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'Cause coffees' produce a cup with an agenda 'Shade-grown,'
'fair trade' and other eco-friendly, socially aware blends of
java are attracting consumers
By Patrick McMahon USA TODAY
SEATTLE -- Now that you've figured out how to order a double
tall latte, decaf skinny with no foam, there's a whole new coffeespeak
brewing.
Bird lovers want you to buy ''shade-grown'' coffee to protect
disappearing rain forests used by migratory songbirds in
Central and South America.
Purists concerned about pesticides push ''organic'' java.
Worried about impoverished Third World coffee growers? There's
''Fair-Trade Certified'' coffee that guarantees farmers a minimum
price.
In this hot spot for boutique coffee as well as in an increasing
number of cities across the nation, coffee is being poured with
an environmental and social agenda. The big chains, led by Starbucks,
are acceding to activists' demands that they offer these ''cause
coffees.''
While these brews are sometimes branded politically correct,
''we prefer to call them sustainable coffees,'' Washington,
D.C., activist Christopher London says. ''They sustain the environment,
and they sustain the farmers.''
But there's a catch.
''It has to taste good for people to buy it,'' says London, who
promotes ecological labeling for coffee at Consumer's Choice Council.
''If you can't sell it, it's not sustainable.''
But many of these blends are selling, with the help of environmentalists
and other activists extolling their virtues and demanding more
availability.
While still a minuscule part of the U.S. coffee market, these
beans and brews are being sold at Borders Books cafes, Hyatt hotels,
campus coffeehouses and grocery giant Safeway. Seattle-based Starbucks,
the nation's largest gourmet coffee retailer, now promotes blends
of Fair-Trade Certified, organic and shade-grown coffees.
''There is extraordinary excitement with people in our stores
about things like shade-grown,'' Starbucks chief executive Orin
Smith says. Starbucks stepped up its promotion of ''cause coffees''
after it became the target of protests by human rights groups
demanding that it sell fair-trade blends.
But many Americans just don't take their morning cup of joe all
that seriously.
''At 6 a.m., I really don't care about the rest of the world.
I just want to wake up,'' says Seattle law student Jeff Yuhasz,
32, who keeps a can of Folgers in his freezer. ''It's definitely
an issue of political correctness.''
Many consumers say they like making an impact with their coffee.
Philadelphia concert promoter Larry Ahearn, 53, drinks three or
four cups a day. His current brew is an Azteca Blend from Trader
Joe's gourmet grocery chain.
''It's shade-grown, 100% organic, Equal Exchange, Fair-Trade
Certified,'' he says. ''Everything but Eugene McCarthy,'' the
antiwar presidential candidate in 1968. ''When I buy shade-grown
coffee,'' Ahearn says, ''I feel like I'm voting for a better environment
or a better world.''
A host of worries
Coffee is the second most-traded commodity in the world after
oil, measured in export dollars. It is produced in 80 countries
in tropical regions, most of them environmentally sensitive. The
largest exporters are Brazil, Colombia, Vietnam, Indonesia and
Mexico. The largest importer is the United States.
Fully 80% of adult Americans are regular or occasional coffee
drinkers. Only 14% say they're daily consumers of gourmet coffees
-- premium blends, latte, espresso, café mocha, cappuccino and
frozen and ice-blended coffee beverages. But that number represents
almost 29 million people, up from about 8 million five years ago,
according to a 2001 survey by the National Coffee Association.
Today's sustainable coffees -- a small niche of the gourmet market
-- are not as new as they are newly visible. Organic coffees --
once found mostly in health-food stores -- and the others are
just getting more space in grocery stores and on the menus at
coffee bars.
''It's really an emerging trend,'' says Gary Goldstein, a spokesman
for the coffee trade group.
While nothing might seem less contentious than a cup of hot coffee,
environmental, economic and labor issues abound:
* World coffee prices are at decade-low levels, prompting concern
that low-paid growers will abandon their crops for work elsewhere.
* Tropical rain forests continue to dwindle as farmers clear-cut
hillsides and fields to grow coffee in sunshine, a faster process
than shade-grown. Sun-grown coffee also requires more pesticides,
a greater concern for workers than drinkers because processing
removes most chemicals.
* Clear-cutting in the highlands of Central and South America
also is removing traditional habitat for migratory songbirds that
spend the winter there.
''Coffee touches so many people, from the coffee plant to the
coffee cup,'' says Helen Ross, who runs the Seattle Audubon Society's
Northwest Shade Coffee Campaign. ''People don't realize the huge
effect on birds, workers and forests.''
Growers in decline
No one is suffering more from the fall in worldwide coffee prices
than small-scale coffee farmers. Even Juan Valdez is hurting.
The mythical coffee farmer who stars in Colombian Coffee Federation
ads with his sturdy mule Conchita has fallen victim to the plummeting
world price for beans. Federation ads featuring him were cut almost
in half this spring.
But the effect has been far more brutal elsewhere. In May, 14
migrant workers died in the heat of the Arizona desert after crossing
the border with Mexico. Half were identified as coffee farmers
who had left their jobs in Veracruz, Mexico, in search of better-paying
jobs in the United States.
''Prices are so low that we are at risk of having farmers opt
out, and we will be unable to get the quality we want,'' Starbucks
CEO Smith says. ''This is of grave concern to all the specialty-coffee
people.''
Suppliers, roasters and retailers now have dozens of projects
underway in South and Central America to improve the lives of
coffee farmers and maintain quality supply lines.
Starbucks is working with the environmental group Conservation
International to improve shade-grown production near Chiapas,
Mexico. Other retailers on the bandwagon include Seattle's Best
Coffee, Bucks County Coffee Co. in
Philadelphia, Equal Exchange in Canton, Mass., and Taylor Maid
Farms in Sebastopol, Calif.
Consumers looking for independent evidence that these coffees
are organic, shade-grown or bought at a fair price to farmers
need only look on the back of packages in the store. Some are
certified by groups such as the Rainforest Alliance, the Smithsonian
Migratory Bird Center and several organizations that monitor organic
farming.
What difference does all this make?
Fair-Trade Certified coffee, for example, guarantees farmers
in cooperatives a minimum $1.26 a pound, far more than the current
world price of 43 cents.
Fair-trade prices will give the typical Latin American coffee
farmer an annual income of about $2,000, compared with the current
$500, says Paul Rice, executive director of TransFair USA, an
Oakland non-profit group that certifies fair-trade coffee in the
United States.
''This is the difference between a small farmer carrying sacks
of coffee on his back, versus buying a mule,'' Rice says.
The fair-trade coffee movement is growing. TransFair USA certified
2 million pounds in 1999, 4.3 million pounds in 2000 and ''we
project 9 million this year,'' Rice says.
Coffee seems an unlikely focus for rallies, protests and benefit
concerts featuring Bonnie Raitt. But not in Seattle, where coffee
is taken more seriously than almost anyplace else.
And that means Starbucks.
Starbucks was founded in 1971 in Seattle and named for the first
mate in Herman Melville's Moby Dick. Thumbing its nose at fast
food in the fast lane, it pioneered the modern-day, stay-as-long-as-you-like
coffeehouse.
It has grown from 84 locations in 1990 to 4,435 stores in 39
states and 21 foreign countries. This month it reported $2 billion
in sales for the last nine months -- up 23% from the same period
a year earlier.
Targeting Starbucks
Starbucks' meteoric rise coincided with increasing concern about
coffee itself. The same affluent baby boomer consumers who liked
Starbucks' no-hassle atmosphere grew more interested in the content
of their coffee. Soon after protests against the World Trade Organization's
summit meeting in November 1999 left downtown Seattle trashed
and hundreds arrested, Starbucks found itself taking heat.
Starbucks says it was already planning to market fair-trade and
Earth-friendly brews when members of Global Exchange, a San Francisco
human-rights group, picketed the company's annual stockholders
meeting in March 2000, demanding that the retailer sell fair-trade
coffee.
Immediately, ''I got involved,'' CEO Smith says.
Even as it moved to provide more Fair-Trade Certified coffee,
Starbucks encountered a new group of protesters at this year's
annual meeting.
This time, it was the Organic Consumers Association targeting
Starbucks' milk -- a major ingredient in lattes, mochas and other
espresso products. The chain's milk wasn't guaranteed to be hormone-free.
Starbucks said it offers the same kind of milk sold in grocery
stores, but only 25% is guaranteed hormone-free. Later this month,
it will offer an organic, hormone-free milk alternative.
In the same vein, activists here have launched a major education
and advertising campaign to get people to buy more sustainable
coffees -- of any brand.
The highlight came in June when recording artists Raitt, Jackson
Browne and Keb' Mo' held a concert in Seattle to benefit the Songbird
Foundation, which seeks to protect songbirds and their habitat.
Nostalgic boomers in faded jeans and long skirts packed the refurbished
Paramount Theater to hear the three mix politics with music. Microbrews
were everywhere, the aroma of marijuana surprisingly faint.
Browne, 52, his silky brown hair slung over his forehead, told
the audience to try sustainable coffee: ''Being able to change
our lifestyle just a little will make a big difference.''
The artists were there to support their longtime friend, singer-songwriter
Danny O'Keefe, who founded the Songbird Foundation in 1997 and
wrote and recorded the 1972 hit, Good Time Charlie's Got The Blues.
''Quality is the bottom line,'' says O'Keefe, who roasts his own
coffee. But by buying sustainable coffees, he adds, ''consumers
can have quality and really make a difference. Every cup of coffee
makes a difference.''
Not everybody cares.
''The average American isn't ready for this,'' says Julie Barrett,
coffee director for Dunkin' Donuts. The chain recently offered
a ''French Roast Eco-Blend'' in Maine, Boston and Chicago but
decided not to go nationwide yet.
''They're not asking for it enough,'' Barrett says.
But for some, the message is catching on.
''Sometimes you'll ask for a cup of shade-grown or fair trade,
and people give you a blank look, but not so much anymore,'' says
Tom Keefe, a Spokane, Wash., lawyer who ran unsuccessfully for
Congress in 2000. ''In the era after WTO, especially in Seattle,
it's not surprising to see consumers asking more questions about
the products they buy: Who makes it, where did it come from and
what's in it?''
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