Daily Tip: Choose Your Coffee Wisely
Do you know where your coffee comes from? Next time you reach for your cup of joe, consider these three things before you drink.
- Fair trade. The fair trade certification label ensures that the workers or farmers who produce a product receive a fair price for their goods and have improved labor conditions. The fair trade label also often includes a measure of environmental sustainability and responsibly managed farms. Fair trade standards are decided upon and enforced by third party certifiers under the umbrella organization Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International.
- Organic. Organic coffee is grown without the use of synthetic fertilizers, herbicides or pesticides, which means less environmental pollution and improved worker health.
- Shade grown. If your coffee says shade grown, chances are it is responsibly farmed. Shade grown coffee does not require as much land clearing, leaving original tree cover or other taller crops available for songbird (and other wildlife) habitats. This method of growing also helps to prevent soil erosion, increases the ability for natural pest control and reduces the need for weeding.
For a glimpse into the global coffee industry, check out the documentary Black Gold. The film literally follows the coffee bean from the farm to your cup, including everyone who comes into contact with it: the workers on the coffee plantations, those who set the prices and buy the coffee, and the consumers who have turned coffee into an artform.
Can’t find coffee with these labels? GO’s Brady Swenson has a few things you can do to plant the seed for fair trade in your community, such as simply asking for it at your local coffee shop or grocery store.
When you’re making your own: GO’s Patrick Donnelly has suggested a couple of tips for greening up your home brew, including using unbleached paper filters, or reusable gold or steel filters. You could also skip the filters and electricity by switching over to a french press (but, yes, it does require boiling water.) And instead of tossing out all those coffee grounds, compost them.
For coffee on the go bring your own mug. You’ll waste less paper, and if it’s a stainless steel mug it will stay warmer longer. Forgot your mug? Avoid the double cup by using a sleeve, and please, please, say no to the bag. If you’re carrying more than one cup, use a drink tray (and recycle it when you’re finished.)
More on coffee and fair trade from Green Options:
Black Gold: The Story Behind Your Morning Brew
Daily Tip: Bring Your Own Coffee Mug
Dean’s Beans and the Fairer Trade
Eco-Effective Decisions: Fair Trade, When Voting with your Dollars Counts
The Greenest Coffee on the Planet
How to Plant the Fair Trade Seed in Your Community
Kicking the Habit: Greening that Cup o’ Joe
Labor Day: Rights and Respect for the Worker
Organic Coffee Company Sponsors Guatemalan Radio Show to Promote Fair-Trade
Starbucks Backs Down, Allows Ethiopia Trademark Rights To Its Own Names
Tags: Agriculture, black gold, certification, coffee, Daily Tips, Environment, Fair Trade, organic, Organic food, shade grown
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October 3rd, 2007 at 2:49 am
Thanks for bringing this up. If you can’t find organic/fair trade coffee locally there are plenty of places to find it on the web. Good plan to bring your own mug to your favorite coffee house too.
Debbie
http://www.organic-food-and-drink.com