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New Fair Trade Products & Unique Partnerships With Faith-Based Organizations Help Farmers During Tough Times
CANTON,
MA—March 6th, 2003—Equal Exchange, the nation's leading fair trade
coffee company, reports that the company's 2002 sales revenue grew 34%
over 2001, reaching a record $10,400,000. Almost half of the growth for
the 17 year old company resulted from their rapidly expanding
Interfaith Program - partnerships with faith-based organizations such
as Lutheran World Relief, United Methodist Committee on Relief, and the
Presbyterian Church USA. Equal Exchange's Interfaith Program sales
alone were $1,700,000 in 2002, an increase of 95% over 2001. Company
sales across all sectors were also boosted by a new 12 oz. packaged
product line, new coffees such as Love Buzz, Espresso Euphoria, Kafe
Haiti and especially by their new Fair Trade Certified™, organic hot
cocoa mix, whose sales exceeded projections.
Equal
Exchange's Interfaith Program is a unique system of collaborations with
national faith-based organizations that is built upon their shared
interest in addressing the underlying causes of rural poverty in
developing nations. Both Equal Exchange and the partnering
organizations believe a key to enabling small-scale farmers to break
the cycle of poverty is to address basic inequities in international
trading relations. Equal Exchange works with its partners to develop
educational materials for use in the congregations that address the
social and environmental concerns around the coffee and cocoa trades.
The company also makes available a customer service system created from
the ground up exclusively for handling the orders, and educational
needs, of faith-based communities.
By the end of
2002 Equal Exchange had received orders from 3,400 churches and had
formal partnerships with six groups: Lutheran World Relief, United
Methodist Committee on Relief, the Presbyterian Church USA, the
Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, the American Friends Service
Committee and the Church of the Brethren.
Another
area of growth for Equal Exchange was its expanded sales to mainstream
supermarkets. Some of these sales were due to the company's expanded
line of 21 different 12 oz. packaged coffees. During 2002 the company
initiated new sales to Stop and Shop supermarkets in Connecticut and
Massachusetts, Albertsons in Oregon and Washington, and expanded its
sales to Shaw's supermarkets throughout New England.
2003
sales to retailers in all sectors are expected to show strong continued
growth thanks to Equal Exchange's recent entry to United Natural Foods
Western distribution system.
Sales for the new
organic, Fair Trade Certified™ hot cocoa mix Equal Exchange introduced
in the fall exceeded projections and proved to be popular with all
sectors. Sales for 2003 are projected to surpass $1,000,000.
Thanks
to the substantial increase in sales Equal Exchange was able to support
- via fair trade purchasing - more small farmer co-ops (29), in more
sectors (5), in more countries (14), than ever before. Equal Exchange
estimates its purchases generated $1,200,000 in extra income above what
farmers would have received under normal market conditions. The extra
income comes at a critical time as the world market price for coffee
has been at or near record lows since 2001, and has created wide-spread
destitution, hunger and migration out of rural areas.
Equal
Exchange, the pioneer and U.S. market leader in fair trade coffee since
1986, is a full service provider of high quality, organic coffee, tea
and hot cocoa to supermarkets, cafés, and places of worship across
North America. 100% of Equal Exchange products are fairly traded,
benefiting 29 small farmer cooperatives in 14 countries around the
world. In keeping with its business philosophy Equal Exchange is a
worker cooperative, owned and controlled by its employees.
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