----- forwarded message -----
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2002 16:49:48 -0800
From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Starbucks braces for another round with eco-protests

Starbucks braces for another round with eco-protests

<http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/14550/story.htm>

Story by Chris Stetkiewicz
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
USA: February 15, 2002

SEATTLE - Facing mounting pressure from protest groups, Starbucks Corp. 
this week affirmed its commitment to environmentally friendly products and 
fair wages for coffee farmers.

Protesters will hand out fliers at Starbucks stores in six countries, 
including the United States, late this month and amass outside Starbucks' 
February 26 annual meeting for a second straight year to demand 
hormone-free milk and a stronger commitment to farmers.

"Starbucks is a market leader. They are an icon associated with the 
industry and if they start to change their practices it could have a ripple 
effect," said Simon Harris, protest organizer for the Organic Consumers 
Association (OCA).

Seattle-based Starbucks buys just one percent of the world's coffee output 
but its 5,000-plus cafes make it an easy target for opponents of 
genetically modified foods-which are not present in Starbucks coffee and 
tea-and other activists.

Starbucks now offers organic cow's milk and soy milk in many cafes and last 
November agreed to buy 1 million pounds (455,000 kg) of "fair trade" coffee 
over 12 to 18 months, guaranteeing at least $1.26 per pound to small 
farmers hammered by low prices and a worldwide coffee glut.

Critics say that's a drop in the bucket, with some 165 million pounds (75 
million kg) of fair trade beans produced each year, and total world coffee 
supply near 15 billion pounds (6.6 billion kg).

"We certainly commend them for taking the first step," Harris told Reuters 
by telephone. "But there is a lot more room to produce fair trade coffee, 
or to take steps to certify that suppliers are paying farmers the fair
price."

Starbucks has also committed to brewing fair trade coffee once a month in 
many of its cafes, though some insiders quietly complain about the uneven 
quality. Protesters want to see that brew once a week.

Starbucks Chief Executive Orin Smith shot back that the OCA was spreading 
"inaccurate" and "grossly misleading" information that minimized Starbucks' 
progress on these issues.

"They have also publicly stated that Starbucks is a socially responsible 
company and have targeted us only to generate publicity," Smith said in a 
statement released to Reuters.

Starbucks noted it buys more than half its beans directly from farms or 
co-ops, eliminating markups by middlemen and thus maximizing payments to 
farmers.

Organic milk is more difficult to buy and more expensive, Starbucks said, 
and customers have shown little appetite for it. Still, the company 
promised to keep offering milk without bovine growth hormones for the 
foreseeable future.

"We estimate that about 20 percent of all the milk Starbucks purchases in 
North America is from cows not treated with (hormones)," Starbucks said. 
"As we identify additional qualified suppliers of milk that meet these 
standards, we will convert to these sources as long as it is financially 
feasible for Starbucks to do so."

The latest protests are the fourth in a series that began at last year's 
Starbucks shareholders meeting in Seattle and OCA organizers, who claim 
some 250,000 members, say they are growing in size.

Organizers also say they plan to pressure the much larger roasters of 
coffee brands that blanket supermarket shelves, including Procter & Gamble 
Co. , which owns Folgers Coffee Co. and Millstone Coffee, Inc.
P&G last month announced plans to help small farmers in Latin America 
produce better quality coffee worth more money and to develop economic 
options besides coffee.

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