Fairtrade Fortnight

What is Fairtrade Fortnight?

mainSustainabilitysustainableunion
No ratings yet. Log in to rate.
Fairtrade fortnight

 

Fairtrade Fortnight 

fairtrade fortnight

 

"By choosing Fairtrade now, you're taking a stand with farmers and workers worldwide for fairer incomes, so together we can protect the future of our food" Fairtrade 2023.

You may have seen a Fairtrade logo on products in supermarkets, but do you know what it is and what impact buying a fairtrade product can have?

Smallholder farmers can't foot the bill for adapting to economic and climate change on their current incomes. So this fortnight and beyond, Fairtrade is asking shoppers to act now and choose Fairtrade to back the farmers behind some of our favourite products to ensure they are paid fairly and can keep farming through these extremely tough times. 

Fairtrade Fortnight this year will highlight the urgent threat to the future of the foods we love and the livelihoods of the people who grow them as they face the worst effects of the climate crisis. With our support for fairer prices today, farmers will find it easier to tackle the climate and economic challenges of the future. ?? 

You can start by buying Fairtrade products from our shops and venues. So, for example, all hot drinks served in Squeezebox and Verve would have included Fairtrade products such as Tea, Coffee or sugar! This will support farmers by ensuring they have fairer pay to face the climate crisis and continue producing the food we love. 

 

Saddick Abanga's Story 

Saddick Abanga fairtrade

Saddick Abanga, 39, Fairtrade cocoa farmer, Ghana

‘I didn’t know I was punishing the land, now because of this project I’ve seen the benefits, there are more nutrients in the soil.’ 

Saddick farms nine acres of land for cocoa. He’s been doing this for 18 years and it’s getting increasingly difficult due to the climate crisis. Part of his farm lies high on a rocky, steep hillside, unfriendly terrain for cocoa plants. Saddick’s working on gradually surrounding it with shade trees. This is a technique he discovered after joining an agro-forestry project, which offers farmers training in methods to adapt to climate change by improving soil, planting for shade and attracting biodiversity. 

Saddick was able to join because he is part of a Fairtrade co-operative, where in addition to projects like this, farmers can choose to invest their Premium in adapting to the climate and cost of farming crises. 

 

Emilia Debrah's Story 

emilia story fairtrade

Emilia Debrah, 51, Fairtrade cocoa farmer, Ghana 

Emilia Debrah has a flair for farming. Even so, her income from cocoa before 2018 was so low that she fell into debt and struggled badly for a while. What turned her finances around, she says, is the support she got from the Fairtrade co-op she belongs to and training as part of a project where she learned to farm her four hectares of land more productively. 

She’s now almost self-sufficient thanks to her newly created ‘micro-forest’ and can sell the vegetables she intercrops with cocoa locally. The savings she’s made on pesticides help protect Emilia, and her six grandchildren she cares for, against rising living costs.  

 

Odessa Michelle Grant's Story 

Odessa Michelle Grant, Fairtrade coffee farmer, Honduras 

Odessa is recharging coffee-growing traditions by bringing down barriers to women earning enough from their crop. ‘…when men handed over part of the ownership of the farms to their wives and daughters, there were a lot of tears, it's no small thing.’ After her coffee community was badly hit by hurricanes two years ago, redressing the gender balance is giving members hope for the future. 

This shake-up of traditional land ownership offers Odessa and her fellow women farmers more power, more independence and perhaps most importantly in the climate and cost-of-living crises, more income. Fairtrade has supported the legal process through the co-operative to which Odessa belongs. It’s paved the way for Odessa to take a seat on the board and inspire other women to come together to market their coffee as an all-woman grown speciality product.  

 

sdg1sdg 2sdg3 sdg 4sdg 5sdg 6 sdg 8 sdg12sdg 13sdg 15

 

 

 

Comments