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Associated Press September 18, 2001
Protest starts against Starbucks on fair-trade coffee
LONDON:
Protests against the world's leading retail coffee chain, Starbucks
Corp., began this week in the United States and Europe to promote
fairly traded coffee - coffee where the grower is guaranteed a minimum
price that is typically above the market price.
The protests will last all week and target stores in 300 cities,
said Ronnie Cummins, national director of the United States Organic
Consumers Association, which is coordinating the action. The group
is leafleting Starbucks' customers to pressure the Seattle-based
company, now in some 4,500 locations worldwide, into promoting fairly
traded coffees, not just stocking them, and ensuring that none of
its ingredients are genetically modified, Dow Jones News Service
reported.
"We are targeting Starbucks, rather than (any other coffee
company) because they are a high-profile market leader and because
they promote themselves as socially responsible," Cummins said.
Fair-trade coffees guarantee growers a minimum $1.26 a pound for
arabica coffee and $1.06 a pound for robusta, along with longer-term
contracts and other social and environmental benefits. That compares
with an average world market price of 60 cents per pound for arabica
and 25 cents per pound for robusta.
Starbucks' Britain spokeswoman Yasmin Crowther said, "Starbucks
is totally behind fair-trade." She said it stocks the coffees
in the United States and is now in talks with fair-trade providers
in Britain to introduce these coffees in its 200-plus British stores
in the next year.
Crowther said genetically modified ingredients aren't used in Europe,
and even in the United States the company offers an organic-milk
alternative to ordinary milk
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