Showing posts with label fair trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fair trade. Show all posts

Cafédirect triumphs in Great Taste Awards – 8 awards in 08!

    Cafédirect, the UK’s pioneering Fairtrade hot drinks company, is celebrating winning eight prestigious Gold Great Taste Awards - leading the hot beverages category this year.

    This, undoubtedly, shows that Fairtrade coffee and tea and other drinks do not have to be low class and mediocre.

    Since the early days of Fairtrade when there was often lowish quality a result of the way things were done thins is no longer the case. Today, as can be seen here, Fairtrade brands lead the field in taste.

    Regarded as the food and drink industry’s Oscars, The Guild of Fine Food’s annual Great Taste Awards are the UK’s largest independent evaluation of gourmet and fine food and drink.

    Leading the bumper crop of awards was Cafédirect’s Organic Mount Elgon gourmet coffee beans, which scooped the coveted three star Gold award. A three star gold award is a great achievement, and shows that the expert judges considered the single origin Ugandan beans from the Gumutindo co-operative on the slopes of Mount Elgon to be faultless. Just 72 out of the 4753 entries this year were awarded three stars.

    “This prestigious award is a culmination of years of collaboration between Gumutindo and Cafédirect in farmer education, along with Fairtrade incentives.” Nimrod Wambette, Chairman of Gumutindo Cooperative, Mt Elgon, Uganda.

    Cafédirect’s Cloud Forest gourmet coffee beans received an impressive two gold stars, single origin 100% Arabica beans grown in the mountains of the stunning cloud forests of Nicaragua.

    Matthew Drennan, Editor of delicious. magazine says “Eight Great Taste Awards is a fantastic achievement, a true reflection of Cafédirect’s brand ethos and the superb quality of its fresh ground coffee and coffee beans. Re-investing a high proportion of its profits to educate the growers in how to improve their beans means there’s every chance the quality of next year’s harvest will be even better. I’m enjoying the fruits of their labours this year, but I’m already looking forward to next year’s!”

    The following coffees and teas won one gold star award – noted for their general excellence in taste, texture and flavour. Teadirect Gold tea (bags), launched this year. An exquisite blend of leaves from Cafédirect’s grower partners in Kenya, Rwanda and Assam in India, expertly blended for depth of flavour and aroma. Three coffees from Cafédirect’s gourmet fresh ground coffee range won one gold star each: Organic Palenque made from 100% Arabica beans sourced purely from Mexico, Kilimanjaro fresh ground Arabica coffee grown on the steep slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, and Organic Machu Picchu sourced solely from Peruvian coffee beans grown on the lush mountains surrounding Machu Picchu. Organic Medium Roast fresh ground coffee also won one gold star, as did Cafédirect’s Organic decaffeinated premium freeze dried instant coffee.

    Zachary Dominitz, Head of Corporate Affairs for Cafédirect says, “We are delighted, but not surprised, that our products have excelled on taste. Growers are the heart of Cafédirect, and our direct relationships with them – and their pride in their work – guarantee we get the best possible produce, and that’s reflected in the quality of our hot drinks. “In the last three years alone we have reinvested 60% of our profits directly into growers' organisations and communities, enabling them to build sustainable businesses and continually improve the quality of their crops. And it shows!"

    For further information about Cafédirect’s award-winning products and the rest of the range, visit www.cafedirect.co.uk. The site is also full of information about Cafédirect’s grower partners, its pioneering work in Fairtrade and it’s Climate Change project.

    “Through their Producer Partnership Programme, Cafédirect has gone out of the box to show there is a lot more that can be done than just Fairtrade. The extra effort made in building farmer and management capacity in a bid to sustain supplies of tea has been received by us farmers and factory staff with appreciation. It has placed Cafédirect in a class of its own which is worthy of my respect.”Julius Ethang'atha, Tea Grower, Michimikuru, Kenya.

    “When our cooperative first began working with Cafédirectover five years ago I didn’t believe there would be anychange in our lives. Now I am sitting here today feeling veryhappy. The growers are paid better prices and receivetraining. Cafédirect is not like the others. I did not believeanything would change but now it is changing.” Emiliana Aligaesha, Coffee Grower, KDCU, Tanzania.

    Awards

    Teadirect, Cafédirect’s tea brand, was a finalist in the Hot Beverage category in the 2008 Branded Excellence Awards.

    In a survey of 2,000 global brands Cafédirect ranks No. 1 as the most recommended brand (Source: Millward Brown, March 2007).

    Combining taste, price, ethics, and availability, Teadirect tops the Fairtrade Tea category: New Consumer Magazine, February 2008.

    About Cafédirect

    Growers play a key role in every aspect of Cafédirect, from governance to product design. They own shares in the company and have 2 directors on the Board.

    Together with their grower partners, Cafédirect shares a passion for producing the best quality teas, coffees and drinking chocolate. The company's latest is the premium Teadirect Gold, is now available at Waitrose.

    Cafédirect was founded in 1991, predating Fairtrade in the UK by three years and was the first coffee brand to carry the mark. With a turnover of £22.3 million (2006/07), Cafédirect are the UK’s largest 100% Fairtrade hot drinks company, the 5th largest coffee brand and 7th largest tea brand.

    Cafédirect’s work has directly improved the lives of 1.4 million people in developing countries by partnering with nearly 300,000 smallholder growers through 39 grower organisations across 13 developing countries.

    Over the last 3 years the company has invested on average 60% of profits in the businesses and communities of its grower partners.

    Supporting sustainable development, Cafédirect pioneered a minimum price for tea growers, and reward growers for quality and organic produce.

    Cafédirect's range of delicious 100% Fairtrade coffees, teas, and hot chocolate is available in major supermarkets, independent retailers, Oxfam shops, Traidcraft mail order, and the Cafédirect online store, as well as thousands of food service venues, such as hospitals, universities, schools and hotels. They are also available in Ireland, Hong Kong, and Singapore.

    To learn more about Cafédirect visit www.cafedirect.co.uk.

    Michael Smith (Veshengro), August 2008
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Post Title

Cafédirect triumphs in Great Taste Awards – 8 awards in 08!


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https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/08/cafedirect-triumphs-in-great-taste.html


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Ascension – Funky, Affordable & Ethical

    NEWS RELEASE

    Adili.com, the one-stop-eco shop, has acquired the eco casualwear label Ascension and is relaunching the brand this month. Certified by the Soil Association and approved by SKAL, Ascension shows that ethical fashion can look cool and be easy on the wallet.

    Good for the planet and good for your pocket, Ascension heralds a new era of guilt-free shopping.

    Aimed at a younger market than Adili’s online retail site, Ascension is a casual urban label that’s hard to beat on price or ethics. Organic cotton printed Ts start at £19, organic cotton hoodies at £38 and organic cotton jeans at £45.

    Ascension values sustainability and ethics, as much as styling and cut. Producing positive fashion; garments made with care for both people and planet, that consumers love the look of and feel good about buying.

    The T’s are made from Soil Association approved organic cotton. The eco friendly dyes are Oeko–Tex 100 approved, they are manufactured solely using sustainable solar and wind energy in fair wear foundation audited factories in India and the inks are approved by the Soil Association. And if that’s not enough, the carbon footprint of the T’s is 90% reduced. The denim is made from SKAL certified organic cotton in a fairly traded low pollutant factory in Bulgaria. Adili aims to further improve the ethics of Ascension garments and is working towards a Fairtrade certified denim range for 2009.

    The recycling of a brand and a philosophy

    Adili has recycled the Ascension brand. Not just with updated graphics and new designs, but also by redefining the brand values and revamping the website - Adili is set for Ascension to take on the high street. “Ascension was originally created to help fund Indian orphanages, but the label faltered, finding it hard as many ethical labels do, to secure an environmentally friendly, reliable, fair trade supply chain and to keep the clothes at the price they needed to be for their market. We have essentially recycled and relaunched the brand. Keeping true to its principles and using our contacts and knowledge of the market, we have been able to produce great clothes with high ethical standards that are the same price as the high street.” Adam Smith, CEO Adili.com

    Keeping with the original philosophy of Ascension, Adili will continue to donate 10% of gross profit to the Life Association charity which provides a long-term supply of safe clean water, concrete buildings and education for some 150 children and 80 orphans in India.

    Ascension aims to develop the Life Association charity scheme across India, with the next focus being a fishing village that was devastated in the tsunami.

    Adili will be wholesaling the Ascension brand throughout the UK
    www.ascensionclothing.co.uk available from www.adili.com

    Ascension is the first of many exciting projects to be launched by Adili.com. Over the past year Adili has been sourcing ethical supply chains and will be launching their first own-label ranges starting with key menswear pieces on 30th June, a capsule collection of women's knitwear for AW08 and a womenswear range for SS09.

    New on Adili.com for A/W08 - A collection of exciting fashion labels and exclusive ranges including: Noir, Wildlife Works, Eco Boudoir, Sika and Numanu, will help you embrace eco chic as it gets colder.
    Adili also stock a rapidly expanding selection of ethical beauty and homeware products including eco makeup by Suki launching in July 2008.

    Source: The Spring Consultancy

Post Title

Ascension – Funky, Affordable & Ethical


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https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/ascension-funky-affordable-ethical.html


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Is Ethical Shopping Becoming the Victim of the “Credit Crunch”?

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    There appear to be signs on the horizon that indicate that shoppers may abandon ethical shopping in the fact of rising prices, especially cost of food and fuel.

    Organic foods and fair trade goods are being bought less, already, it would appear, than it was only a few weeks back.

    Concern for others less well off and especially for growers and producers of coffee, tea, cotton and such, and concern for the environment are the first to suffer and go out of the window when it comes to prices, in general and especially for food, going up. Then even BOGOF offers not longer cut it and it is straight forward price reductions that shoppers look for.

    Where does this leave Fair Trade and organics and green produce and products, as well as services and suppliers?

    Considering that, more often than not, fair trade and other ethical products, goods and services are somewhat more expensive – in some case a lot more expensive – than “ordinary” ones people vote, in times of economic “hardship” and recession, even if it is only perceived “hardship” and recession, with the pocketbooks and their feet. That is to say they buy other goods that are not fair trade or organic or green or ethically produced. They will then go, mostly, for non-fair trade products which are significantly cheaper that any ethical goods and products. This is with the exception of some produce such as tea and bananas at Sainsbury's in the UK, for instance, where all of their own brand tea and all of their bananas are fair trade and the price remained the same as before.

    While I am well aware, as I am sure other people are too, that a fixed price and premium is paid to the producers under the fair trade agreements, ate times, I am more than certain, retailers do put a nice little profit margin onto fair trade and other ethical goods, knowing that the ethical shopper is prepared to pay extra to have the money go to the producers. Most are not aware of how high that profit margin is, at times.

    Not surprising at a time when such products are demanded by the buying public and the same is true for anything recycled and “green” and for any environmentally friendly goods. Here too, in the recycled and environmental friendly product sector, because of demand, many makers, manufacturers and sellers have added a rather big margin to rake it in. Is that ethical? No!

    It is therefore not surprising that at times like these when fuel and food costs are going up and up shoppers are not prepared to pay through the nose often and therefore go for the non-fair trade and other products.

    While the fair trade premium paid to the producers is one thing, in many of the other cases the costs are that high because the sellers know full well that people want to be and be seen to be green and to have a conscience. People who want to be seen to be thus are therefore also quite willing to pay such premium while the economy is more or less booming but, as it seems to ease their consciences to do so and to do “their bit” for the poor or for the environment. However, when there is a downturn and the economy throws a wobbly such ethical principles soon are abandoned and no such goods and produce are being bought, or at least they are bought less.

    I must say that, with some of the prices charged for “green goods” I am not surprised that under conditions of perceived hardship people will not buy them. Some are a rip off as far as costs are concerned. There was a saying that one cannot get money for old robe. Today this, however, no longer holds true. I am not sure about getting money for old rope but some green “designers” and crafts people sure ask money for old rope (see my article elsewhere).

    Sainsbury's has recently fought, it would seem, a price war with the likes of Tesco and ASDA as regards to “Delight” chocolate and, as far as can be seen from the restocked shelves, has now deselected the Divine fair trade brand and has gone for a much more expensive brand that is not all fair trade and I am sure we can see here, yet again, that money begins to speak against the principles that that company was claiming it had.

    The truth is, and that applies to supermarkets and retailers as much as to the shopper, that the bottom line is all that the majority are concerned with and only when it suits them will they, the majority that is, be interested to be seen to be green or ethical. There will remain some that will stay true to their principles but I doubt that many retailers will. The same will also be true for many shoppers. To the seller any fair trade that does not sell is a loss-leader and something to be replaced, period. To the shopper who has to watch his pocketbook it is the price that counts for the food or what-have-you in times of economic wobble and not whether or not he is green or does good. That is the bottom line. Now where does that leave fair trade and the green sector?

    © M Smith (Veshengro), May 2008

Post Title

Is Ethical Shopping Becoming the Victim of the “Credit Crunch”?


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/05/is-ethical-shopping-becoming-victim-of.html


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