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AirplaneBullet You are here » Home » campaigns » Campaign Minisites » Environment and Ethical » Fairtrade

About Fairtrade

Everything you need to know about the Union's fairtrade policy and fairtrade in general!
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The site for all your Fairtrade needs!

What is Fairtrade?

Fairtrade guarantees farmers in third world countries a reasonable and stable price for the commodities they produce. Be it coffee, bananas or cocoa beans (to name some of the products available) you can be sure that when you buy fairtrade your making a difference to the life’s of countless farmers who would otherwise be exploited.

Why is it important?

“Before you finish eating breakfast in the morning, you’ve depended on more than half the world”, Martin Luther King

The lives of farmers half way across the Earth may seem like an issue that doesn’t affect you, but it does. You rely on countless numbers of people from across the world to produce the products you consume.

If the price of commodities such as coffee falls, the effects on the millions of producers can be crippling. Although the prices paid for commodities such as coffee has not fallen in real terms over the last forty years, the costs of fertilisers, pesticides and machinery have risen. Farmers have to work longer and harder in order to make a living. When you bear in mind that the market price of these commodities often falls below the cost of producing them, it’s clear that the farmers are getting a raw deal.

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Fairtrade guarantees:

  • Farmers and workers get paid a fair price or wage for their produce
  • Farmers have safe working conditions
  • That no child or forced labour is used
  • There is a commitment to improve working conditions and product quality
  • Increased environmental sustainability of practices
  • A commitment to invest in development of the organisations and producers involved

How does Fairtrade work?

Fairtrade works in two ways. Growers of, for example, coffee and cocoa tend to work independently on their own land and market their produce with local co-operatives, for farmers such as this fairtrade works to guarantee a fair price. Growers of tea, for example often work on large estates, fairtrade guarantees these workers good wages, the right to join trade unions and housing (where relevant). Both share the common principles of minimum health and safety standards as well as environmentally sound practices.

There exist two main groups, The International Federation for Alternative Trade (IFAT) and Fair Trade Labelling Organisations International (FLO), these exist to push the fairtrade ideal across the world. The UK based Fairtrade Foundation is a founding member of the FLO, when you see their mark (which is now becoming standard in 17 countries across the World), you can be sure your helping to provide a brighter future for disadvantaged farmers.

You may find that fairtrade products cost more than non-fairtrade products. This is simply because more money goes to the people that have produced that product at a primary level. Premiums are paid on top of the normal price of produce to allow for fairtrade standards to be upheld. So you are paying more, but you are getting more for your money!

Images courtesy of The Fairtrade Foundation

You want examples?

  • The FLO works with 352 certified producer organisations representing over 800,000 families of farmers and workers in over 45 counties across Africa, Asia and Latin America.
  • Between 2001 and 2001 fairtrade labelled product sales rose 21.2%. The markets for fairtrade products in Austria, France and Norway grew by over 100% (by volume) in the same time period.
  • Fairtrade ground and roast coffee accounted for 14% of the total UK market in 2001.