Farmers from Africa, Asia and South America got to have an equal say in running the global Fairtrade movement for the first time at the organisation's annual General Assembly, which was held in Germany on Wednesday, 12 June, 2013. Fairtrade is the first major development organization to pioneer such power-sharing between groups in the northern and southern hemisphere. Marike de Peña, vice-chair of Fairtrade International and director of the banana co-operative Banelino in the Dominican Republic, said the arrangement would help serve the interests of Fairtrade’s more than one million small farmers and their workers. “This is what real empowerment is about,” de Peña said in a statement. Previously growers and producers in the southern hemisphere had three out of 22 votes at Fairtrade International’s annual meeting, with the majority held by national Fairtrade organizations in the consumer countries of the northern hemisphere. Under reforms begun five years ago, the constitution of Fairtrade International, the global co-ordinating body for the movement, was changed in January to give producers groups and consumer countries parity. Chief Adam Tampuri, chair of Fairtrade Africa and the Gbankuliso Cashew Farmers Association in Ghana, said: “We are convinced that what we have just achieved in Fairtrade International is a very important breakthrough: people in the south are not just beneficiaries but, for the first time, co-owners. “This is not the end of the story and we still have a long way to go, but this fundamental step is a source of great motivation for us to strengthen and improve Fairtrade in the years to come.”
Löfbergs turns coffee waste into sustainable potting soil
Swedish coffee roaster Löfbergs and horticultural company Weibulls have developed Coffee Soil, a peat-free potting mix made with upcycled coffee...