
Let’s Get Ireland To 1st Place In ‘World Fairtrade Challenge’
Sat May 14 2016

Let’s Get Ireland To 1st Place In ‘World Fairtrade Challenge’
Ireland Is Currently Positioned In 3rd Place In The World Fairtrade Challenge Which Takes Place This Weekend!
Ireland is currently positioned in 3rd place behind Finland and Belgium, in the World Fairtrade Challenge, which takes place this weekend, 13-15 May.
Fairtrade Ireland is sending out a call to arms, and asking the nation’s coffee lovers to get together to drink a record amount of Fairtrade coffee and show their support for farmers hit by climate change this weekend…and push Ireland up to the number one spot on the leader board!
To take part, coffee lovers can log on and register their coffee break on the website (https://www.fairtradechallenge.org/ie/home/), invite as many people as they can, and challenge others to take part. It is also possible to take part in the World Fairtrade Challengeby having a cup of coffee in your local Insomnia Coffee Company as all the cups of coffee served will be registered automatically!
Climate change affects millions of coffee farmers who are among the hardest hit by extreme weather, droughts, floods and crop disease. Unpredictable weather patterns make it challenging for them to grow and harvest their crop, as coffee plants are extremely sensitive to changes in temperature. In Latin America increased rainfall, humidity and higher temperatures have allowed the leaf rust disease to spread rapidly, leaving farmers no choice but to cut down acres of coffee farms.
This means that coffee farmers around the world struggle to grow and sell enough coffee to sustain themselves and their families. “There is a chain on Earth that starts at the bottom where producers are. They are the ones who suffer the consequences of climate change, the ones who get the least help, and carry all of the burden. It’s not fair.” says Bayardo Betanco of PRODECOOP Fairtrade Coffee Cooperative in Nicaragua.
More than 800,000 coffee farmers are part of the Fairtrade system in 30 countries. Fairtrade supports them by enabling access to technical knowledge and funds which they can use to successfully adapt to, and mitigate against, the worst effects of climate change. In 2013–14, coffee farmers worldwide received a total Fairtrade Premium, the extra money they get in addition to the minimum price when selling their coffee on Fairtrade terms, equivalent to more than 49 million Euros. They can, for example, use the Fairtrade Premium to invest in their farms or in training to improve their farming practices. Access to technical knowledge means they can take steps to change the way they farm so that they can adapt to and mitigate the impacts of climate change.
With the World Fairtrade Challenge millions of coffee lovers around the world can raise their cup to support small-scale coffee farmers. The goal is to achieve a record number of cups of Fairtrade coffee drunk within three days and to send a powerful message that small-scale coffee farmers have global support for their fight against climate change.
For more information on any of the activities taking place nationwide, or to find out more information on how to become a Fairtrade Ambassador, simply log on to www.fairtrade.ie. Become a fan on www.facebook.com/FairtradeIreland, follow the conversation on @Fairtrade_ie