK

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ONE CUP ONE CHANGE ONE SIP

HOW YOU DO ANYTHING IS HOW YOU DO EVERYTHING

You may have heard that phrase, attributed to many, often said in yoga classes and diametrically, personal coaching sessions…but, there is a certain resonance to it, if you think about it.    

Once we are of an age to make mindful decisions, our choices are defined by our character.  Ponder whether you live your life in a manner in which, if it were all dissected, placed under a microscope and then broadcast to world, you would be OK with it.   You give to your favorite charities, you coach the Little League team, you let a car get in front of you during rush hour -all good.  

How about those non-public, unseen choices we make a million times a day.  Do you zone out when your friend/colleague is sharing her pain relating to her husband/son/mother/daughter,  or her own.  Are you glancing at your watch when someone is sharing their new, exciting (to them) news?  Do you allow it to register that at least 80% of the world’s population lives on less than $10.00 a day.  According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty. And they “die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death.”  

By now, you’ve heard the term Fair Trade.  Your  fair trade certified purchases affirm that it matters to you that the people who produce the commodities you purchase, receive a fair compensation for their labor.  When they receive a fair  wage, their children can go to school and break the cycle of poverty that envelopes their community.

HOW YOU DO ANYTHING IS HOW YOU DO EVERYTHING.  

Buying fair trade coffee, chocolate and other products affirms that you are who you are claiming to be.

MORNING COFFEE & KISSES

     You want to your choices to matter -in fact, you want to matter, to someone, to the world, for a legacy, to be remembered kindly. We all do – it is the blessing and the curse of the human condition. Everyday you make countless choices- get up, buckle up, show up. Walk past the guy on the corner with his hand out…or not. Call your friend, make those calls for charity, call your mom – or not. It’s not easy navigating this sea of consequences.
Drink coffee? Do you brew at home, grab a cup at the fast food place with your croissant, stop at Megabucks?

     Some choices are easy. Choosing fair trade ensures the growers get a fair price for an honest days work and also, that they are not taken advantage of by the price-fixing of multi national corporations.

     Want a kiss with your coffee?  If you want to sweeten your morning with compassionate, kisses, don’t buy Hershey’s.  they’re well-known for exploiting children and using slave labor to produce their sweet kisses.

     Consider Kallari, an Ecuadorian cocoa/chocolate cooperative in the Amazon.  They are saving the Rainforests, the land and they formed a co-op to save themselves.  Read about them here : http://www.kallari.com/

and also in the MSNBC story below.     

 

 

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032619/#30194143

Fair trade-sweet!

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RESONATE WITH FAIR TRADE

HOW YOU DO ANYTHING IS HOW YOU DO EVERYTHING

You may have heard that phrase, attributed to many, often said in yoga classes and diametrically, personal coaching sessions…but, there is a certain resonance to it, if you think about it.   Once we are of an age to make mindful decisions, our choices are defined by our character.  Ponder whether you live your life in a manner in which, if it were all dissected, placed under a microscope and then broadcast to world, you would be OK with it.

You give to your favorite charities, you coach the Little League team, you let a car get in front of you during rush hour -all good.  How about those non-public, unseen choices we make a million times a day.  Do you zone out when your friend/colleague is sharing her pain relating to her husband/son/mother/daughter,  or her own.  Are you glancing at your watch when someone is sharing their new, exciting (to them) news?  Do you allow it to register that at least 80% of the world’s population lives on less than $10.00 a day.  According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty. And they “die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death.”

By now, you’ve heard the term Fair Trade.  Your  fair trade certified purchases affirm that it matters to you that the people who produce the commodities you purchase, receive a fair compensation for their labor.  When they receive a fair  wage, their children can go to school and break the cycle of poverty that envelopes their community.

HOW YOU DO ANYTHING IS HOW YOU DO EVERYTHING.  Buying fair trade coffee, chocolate and other products affirms that you are who you are claiming to be.

FAIR TRADE: IT MATTERS-SUGAR IN YOUR COFFEE

As recently  reported by the Chronicle’s David Kaplan, Paul Rice, founder, president and CEO of Fair Trade USA, was in town recently to attend a coffee exposition. His organization — the leading third-party certifier of fair trade products in this country – certifies coffee, tea, sugar, cocoa, fresh fruits and other produce, and has partnerships with more than 800 U.S. companies. Its biggest partner for sugar is Wholesome Sweeteners in Sugar Land.

Today, similar gains are being made in developing countries all over the world, many of them extremely modest by our western standards, but vital to improving the lives of millions of rural farmers and workers. And a modest outlay on fair trade goods by ordinary people can go a long way, as Fair Trade USA is aiming to illustrate.

It invites Americans to participate in World Fair Trade Day by enjoying a fair trade breakfast: A cup of fair-trade coffee can help build a women’s clinic in Rwanda; a fair trade-certified banana will help send an Ecuadorian child to school; and that fair trade sugar in your muffin will help a small co-op in the Philippines to adopt organic farming methods.

Read more: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/7564281.html#ixzz1MW6AKgoN