Is it actually possible to find a good shot?
Moderators: GreenBean, Gouezeri, bruceb, CakeBoy
by phil » Thu May 13, 2004 1:45 pm
Following our recent discussions on Fair Trade (so called
) this comes up:
BBC News Article on Oxfam plans to open up "fair trade" coffee shops
I've not read the article in detail yet - I rushed over here to post the link.
Comments?
La Spaziale Spazio 2 group semi-auto
La Spaziale Lusso grinder (espresso),
Macap MC4 shop grinder (brewed coffee)
Three Thor tampers
Two Hottops, first since Feb 2003
No partridge, no pear tree either
Conas, Zassenhaus hand grinder....
-
phil
- Founder Member
-
- Posts: 2321
- Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2003 12:05 pm
- Location: Swindon, UK
-
by mattmills » Thu May 13, 2004 2:13 pm
I am not too happy with it. Possibly if Fairtrade coffee was the answer to the problems facing the industry i would say yes, but all this will do is to continue to damage the rest of the industry without addressing the problems.
It is a terrible things when a small a,outn of information becomes dangerous
-
mattmills
-
- Posts: 249
- Joined: Tue May 11, 2004 8:16 am
- Location: Bogota (Colombia)
by Steve » Thu May 13, 2004 3:34 pm
<----------- <reachs for soapbox, before mrs Eeffoc pulls it away>
-
Steve
- Founder Member
-
- Posts: 3442
- Joined: Fri Aug 22, 2003 5:58 pm
- Location: Stafford UK
by mnemonix » Thu May 13, 2004 9:06 pm
I heard about it on radio 4 this morning... I'm not sure it's actually Fairtrade is it ? I thought Oxfam had established a 'relationship' with a specific cooperative in Honduras so it was more of a joint business venture. Isn't most of the profit made on coffee at the final point of sale ? This might actually give a share of that back to growers who have invested a stake in that point of sale, which will succeed or fail to some extent based on its quality. Well it's potentially a different model to the existing exploitation/fairtade divide.
Chris.
-
mnemonix
-
- Posts: 176
- Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2003 11:03 pm
- Location: Nottingham
by ianboughton » Wed Jun 09, 2004 5:49 pm
It is Fairtrade labelled. The roaster is Matthew Algie. The blend is Ethiopia/Honduras/Indonesia, and David Williamson (Algie) says these are the three best Fairtrades he'sfound in seven years' looking. Haven'tasted it yet, I'm afraid!
-IanB
-
ianboughton
-
- Posts: 104
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2004 12:05 pm
- Location: Cornwall
-
Return to Places to drink coffee
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 27 guests