Archive for the ‘Nestle’ Category

Mom Mouths Off at Child Slave Practices of Chocolate Giants

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Convinced that moms can change the world, this wife-mother-advocate takes a bold stance against corporate chocolate makers who use child slave labor to produce their chocolate confections. Courtney wants the rest of the world to take action too:

Here’s a little history: There are roughly 280,000 children working on cocoa farms in west Africa, with about 200,000 of those working in The Ivory Coast. A substantial number of those children have been trafficked from other African countries. The work these children perform is categorized as “dangerous” and they are forced to work long hours while being denied an education. The cocoa industry became aware of this issue about 10 years ago and even ratified an agreement in 2001 promising to end the worst forms of child labor by 2005. They did not deliver on this promise, and were given an extension to follow through in 50% of the cocoa regions by 2008. Instead they altered the wording of the agreement to say they simply had to REPORT the problem…not actually do anything about it. (You can learn more about this issue at www.stopthetraffik.com or check out their Where Does Our Chocolate Come From Fact Sheet or FAQs.)

As a little note of hope…things are slowly changing. Due to advocacy work by the amazing organization Stop The Traffik, Cadbury has recently launched a line of fair trade certified chocolate in the UK and Ireland and Mars has recently promised to make their Galaxy bars certified fair trade by the end of this year. They have also promised to make the rest of their chocolate products fair trade by 2020. (You can read more about these changes in Stop The Traffik’s News Section)

Nestle is the only major US chocolate company refusing to make any real changes in this area. They have recently promised (kind of randomly) to make their 4 piece Kit Kat bars fair trade, but none of their other products (including the 2 piece Kit Kats) will be. This seems to imply that they have only made this change so that they can say they offer fair trade chocolate. But Nestle has clearly missed the point. So we’re going to target them. I’ve decided that simply boycotting their slave tainted products is not enough…that we need to actually advocate for the rights enslaved children who live a horrific life simply because it increases Nestle’s profit margin.

View the five easy yet direct ways consumers can show Nestle that ending child slavery on cacao farms is important to them by clicking here.

You can also read an ealier post Courtney wrote tackling this very same issue by clicking here.

Nestle Pledges Millions of Cacao Trees to Ivory Coast

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Soaring cacao prices affect everyone, even the big chocolate manufacturers. But Bloomberg.com reports that Nestle has stepped up to help ease the cacao shortage in the Ivory Coast by pledging to give the African nation millions of trees.

Nestle SA, the maker of Kit Kat, Butterfinger and Crunch chocolates, will provide 12 million cocoa trees during the next decade to farmers in Ivory Coast, the world’s largest grower, to help improve bean quality.

“What we are trying is to increase the quality of the cocoa trees of our producers,” Klaus Zimmermann, the head of product technology and R&D Centers for Nestle, said today during an interview in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. Vevey, Switzerland-based Nestle will receive a small fee from farmers for the trees.

Cocoa prices in New York have more than doubled since 2006, touching a 30-year high in December, as slumping output in Ivory Coast left a global production deficit for three straight years. Farmers in major growing regions say beans are becoming scarcer amid unusually dry weather in the past two months, raising concern that supplies will fall short of forecasts.

Read the entire article by clicking here.