Showing posts with label Community Trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Community Trade. Show all posts

08 July 2008

Responsible Travel

Image: Arctic Sounds

I've just come across a great website called Responsible Travel.
They handpick inspiring holidays from all over the globe to give a fantastic experience to the traveller at the same time as making a real difference to local people and the environment.

I thought...so it's basically The Body Shop of travel agencies... then, when reading the 'About Us' section I discovered it was actually set up by a former Head of Marketing at The Body Shop (UK). responsibletravel.com was even financially backed by a small group of private investors including Anita and Gordon Roddick!

So how does it work?
From their website:
We do not claim to have addressed every single issue relating to responsible travel, as these are both complex and variable in each destination. Rather, we have created a way for the industry and tourists to work openly together to improve tourism for travellers and local communities.

All industry members have been screened to meet the required environmental, social and economic criteria for responsibletravel.com. You will find summaries of how they have achieved this, and their full responsible travel policies on the site. In addition, we require a short summary of the responsible travel aspects of every trip and form of accommodation on the site.


I like it.


I'm thinking about going to India in January for a holiday but also to visit Teddy Exports (the Fair Trade community where we get all our massagers from). I'm not sure if it works for people travelling from Australia but I'm definitely going to check it out.

www.responsibletravel.com

01 May 2008

Compost To Combat Climate Change!

By Adam Valvasori - Values Manager






















Hey there... International Composting Awareness Week starts this Saturday so there's never been a better time to start your worm farm.

Approximately 60% of the rubbish Australians put in the everyday mixed-waste ‘garbage bin’ could be put to better use in the garden as compost and mulch or could be returned to agricultural land to improve soil quality.

Alarmingly, such a huge amount of organically-active material buried ‘anaerobically’ (without air) in landfill causes over 3% of Australia’s total greenhouse gas emissions annually by producing methane: a gas with 25 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide!

If properly composted instead, this same organic waste could help to abate climate change in yet another way: by sinking or ‘sequestering’ carbon back into the soil.

Find out more at www.compostweek.com.au

Compost Week provides a great segue for me to plug a couple of fantastic, discoveries I've made recently, whilst riding my bike around Melbourne....

CERES is an urban oasis, a vibrant and thriving Community Environment Park in Brunswick East, the product of remarkable contribution and commitment. It includes an organic cafe, co-op markets, community farming plots, orchids, an eco-house, chooks and wormie bins. They also do children's parties in different cultural themes... Aboriginal, Indonesian, African or Indian! It's truly amazing! I have friends that get all their fruit & vegies there. There's also a place called The Bike Shed that can make you a recycled bike from scratch for only $30 - $70 !

www.ceres.org.au


Established in 1979 the Collingwood Children's Farm is a not-for-profit community resource providing country experiences for city people.

Visitors can milk the cow at 10am and 4pm, bottle feed young lambs (seasonal), wander around, feed the animals, help with farm chores, go into the paddocks with the sheep and goats, cuddle a guinea pig, waddle with the ducks, feed the chooks, look for eggs or just sit and unwind under a shady tree or on the banks of the Yarra river.

Explore their website for all the amazing programs and activities they have on offer. A must for families with munchkins.

www.farm.org.au

13 March 2008

The Real Cost Of Chocolate

Your chocolate Easter Egg might not taste so sweet when you consider that with each bite you are supporting an industry where children are forced to work long hours in dangerous conditions instead of going to school.

About 70% of the cocoa beans used to make chocolate around the world come from West Africa, with Ivory Coast and Ghana among the biggest producers. Criminal networks have been caught moving children across regions and international borders to work on cocoa farms. There are claims that in the worst cases children as young as six are being forced to work 80-100 hours a week, enduring beatings and malnutrition.

THE BODY SHOP & COCOA
We use a lot of cocoa! Its in every one of our body butters and we sell one of those every two minutes in Australia alone! The Body Shop values the human rights of the Cocoa Farmers in Ghana through our Community Trade program. We're proud that our Community Trade program:
  • creates jobs for over 50,000 small-scale Cocoa farmers that are members of the Kuapa Kokoo Ltd Farmers Cooperative in Ghana.
  • pays them a social premium to help fund basic necessities such as wells,health and education for the wider community.
  • makes us the third largest user of fair trade cocoa beans in the UK.
  • gave us the opportunity to donate $AUD 591,506 of capital to the Day Chocolate Company (partly owned by Kuapa Kokoo and now Divine - a world leader in fair trade chocolate).
  • guarantees that no child labour is used in the cocoa farming process
So I think we can safely say - as a company we have helped to address the child trafficking problem in West Africa. But it's not enough, we can do more as individuals to totally eradicate all child labour contained in our chocolate. Here's how....

BE A GOOD SHOPPER
It's so easy. Just always choose fair trade chocolate that's guaranteed not to use cocoa sourced using child labour! Download the Good Chocolate Guide to find out which brands to support.

LOBBY YOUR LOCAL SUPERMARKET
Hand this coupon to the retailer where you buy your favourite chocolate and mention why you are doing it!

LOBBY THE CHOCOLATE MANUFACTURERS
Print and send this letter to the manufacturer of your favourite chocolate c/o The Confectionery Manufacturers of Australasia. Let them know that you believe they have a clear responsibility to actively address the problems!

SPREAD THE WORD

Forward this email to a friend, colleague or family member.

For more on this campaign check out World Vision's Don't Trade Lives website, which includes more information on child trafficking, events and links to activist groups you can join.



Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

05 February 2008

Marula Makes Make-up Fair

4 Members of the Eudafano Women's Cooperative with their harvest of Marula Nuts.

The Body Shop was the first company ever to use Community Trade Marula oil in their make up and now it’s an important ingredient in nearly all of our cosmetics.

Happily, the 6,000 women of the Eudafano Women’s Cooperative (EWC) in Namibia have been able to supply all of our needs. The EWC was established in north central Namibia in 1996 to market oil from the local marula fruit. The EWC helps local women with otherwise limited employment opportunities earn fair wages. It also contributes to regional economic development.

The Eudafano women harvest fruit from wild marula trees and deliver kernels and seeds to the EWC processing factory. Juice and oil are extracted and prepared for local customers and international buyers including The Body Shop. Women now involved in the project report that the benefits to them go beyond money, affording them a sense of independence, competence and confidence. Many women use money earned to educate their children. Community Trade makes such a difference including equality, independence and confidence!

Last year The Body Shop launched a new range of make-up called "Make Me Fabulous". They tell me (because I don't really use cosmetics) the lipsticks, bronzing collections and eye colours makes you feel fabulous. Thus the name I guess. As a guy who can't tell the difference from one cosmetics counter to the next - I think people out there using our make-up should feel fabulous because they are helping some truly beautiful women out of poverty as well as minimising their impact on the environment. Here are the facts:

  • The Make Me Fabulous range uses recycled plastic wherever possible in its packaging.
  • Over 70% of colour product packaging contains post consumer recycled plastic.
  • The range supports Community Trade by using Marula Oil from Namibia in the majority of Make Me Fabulous products.
  • "Marula Oil moisturises and conditions skin"
WOW! What more could you ask for from your make-up?

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager

EWC Factory Image Courtesy: DeBeers

29 January 2008

Fing vs The Dark Side of Cotton

It seems appropriate that this, the first “press release” for fing.com.au should be hosted on The Body Shop Activist. The reason; well frankly without The Body Shop (TBS), Adidem and more particularly the inspiration of Anita Roddick I don’t think Fing would have come about.

My wife Emma works for TBS and over the last few years has learnt so much, not just about retailing but equally as important about how a company can contribute to society, and as many spouses of a TBS employee can testify this will rub off!

Even as I look up for the inspiration to write this piece I am being watched over by Anita, a series of cards celebrating her life looking down from our “inspiration wall”. Fing has grown from Emma’s and my love of t-shirts; I challenge you to think of another product that has achieved such iconic status, is so attainable, has the ability to express so many emotions and yet can look so comfortable in a wide range of environments.

Yep, I love t-shirts!

It became apparent through discussions with friends that we were not alone, everyone it seems has what we have come to call “t-shirt moments”, what also became apparent is that as soon as it came the moment would pass and that flash of inspiration would be lost forever. Then one day last year we had had enough, we decided to somehow create a home for all those lost t-shirt moments. It was then the floodgates opened and the ideas really began to flow.

Personally, I get a kick out of wearing a t-shirt that I designed, but I wanted to give others the opportunity to send their ideas. From there it was a small leap to paying a royalty for other people's designs and donating the royalty to a cause or charity, or designing t-shirts as fundraisers.

We were beginning to see the blueprint for a business which we could truly get passionate about, only one problem we had no way to print t-shirts or no experience in doing so. In Anita’s words:

“To succeed you have to believe in something with such a passion that it becomes a reality”

So we looked for a how. Whether it was fate or luck I can’t say, but after hours, days and weeks we discovered Direct Digital Printing, a new technology which would let us take any digital image whether it be a photo, text, graphics or any combination and transfer the image to fabric. This meant not only could we create t-shirts but also a host of custom products such as cushions, bags, table runners, wall hangings etc. The business was getting tantalisingly closer, but there was still to be another twist to come. We wanted to offer a quality product to our customers so we started looking into blank T Shirts, what we learned was quite shocking...

Cotton has a truly dark side!

Although cotton only occupies about 3% of agricultural land globally, it takes an amazing 50% of all herbicides, pesticides and a cocktail of other chemicals to produce it!

The nature of this intensive farming has an appalling effect on the quality of the land, water, air and people involved in the production. Many of the chemicals are known carcinogens leading to premature death among workers and their families.The land itself eventually becomes so toxic and polluted that it becomes unusable, and the run off enters rivers, water tables and eventually the oceans causing untold damage to people and wildlife on its journey.

There is however a better way; organic farmed cotton. Not only does this eliminate the use of chemicals totally, the rotation of crops also leads to the establishment of habitat for wildlife and -in a lesson Australia certainly needs to learn- cotton can be grown without irrigation as the greater organic content in the soil retains moisture, sufficient to allow dry growth. Naturally yields are lower and therefore the cost is higher.


At Fing we believe (and hope you will too) that as the planet struggles to cope with the demands we place upon it, we begin to understand and appreciate the true cost of an item and not just the price. As we live in the most fortunate of societies we should be prepared to pay a reasonable price, Fing therefore made a choice to use only organic cotton. This adds as much as $7 to the price of our shirts, to us these seems a fair exchange for the peace of mind of knowing what you wear has done no harm. For this reason all our shirts carry the Fing logo.

In closing I would like to thank Adam and the Body Shop team for this opportunity to showcase our business, I thank-you for taking the time to read the piece and hope you will visit the website, and even recommend it to your circle of friends. Emma and I are proud to have come this far and are excited that the ball is now rolling, where Fing goes from here is now beyond our control, but we hope we have established a home for those lost T Shirt moments and to see great designs and we hope that in some small way we can help to further the uptake of organic cotton products. I would like to leave you with a favourite quote from Anita Roddick:

“Get Informed. Get Inspired. Get Outraged. Get Active”

Cheers!
Emma & Jon.









Know More:

22 October 2007

Children's Week

Children from Aceh, Indonesia enjoying a mask making workshop with The Body Shop Australia volunteers in the Children On The Edge Child Friendly Space.

Photo: Kerry Robinson / The Body Shop

Today marks the beginning of Children’s Week. One of its aims is to raise community awareness of children’s right to enjoy childhood.

This is a right we take for granted here in Australia. In developing countries, poverty forces kids to grow up far too quickly. Children simply don't have the luxury of playing or going to school, they have to work to survive.

Worst still, according to UNICEF, an estimated 1.2 million children are being trafficked every year. Because there is a demand for children as cheap labour or for sexual exploitation. Children and their families are often unaware of the dangers of trafficking, believing that better employment and lives lie in other cities or countries.

Defending children's rights is very close to our hearts. In 1990 our founder, Anita Roddick, founded a charity called Children on the Edge (COTE) in response to the Romanian orphanage crisis.

COTE exists for the most vulnerable and marginalised child worldwide, ensuring they are heard and are not invisible, are protected and have their needs met, advocating for all of their rights in accordance with the principles and provisions of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The Body Shop Australia has been selling Tri-Massagers since 2003 and giving all proceeds to the COTE project in Viqueque, East Timor . The massagers have the added bonus of being made by one of our oldest Community Trade partners India.

To celebrate Children's Week I thought it would be great to get some of our amazing staff who have recently returned from volunteering at the COTE Child Friendly Space in Aceh, Indonesia to talk about their experiences, so stay tuned...

Learn More:

Adam Valvasori - Values Manager - The Body Shop

16 October 2007

Sustainability: in the palm oil of our hands

Aerial photo of a palm oil plantation in the middle of a natural forest in Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Flims4Conservation

Yesterday I found myself at a meeting convened by World Vision and attended by several giants of the retail world like the Coles Group, Independent Grocers Association, Unilever, The Australian Food Grocery Council as well as an advocate from Friends Of the Earth. Sounds weird but the group had actually come together to hear from us, or more specifically: Rikke Netterstrom, The Body Shop International’s Ethical Policy Manager and a member of the international Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). We were discussing ways to bring sustainable palm oil to the Australian marketplace.

As the second most used vegetable oil in the world, palm oil is responsible for the livelihood of millions of people, however it’s a crop that’s being blamed for:

  • massive deforestation
  • destroying fragile ecosystems
  • threatening the extinction of wildlife like orangutans, asian elephants, sun bears, clouded leopards, Sumatran tigers and hornbills
  • sever human rights and worker abuses of indigenous people living in poverty
  • conflict over land rights disputes in Indonesia

Vanilla is a rescued Bornean orangutan. Her mother was killed and her forest habitat is now replaced by palm oil. Photo: Flims4Conservation

The Minister for the Environment, Malcolm Turnbull, has being looking at palm oil as a possible alternate energy source in Australia. In a media statement released 8/10/07 he warned:

“If palm oil is produced in areas which had previously been cleared for agriculture, biodiesel based on that palm oil does have a considerable reduction in CO2 emissions compared to petroleum. However if the land is cleared of rainforest or, worse still, forested peatland is cleared, the CO2 emissions attributed to that palm oil are in fact greater than petroleum.”

He also stated the Government is looking at local measures to ensure our palm oil imports are sustainable, including requiring certification with the RSO. Mr Turnbull also said co-ordinated international action is essential. Maybe that's why all those big players were at the table?

Pursuing sustainable palm oil would mean win:win:win for the farmers, the environment and the companies that use it. The limited size of the world's sustainable palm oil supply creates an added complexity, however I'm sure that where there's demand, supply will follow.

The great news is we have already changed our entire soap range to be manufactured using palm oil from one of the world’s leading sustainable, organic and fair trade certified plantations, owned by Daabon Organic in Colombia.

This is a really important global issue that’s flying under the radar at the moment even though it has the potential to devastate unique ecosystems in our own region. The Body Shop Australia is proud to continue championing the sustainable palm oil issue locally and play its part to help bring all sectors of the Australian community together to achieve the best outcome for our planet.

More:


Polly Caldow – Chief Executive – The Body Shop


10 October 2007

Soap Stops Violence

In Fight Club they made soap to finance violence and mayhem. Today I had the privilege to observe the opposite - a dedicated panel deciding how the proceeds of 30,816 Daisy Soaps* will be used to prevent Domestic Violence.

The panel included: passionate staff from The Body Shop, experts from Domestic Violence community organisations such as C.A.S.A House and WESNET, and Angela Barker, herself a survivor of domestic violence. Angela's story has helped warn thousands of students through the government's 'Australia Says No' campaign documentary.

The Body Shop was thrilled to receive over 90 applications. In the end, twelve different organisations around Australia were selected to receive grants of between $1,000 and $10,000, each had great ideas to raise awareness to prevent domestic violence or help victims.

So if you're interested in how your soap has helped protect young Australians from domestic violence stay tuned... and the winning organisations and their proposals will be published here soon.

* The Daisy Soaps had the added benefit of containing our Community Trade ingredient - Shea Butter which is fairly traded from the Tungteiya Women’s Group in Ghana.

- Adam Valvasori - Values Manager - The Body Shop