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Fair trade certification labels

Posted by Siel in caffeine, fairtrade (Saturday April 29, 2006 at 9:38 am)

For those confused by all the fair trade labels — Here’s an explanation of what the labels in the US are, and what they mean.

And for an explanation of shade grown labels, go here.

Product certification labels

2320186644 cd6475425b t Fair trade certification labelsFairTrade Labelling Organization. FLO is the international org that certifies fair trade co-ops. It serves as an umbrealla org for the various national orgs — such as TransFair USA for the US, or FTAANZ for Australia — that provide fair trade product certifications.

152926334 998ff81343 t Fair trade certification labelsTransFair USA. Within the US, TFUSA’s the nonprofit that provides the fair trade certification sticker (right) for products.

Labels that mark fair trade companies

2319365243 1c88ea0d6d t Fair trade certification labelsFair Trade Federation (FTF). An association of fair trade wholesalers, retailers, and producers that practice fair trade. To become a member, businesses have to meet a set of strict criteria. This is an association, not a certification label — though if you see the logo, that means the company’s a fair trade company.

2319368509 04c460d0f2 t Fair trade certification labelsInternational Federation for Alternative Trade (IFAT). The IFAT label identifies fair trade organizations. IFAT’s a global network of fair trade organizations — The label identifies member organizations, not specific products.

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2 Comments

2 comments for Fair trade certification labels »

  1. Always appreciate these clarifications — especially as more companies create logos to designate their own supposedly “fairly traded” practices.

    Amusingly, for all the grief given SBX, I recently had occasion to stop at a Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf . . . 0% FT . . . and when I left a comment card, the response was “we have our own program, its better, we play fair with our farmers” yada yada yada . . . It may be that some regulation (perhaps just as to transparency) is needed before one can make “fairly traded” or similar claims . . . I know the Green candidates for Congress in the 29th Dist. and likely the 28th would support a transparency reg. for such claims — perhaps you could check with the incumbents?

    Oh, and the coffee was not yummy at CBTF.

    Comment by Roger, Gone Green — April 30, 2006 @ 3:10 am

  2. The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf was actually the first company I “bugged” about fair trade — I talked to Jay there. Not only do they not have any fair trade coffee, they also only offer one organic blend — which tastes quite gross.

    Comment by Siel — May 6, 2006 @ 12:07 pm

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