
Valentines Day is just around the corner and we will all be out buying chocolate, flowers, and other gifts for friends and loved ones. But do you know where your chocolate came from? Global Exchange has the below article talking about the importance of giving Fair Trade Certified Chocolate this V-Day.
Yes, it is long but well worth the few minutes that it takes...
ARTICLE: The Bitter Truth About Chocolate by: Tex Dworkin, February 2007 Global Exchange Fair Trade Online Store Website: www.globalexchangestore.org
THE BITTER TRUTH ABOUT CHOCOLATE
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Hershey's kiss, and yet a celebration is hardly in order. Why? Because with each bite, we are reminded that most chocolate sold in the U.S. comes from cocoa farms where farmers work in unsafe conditions, receive below poverty wages, many of them children under 14 years old who are forced to work and denied education.
With another Valentine's Day approaching, happy couples will wine and dine, showering each other with flowers, jewelry, and chocolate. Unfortunately, knowing where most chocolate comes from makes it hard to swallow!
It's 2007, and people are finally starting to question where the products they buy are made and whether the workers who made them were treated fairly. Sweatshop-free apparel is becoming hip, and Fair Trade coffee is at least a blip on the map. Yet chocolate is still being made with cocoa beans harvested by children in Africa working in unsafe conditions, while the average consumer has no idea this is going on.
The truth behind chocolate is not-so-sweet. The Ivory Coast is the world's largest cocoa producer, providing 43% of the world's cocoa. And yet, in 2001 the U.S. State Department reported child slavery on many cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast. A 2002 report from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture about cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast and other African countries estimated there were 284,000 children working on cocoa farms in hazardous conditions. U.S. chocolate manufacturers have claimed they are not responsible for the conditions on cocoa plantations since they don't own them.
Chocolate comes from cocoa, and the cocoa supply is controlled by a small number of companies worldwide that are allowed to function with limited accountability. Hershey's and M&M/Mars alone control two-thirds of the $13 billion U.S. chocolate candy market. The result? An industry marred with child slavery, unsafe working conditions and a cycle of poverty with no end in sight for cocoa farmers. Chocolate companies are not held accountable for sourcing practices, and despite their knowledge about the travesties that occur on cocoa farms, they lack the will to change.
The U.S. chocolate industry has faced multiple deadlines requiring new protocol, and yet little has changed. Under pressure from Congress, in the Harken-Engel Protocol, the U.S. chocolate industry agreed to voluntarily take steps to end child slavery on cocoa farms by July of 2005. This deadline has since passed, and the chocolate industry has failed to comply with the terms of this agreement.
So in July 2005, International Labor Rights Fund filed suit against Nestlé in Federal District Court on behalf of a class of children who were trafficked from Mali into the Ivory Coast and forced to work twelve to fourteen hours a day with no pay, little food and sleep, and frequent beatings. What was Nestlé's response to court questioning? "We are only buyers of a product.”
There are a plethora of examples of company leaders who were publicly criticized for selling clothing lines manufactured by sweatshop workers, Kathy Lee Gifford and designer Jessica McClintock to name a few. Chocolate companies should be held accountable for the conditions of cocoa producers they buy from.
Consumers can hold chocolate companies accountable by choosing only Fair Trade Certified chocolate. It's easy to do. Simply look for TransFair USA's Fair Trade logo on the package. TransFair is the only third-party certifier of Fair Trade products in the U.S. Fair Trade Certified chocolate ensures that no forced or abusive child labor was used. If consumer demand for Fair Trade chocolate increases, perhaps chocolate companies will alter their practices. Thus, buying Fair Trade chocolate can put an end to the disastrous cycle of poverty and child endangerment.
It is estimated that Fair Trade chocolate represents less than 1% of the world's roughly $60 billion chocolate market. According to the Chocolate Manufacturers Association and National Confectioners Association, in 2005 more than 36 million heart-shaped boxes of chocolate were sold for Valentine's Day. How many hours of exploited child labor went into those boxes of chocolate?
So what's a chocolate lover to do? Choose Fair Trade chocolate this Valentine's Day, a sweet deal for loved ones and cocoa farmers. If you click the banner above (or below), you can buy Fair Trade Certified V-day gifts that will not only be a huge hit with your loved one, but will also help a a child in a poverty stricken country.
So many times we hear about Fair Trade Certified coffess but there are many other things that you can purchase through this network. Take a look around and remember to buy Fair Trade this V-day season.

..be bold |
Comments on "V-Day is Coming - Do you know where your chocolate comes from?"
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Anonymous said ... (2/06/2007 08:01:00 AM) :
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Jason Duncan said ... (2/08/2007 05:42:00 AM) :
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Tim said ... (2/09/2007 08:22:00 AM) :
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TOMAS said ... (2/11/2007 11:17:00 PM) :
post a commentAn interesting point of view, but that there are a variety of activities underway to improve the lives of cocoa farming families, enhance family income and provide education for adults and children alike. To learn more about specfic programs, visit www.worldocoafoundation.org. Fair trade is one option, but there are many organizations, both private and government, that are working together on programs that help cocoa farming communities.
Thank you for bring this up. I agree and would say that the more programs we have to help these farmers and families in these regions the better.
While I support Fair Trade labeling, my main concern is for the people. Fair Trade is not perfect, but it is what we have at the moment.
I would love to see all of these groups come together to form a very powerful organization that can really do good.
Thanks again for commenting.
..be bold
Jason: Thanks for this great post!
The World Cocoa Foundation is an organization largely made up of chocolate companies which continue to source from West African cocoa farms using child labor. They have been involved with the Cocoa Protocol which is a failed industry agreement which promised to eliminate the worst forms of child labor and forced labor from West African cocoa farms by July 2005. Since the Protocol failed to meets its goal, the International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF) filed a lawsuit against Nestle, Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland (all WCF Member Companies) on behalf of a class of Malian children who were trafficked into the Ivory Coast and forced to work on cocoa farms. For a critique of these industry initiatives please read this: http://www.laborrights.org/projects/childlab/CocoaProtocolUpdate101906.pdf and visit the ILRF website: www.laborrights.org. You can also send a letter to Nestle here: http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/Nestle07.
Hey Jason, thanks for posting this. I've seen the "Fair Trade" label mentioned in several places but never had a chance to look into it - and now I know.