Coffee (original) (raw)

More than a billion people worldwide drink coffee every day. It’s one of the most traded commodities globally. And yet many of the people who grow this much-loved product can’t earn a living to rely on.

The coffee industry

From Honduras over Vietnam to Kenya and Indonesia, some 125 million people worldwide depend on coffee for their livelihood. For a number of reasons, the global price of coffee is highly volatile. The coffee supply chain is a complex one. After leaving coffee farms, the beans pass through a succession of traders, processors, exporters, roasters and retailers. Most farmers have little knowledge of where their coffee ends up, or the price it sells for.

Coffee

Fast facts

Here are a few facts you should know about Fairtrade coffee.

Current challenges

Though the coffee industry is a billion-dollar one, many farmers are paid less for their hard work than what it costs to grow and harvest their beans. The situation is unsustainable, and the future of coffee is under threat.

How Fairtrade makes a difference

We all need to understand what coffee actually costs to be produced sustainably. Farmers need fair pay. There are almost +870,000 coffee farmers in the Fairtrade system, making up almost half of all Fairtrade farmers and workers.

Coffee heroes

In Brazil, a Fairtrade-certified coffee cooperative supplies free clean electricity to all members, all small-scale farmers. Behind this is a manager who actually had a completely different mission.

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