Making a difference through your daily cuppa
Posted: July 22, 2011 Filed under: Editorials, News | Tags: co-operative, Ethical shopping, Fair Trade Fortnight, fairtrade, fairtrade tea, Fairtraders Cooperative, Yorkshire Fair Trade Leave a comment »
Many of us here in Britain rely on that first cup of tea in the morning to wake us up and get us going for the day. And it’s a good job that we do, because in other areas of the world, reliance on tea is far more fundamental than that: as many as twenty million people in the developing world are dependent on tea for their very survival. In India, for example, tea is the second largest employer, and ten percent of Kenya’s population works in the tea trade. It is for this reason that tea is a vital element in the fight against poverty. Despite the huge popularity of tea in wealthy nations, small scale tea farmers and workers in the tea industry benefit little from the money spent when you buy your average brew. Buying fairly traded tea is one way that we can all make a difference and improve the lives of some of the most vulnerable people around the world. With this in mind, The Fair Traders Co-operative now stocks a range of ‘everyday’ Traidcraft teas to complement the selection of flavoured green and white Qi teas already available in its shop and online store. Choosing a Fairtrade tea such as those stocked by The Fair Traders Co-operative ensures that the farmer receives a fair price for the tea. And what’s more, it means that workers rights and environmental needs are respected in the production of the tea. Producing tea is a labour intensive process, and workers and small scale producers in the tea sector can work very long hours, suffer back problems due to the bending and lifting involved and are exposed to pesticides and other agro-chemicals that cause ill-health. Workers on the large plantations, or tea estates, can be powerless to change their circumstances as they can be totally dependent on the estates for everything from wages and healthcare through to schooling and sanitation, leaving them with little control over their lives. And, of the many players in the tea supply chain, the small scale farmers and labourers earn a tiny proportion – as little as 1% – of the final retail price of the tea, whilst also carrying the greatest burden of risk when market prices fluctuate. The length and complexity of the tea supply chain means that farmers and tea workers have little relationship to buyers, and often have little choice about who they sell to or what price they get for their produce. The Fairtrade Foundation reports that there is very limited competition in the tea supply chain, with seven companies controlling 85% of tea production through their own factories and estates. Retail sales are also highly concentrated: the top three packers control 60% of the tea market in the UK. This concentration and control by a few western companies is reflected in the breakdown of who accrues the largest share of the value chain: • Around 40% of the retail price of tea accrues to the tea traders and manufacturers, and a further 40% goes to the processors/blenders, packagers and retailers, based mainly in rich countries. • In tea-producing countries, around 15% of the retail price goes to the plantation and factory, and less than 1% to the auction broker. • The plantation worker is likely to earn 1% or less. So whilst lacking power in the supply chain and receiving a very small proportion of the price of tea, small scale tea growers have to cope with the reality of increasing costs, such as for fuel, labour and fertiliser. Inflation has caused the price of living to go up, and yet tea producers have not benefited from increases in the nominal price of tea, receiving in fact only about half of what they did 30 years ago. And climate change is adding to their difficulties by causing unpredictable harvests, with recent droughts affecting crop outputs in many tea producing areas of the world. So, buying Fairtrade tea really can make all the difference. Fairtrade standards act as a safety net against the unpredictable market, providing a minimum price that aims to cover the costs of sustainable production, as well as a Fairtrade premium for investment in social, economic and environmental improvements, and providing credit if needed. The Fairtrade environmental standards require environmental protection, restrict the use of agrochemicals and encourage sustainable farming and processing methods. But perhaps the most crucial element of the Fairtrade standard is that the tea workers on plantations and the smallholder members of the producer organisations are able to take more control over their own future. Small scale farmers are organised into associations and must manage the Fairtrade premium democratically, reinvesting it according to priorities identified by the farmers themselves. This can include improving the services of their own organisation, improving quality control, or investing in social or environmental projects to benefit the whole community. The Fair Traders Co-operative stocks a variety of teas, including Everyday Tea, Everyday Decaffeinated Tea, African Gold Tea and Everyday Green Tea by Traidcraft and a range of flavoured green and white teas by Qi. Click here to browse and buy these high quality teas that really do ensure better livelihoods for vulnerable people.
Fair Traders’ Celebrate shop’s first Birthday
Posted: July 1, 2011 Filed under: Editorials, News | Tags: co-operative, Ethical shopping, fairtrade, Fairtraders Cooperative, Holmfirth Arts Festival, Yorkshire Fair Trade Leave a comment »
Customers, members and staff were partying around the piano at the Fair Traders Co-operative on Sunday 12th June to celebrate our first birthday. And that was following a day of piano-playing fun on Saturday 11th to kick-start the Holmfirth Street Pianos project as part of Holmfirth Arts Festival.
If you’re local to Holmfirth, the chances are you’ve heard the strains of piano music drifting around the town during the Arts Festival. Holmfirth Street Pianos is a collaboration between Holmfirth Arts Festival and The Fair Traders Co-operative, which set out to see what would happen when five pianos were left on the streets of the town for anyone to play. The results have been amazing, with many an inspired performance by locals and visitors alike.
And to launch the event at the start of the Arts Festival there was a party around each piano. Free fair trade cake was given out at the party piano outside The Fair Traders Co-operative and children crowded to get involved in the circus skills and balloon modelling provided by Crafty Devilz at the banana piano at Norridge Bottom. Piano music filled the air, and there was even singing; the men on the scaffolding at Holy Trinity Church joined in beautifully with the sounds of the cotton piano outside Sid’s Cafe.
There was more fair trade cake to be had the next day, when The Fair Traders Co-operative celebrated their first birthday. The shop first opened its doors in June 2010, and to commemorate a year of making a difference to workers and their communities in some of the most disadvantaged countries in the world, The Fair Traders Co-operative invited suppliers, members, customers and visitors to a party at the shop. There was piano music, a performance by members of local jazz band New Orleans Wiggle, and a party-hat-making workshop for children.
To complement Holmfirth Arts Festival, a live window display saw local children and volunteers from the shop sipping tea, dancing and sharing fair trade cake. And as a really special birthday treat, Zimbabwe-born X Factor star, Beatrice Masvingise, sang a beautiful and moving song for us in her native language and cut the fair trade birthday cake. If you missed the party, you can see video footage and photos on our Facebook page.
The Fair Traders Co-operative wishes to thank all our members, customers, volunteers, staff, suppliers and supporters who have helped to make our first year successful. By continuing to buy ethically sourced products and supporting non-profit making fair trade ventures such as The Fair Traders Co-operative, each of us can make a positive difference to the people and communities who produce the items we purchase and consume each day. Click here to access our online store.








