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What is Fairtrade?

Fair Trade is a partnership between consumers in the west and producers in developing countries.

 

Many of the products that we buy in supermarkets or shops are grown or produced by people who are not paid properly for their work, and as a result have to live in poverty.

 

Fair Trade guarantees:

  • A fair price to producers in developing countries - enough to pay a living wage, no matter how low world prices on their product go
  • No child labour
  • Safe working conditions
  • Protection for the environment
  • Rights for women
  • Long-term contracts that allow producers to plan for the future
  • A social premium that is often reinvested into projects that help build sustainable community infrastructure, like hospitals, schools and roads

 

Fair Trade is about creating opportunities for producers in the developing world to receive a fair price for their goods and to work their way out of poverty. Put simply, it is an opportunity for them to improve their lives and the lives of their families, and is as simple as the choices you make on your weekly shop.

 

A wide range of Fairtrade certified products are now available, including bananas and other fresh fruit and vegetables and dried fruit; cocoa, tea and coffee; orange juice; sugar; nuts and seeds; honey; rice and quinoa; spices; wine.

 

Fairtrade Coffee Farmer Uganda
Fairtrade Coffee Farmer Uganda

Fairtrade Foundation

The Fairtrade Foundation was established in the UK in 1992.  The Foundation works with businesses, civil society organisations and individuals to improve the position of farmers and producers in developing countries and tackle poverty and injustice.  The Foundation is responsible for licensing use of the Fairtrade Mark in the UK.

 

Further details can be found on the Fairtrade Foundation Website.

 

Fairtrade Logo

The Fairtrade Mark is an independent consumer label which appears on UK products as a guarantee that they have been certified against internationally agreed Fairtrade standards.  Look for the Fairtrade Mark on products. It’s your guarantee that disadvantaged farmers and workers in the developing world are getting a better deal.