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Tell Starbucks to Honor Their Commitments to Coffee Farmers

Target: Jim Donald, Starbucks CEO
Sponsored by: Oxfam America
Each year, coffee companies make billions of dollars. Starbucks alone earned almost $5.8 billion in net revenues during the first three quarters of 2006.

Yet, for every cup of coffee Starbucks sells, poor farmers in coffee-growing countries like Ethiopia earn only about $.03. Even worse, while Ethiopian farmers grow some of the finest name-brand coffees in the world – think Harar, Yirgacheffe, and Sidamo – they don't see the premium profits those names command among consumers.

With as many as 15 million Ethiopians dependent on coffee, Ethiopia wants to get its farmers more of what they deserve. The country's government has asked Starbucks to sign a licensing agreement that will allow Ethiopia to control the names of its coffee. That way, Ethiopia can help determine an export price that makes sure farmers see a larger share of the profits enabling them to feed their children, send them to school and get them better healthcare.

Ask Starbucks to sign the agreement giving Ethiopian farmers their fair share of coffee profits.
deadline: 10-25-2007
goal: 10,000
 

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This petition is now closed.

Success! Starbucks and Ethiopia have finalized an agreement that ends their trademark dispute and brings both sides together in partnership to help Ethiopian farmers. This agreement has the potential to give these farmers a fair share of the profits for their world-renowned coffees.

Congratulations! Keep up the good work!



Dear Jim Donald:

As a Starbucks customer, I'm concerned about your opposition to Ethiopia's right to own its coffee names. I am asking Starbucks to honor its commitment to farmers by signing an agreement with Ethiopia that recognizes the country's rights to the names of its coffees. If Starbucks and other companies sign such agreements, estimates suggest that Ethiopian's could see up to $88 million of extra income a year.

[Your comment]

Ethiopia ranks among the poorest countries in the world; more than 75 percent of its population lives on less than $1 per day. About 15 million people in Ethiopia depend on coffee to make a living, the majority of them growing their crop on small plots of about two and a half acres.

Meanwhile, coffee lovers pay up to $26 per pound for fine Ethiopian coffees because they're willing to pay for high quality and great taste. Ethiopian farmers, however, often earn just 5-10 percent of the retail value.

With this disparity in mind, the Ethiopian government launched a project to get legal ownership of its fine coffee names-Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, and Harar. By owning the names, Ethiopia will be able to occupy a stronger negotiating position with foreign buyers, capture a larger share of the market value associated with those names, and protect the reputations of its brand names. In a country with a per capita income of around $100 per year, that amount of money could have a profound impact on the lives of millions of Ethiopians.

As you know, Ethiopia approached Starbucks more than a year ago asking the company to lead by example and to discuss an agreement that would acknowledge Ethiopia's ownership of these names. So far, Starbucks has refused to sign the agreement, or even talk seriously about it with the Ethiopian government.

I want to see Starbucks do the right thing by the poor farmers who grow its coffee. I urge you to sign the licensing agreement and recognize Ethiopia's rightful ownership of its coffee names.

Sincerely,

[Your name]
[Address]
We signed the “Tell Starbucks to Honor Their Commitments to Coffee Farmers” petition!
# 21,850:
8:32 pm PST, Nov 20, T Lindsey, California
# 21,849:
8:32 pm PST, Nov 20, Name not displayed, Maryland
The honorable thing to do is to give these farmers a higher percentage of the record profits for THEIR PRODUCT. They work for it, they earn it, and there are more than enough profits to go around for everyone involved. Starbucks - step up now and do what is right!
# 21,848:
8:24 pm PST, Nov 20, Name not displayed, Utah
# 21,847:
8:12 pm PST, Nov 20, Name not displayed, Oklahoma
# 21,846:
8:07 pm PST, Nov 20, Linda Fox, California
You treat your employees very fairly. These farmers deserve the same.
# 21,845:
8:06 pm PST, Nov 20, Christine Reed, Texas
# 21,844:
8:06 pm PST, Nov 20, Tony Davila, California
# 21,843:
7:59 pm PST, Nov 20, Carrie Burrows, California
# 21,842:
7:58 pm PST, Nov 20, Saffron Catcrazzy, Indiana
# 21,841:
7:58 pm PST, Nov 20, Christina Tyler, Iowa
# 21,840:
7:56 pm PST, Nov 20, Carol Martin, Texas
You should share your profits. It is wrong for you to get rich while you cheat the Ethiopian farmers.
# 21,838:
7:45 pm PST, Nov 20, Denise Ruch, New Jersey
# 21,837:
7:39 pm PST, Nov 20, Eileen Bowen, New York
# 21,836:
7:37 pm PST, Nov 20, Name not displayed, Florida
# 21,835:
7:20 pm PST, Nov 20, Nancy Wise, Texas
You MUST do what is fair to other humans! You have a classy business but hearing this really reduces you greatly. If you came out and declared that you have changed your methods, your ratings would skyrocket!! Try it and see what happens. I dare you!
# 21,834:
7:18 pm PST, Nov 20, Amy Sigurdson, Ohio
# 21,833:
7:17 pm PST, Nov 20, Juliana Nascimento B Kolevski, Australia
Have some compassion for people that didn't have the same opportunity you had. It is not fair what you are doing.Be useful and give these people what they deserve.
# 21,832:
7:13 pm PST, Nov 20, Moira McGuinness, Virginia
# 21,831:
7:13 pm PST, Nov 20, Hadas Rin, California
I urge you to reconsider your policies and to implement fairness, the right thing to do, so please do it right.
# 21,830:
7:09 pm PST, Nov 20, Munirah Bomani, New Jersey
Give the people their due rights...Stop exploiting them and profitting off slave labor.
# 21,829:
6:53 pm PST, Nov 20, Rachel Cullman-Clark, Kentucky
I must get a cup of your coffee 3-4 times each week, besides brewing it at home. The whole time thinking that your company did not participate in the same un fair labor practices that seem rampant nowadays. Now, I find out that I am sadly mistaken. You should be ashamed, don't say that you "support" fair labor practices when in fact you are practicing the opposite. Your coffee used to be the best in my mind, now there is a distinct bitter after taste that I can't get out of my mouth. The only solution is purchasing a recognized fair trade coffee. I am very dissapointed in your company, I thaught you were different. I guess it comes down to how you can make a few extra pennies---like you really need it.
# 21,828:
6:49 pm PST, Nov 20, Zayed Redda, Virginia
# 21,827:
6:46 pm PST, Nov 20, Rhonda Wetmore-Messenger, Florida
# 21,826:
6:43 pm PST, Nov 20, Helen Drar, Iowa
If these peoples keep on gaining nothing, it's not the farmers that are suffered from the consequencies but starback's also.
# 21,825:
6:38 pm PST, Nov 20, Albertina Washington, California
Starbucks, please give these poor farmers a fair profit, they need fair treatment. Thank you
# 21,824:
6:38 pm PST, Nov 20, Rebecca Stroud, Minnesota
# 21,823:
6:35 pm PST, Nov 20, Sharon Brostrom, California
I lived in Ethiopia for 4 years and I know how important a fair wage is to the people of that country. Please use your head and give a fair wage to these hard working people. It is only human decency.
# 21,822:
6:33 pm PST, Nov 20, Kim Gei9er, Ohio
# 21,821:
6:32 pm PST, Nov 20, Donna Deiss, California
# 21,820:
6:29 pm PST, Nov 20, Linda Pettigrew, Washington
# 21,819:
6:26 pm PST, Nov 20, Ann Baker, California
shameful - get it together Starbucks
# 21,818:
6:19 pm PST, Nov 20, Name not displayed, California
# 21,817:
6:03 pm PST, Nov 20, Sarah Schaub, California
I will NEVER set foot in a Starbucks again...and just THINK of all the money I'm going to save. Your karma sucks, Starbucks...and so do you.
# 21,816:
5:57 pm PST, Nov 20, Julian Furman, Illinois
# 21,815:
5:47 pm PST, Nov 20, Mark Davis, Colorado
# 21,814:
5:43 pm PST, Nov 20, Jill and Jim Henke, Pennsylvania
As loyal customers, visiting Starbucks at least twice a day, my husband and I are really disappointed that you are not actually dealing with "Fair Trade Coffee". According to the pamphlets in your stores, this is a claim you make. We will certainly stop buying our coffee, gifts, grounds, music, mugs, etc. at our Starbucks and will try to convince our university to stop selling Starbucks products as well, if you don't give coffee growers in underdeveloped countries like Ethiopia a fair shake. We hope to see your policies concerning fair trade change ASAP.
# 21,813:
5:40 pm PST, Nov 20, Kris Unger, Virginia
# 21,812:
5:36 pm PST, Nov 20, Jenny Beck, Virginia
# 21,811:
5:32 pm PST, Nov 20, Robyn Zymowski, Texas
# 21,810:
5:24 pm PST, Nov 20, John Stevens, California
# 21,809:
5:11 pm PST, Nov 20, Teri Travis, Washington
# 21,808:
5:10 pm PST, Nov 20, Tresa Fowler, Oklahoma
# 21,807:
5:10 pm PST, Nov 20, Nilda Esteban, California
# 21,806:
5:00 pm PST, Nov 20, Cheryl Clayton, Florida
# 21,805:
4:58 pm PST, Nov 20, Tom Gray, Vermont
# 21,804:
4:58 pm PST, Nov 20, Susan Quinones, Ohio
As a stockholder in Starbuck's,I thought I was making an investment in a socially responsible company. How disappointing to hear about this discrepancy. Please demonstrate true responsibility and make this coffee product "fair".
# 21,803:
4:56 pm PST, Nov 20, Melinda Maysonet, New Jersey
# 21,802:
4:56 pm PST, Nov 20, Paul Swartzel, Iowa
# 21,801:
4:47 pm PST, Nov 20, P. Vargas, Maryland
Please give a share of your profits. THe farmer workers are earning too little for their great efforts.
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