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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
10.26.2006 - 11:53pm ET
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CSR News from:
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News Category:
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Oxfam Responds to National Coffee Association and Starbucks
Says the coffee giant can do much better by Ethiopian farmers
(CSRwire) In response to Oxfam's announcement that global coffee giant
Starbucks has opposed a plan by Ethiopia to gain more control over its
coffee trade, the company claimed that it has never filed an opposition to
the Ethiopian government's trademark applications, nor claimed ownership to
any names used to describe the origin of its coffees.
Oxfam disputes the Starbucks claim maintaining that Starbucks did prompt
the National Coffee Association (NCA), of which it is a leading member, to
file an opposition to the applications, which is the reason the US Patent
and Trademark Office (USPTO) gave for rejecting them. At a meeting held
this past July at the Ethiopian Embassy in Washington, Embassy staff and
advisers met with the NCA president to discuss a letter of protest filed
against Ethiopia's trademark applications. Ethiopian Embassy staff asked
the NCA President what had prompted the NCA to file the opposition after
more than year of silence on the issue. The NCA President responded that
Starbucks had just brought it to the NCA's attention.
Oxfam says that it is disingenuous for Starbucks to claim they were not
responsible for the application being blocked. Ethiopian Embassy staff
and Ron Layton of Light Years IP, a Washington DC-based intellectual
property rights organization that is helping to advise the Ethiopian
government, have gone on record with this.
Starbucks has also claimed that its investment in social development
projects and micro-finance initiatives in coffee growing regions has been
recognized for its leadership within the industry.
While Starbucks has taken some positive initial steps in this area, Oxfam
thinks the company can do much better. As a company that prides itself in
such efforts, it is unclear why Starbucks would oppose Ethiopia's efforts
to help its farmers realize a greater portion of the value their coffee
commands on the international market
Intellectual property ownership makes up a huge proportion of the total
value of world trade but rich countries and businesses capture most of
this. Ethiopia, the birthplace of coffee, and one of the poorest countries
in the world, is trying to assert its rights and capture more value from
its product. It should be helped, not hindered.
Oxfam continues to call on Starbucks to show leadership to other coffee
companies by immediately recognizing Ethiopia's rights in this case and
signing the licensing agreement that Ethiopia presented to the company in
September, recognizing the country's rightful ownership of its coffee
names.
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Helen
2006-10-27 08:48:07
If you have questions on this issue, please visit:
www.oxfamamerica.org/starbucks.
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