Published 05-25-07
Submitted by Rainforest Alliance
May 25, 2007- Unilever, the world's largest tea company, has announced plans to source its entire tea supply sustainably, starting with the certification of its tea producers in East Africa, to Rainforest Alliance standards.
The news also signals the Rainforest Alliance's move into certifying tea farms in addition to its long established programs in coffee, cocoa, bananas and other crops; sustainable forestry; and tourism.
Speaking at the launch of the new partnership, Rainforest Alliance executive director Tensie Whelan commended Unilever on its long-term commitment to sustainability. "We are delighted to be working with a company that understands the value of putting sustainability at the heart of its business," Whelan said. "By bringing Rainforest Alliance certification to its tea supply, Unilever has taken an unprecendented step that could eventually benefit millions of tea growers globally."
Rainforest Alliance certification involves a holistic approach "“ treating environment, ethics and economics equally. To meet the standards, farmers must commit to continuous improvements in worker welfare, farm management and environmental protection. Farmers learn how to improve their productivity and reduce costs by reducing pesticide use, eliminating waste and introducing better farming techniques. Workers earn decent wages and have access to good housing, education and healthcare. And the environment on which these farmers depend is protected.
"This decision will transform the tea industry, which has been suffering for many years from oversupply and underperformance," said Unilever CEO Patrick Cescau. "It will not be achieved overnight, but we are committed to doing it because we believe it is the right thing to do for the people who drink our tea, the people along the entire length of our supply chain and for our business."
The program of conversion starts immediately with Unilever’s own tea estate in Kericho, Kenya, the first to be audited. Other tea farms in Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Indonesia, India, Argentina and Sri Lanka will follow, with the potential of eventually improving the livelihoods of around 2 million people across three continents.
The focus on Africa also strengthens the Rainforest Alliance’s growing presence on the continent. Already coffee farms in Ethiopia and cocoa and banana farms in Côte D’Ivoire are benefiting from Rainforest Alliance certification.
The first certified tea will be made available to restaurants and the catering trade in Europe from August 2007. It will be quickly followed by Lipton, the world’s best-selling tea brand, and PG Tips, the UK’s No.1 tea. The company aims to have all Lipton Yellow Label and PG Tips tea bags sold in Western Europe certified by 2010 and all Lipton tea bags sold globally by 2015.
One aim of the certification program is to enable growers to obtain higher prices for their tea, raising their incomes and enabling them to achieve a better quality of life and standard of living on a sustainable basis. Unilever expects that Rainforest Alliance CertifiedTM tea will command prices 10 to 15 percent higher than current average prices paid at auction and estimates that farmers will receive around $2.69 million (€2 million) more for their tea by 2010 and around $6.71 million (€5 million) more by 2015.
Editors' Notes:
The Rainforest Alliance is an independent, international nonprofit NGO that works with individuals, companies and communities whose livelihoods depend on the land to reduce environmental impacts and increase social and economic benefits. The Rainforest Alliance pioneered the practice of setting standards and certifying well-managed forests nearly 20 years ago, and developed comprehensive principles and standards for sustainable agriculture shortly thereafter. For more information, visit www.rainforest-alliance.org.
Unilever is the one of the world's largest consumer goods companies with more than 400 brands, including Dove, OMO, Ben & Jerry’s, Flora/Becel and Knorr. It is the world’s largest purchaser of black tea, currently buying around 12 percent of the world’s supply. Its major tea brands are Lipton, which has been producing tea for more than 100 years, and PG Tips, which is sold in the UK.
In 2007, the Rainforest Alliance has announced new partnerships with McDonald's UK (the first major UK retailer to source 100 percent Rainforest Alliance Certified coffee, 1.8 million pounds in 2007), Holiday Inn hotels in the US (1,000 hotels, 55,000 cups of Rainforest Alliance Certified coffee daily), Whole Foods (carrying Rainforest Alliance Certified coffee, bananas and chocolate at Whole Foods Market stores throughout the US and Canada), Mars, Inc. (establishing best sustainability practices for West African cocoa growers), Scholastic Books (printing the record 12 million copy US print run of the last "Harry Potter" sequel on some 22 million pounds of Forest Stewardship Council certified paper "“ the largest single FSC paper purchase in history), and even Spain's premier art museum the Prado (building its new extension with 70 percent FSC-certified wood).
The Rainforest Alliance is an international nonprofit organization that works around the world to conserve forests and natural resources while advancing sustainable livelihoods in agriculture, forestry and tourism.
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