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Paraguay Carlos Cabral has been a member of Cañeros del Sur for 7 years and became Fair Trade Certified in 2004.
Carlos (30) lives at the farm with his mother Griselda (55) and his brother Reinaldo (35). Carlos joined FT in 2004 and the first year he was able to deliver 100 MT of cane to the mill. In 2007 he harvested 400 MT. He is currently mantaining a 10 acres cane plantation.
Cañeros del Sur decided to use FT premium to buy tractors and other equipment to keep the roads in good condition, to work the soil, and to transport the cane to the mill. Carlos and other growers find this to be the main reason of their current economic progress. This year he is also using a low interest loan to buy fertilizer.
In Carlos's rural community nearly three out of five families has more than one member living and working in Spain, US or Argentina. Carlos said, " We do not think of migrating to other countries or to the cities. Thanks to FT we can work and progress in our homeland."
Carlos's mother Griselda is a school teacher. She says, "In 2002 we had 40 children in our first grade class; now we have 15 attending. Many people had to migrate, but the ones who could stay are one way or another affiliated with the FT program."
Active co-op members: 933
Average farm size: 2-5 hectares (~5-12 acres)
Premiums invested in:
Crop diversification, biodiversity projects and environmental education: Planted citrus trees to help diversify economic opportunities and the women of the coop planted and tend a medicinal garden, teaching the traditional cures to new generations.
Improved communication: Installed a radio station that broadcasts to the entire community (it’s especially useful for tracking cane prices, harvests, road conditions and weather)
Community & farm infrastructure: Invested in roads and bridge repairs that connect about 80 members to the rest of world. They also acquired a truck and tractor for excavating, leveling, hoeing, and easier transportation to the mill, which reduces travel time for the members and improves the marketability of the sugar cane.
Micro-credit: Initiated a credit program that provides members with low-interest loans.
Healthcare services: Maintaining the co-op’s only ambulance; subsidized dental care for its members; Another coop makes dental and medical consultation available to the entire village while subsidizing its members’ costs.
Technical assistance: Providing resources to help the members produce citrus and medicinal plants in addition to the cane crop.
Office construction: Building cooperative offices and a resource center. The facility is equipped with a fully functional dentist and doctor’s office, waiting rooms, restrooms, a large meeting room and a small kitchen. |
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Malawi The premiums from Fair Trade sales have increased our income and our status. We're also assured of sustainability in our business--part of the premium money is invested in the plough-out and planting program. --Exford Dimo, Cane grower and co-op board member
Active co-op Members: 282
Average farm size: 2.5 hectares (6.1 acres)
Premiums invested in:
Access to safe water: Drilling water wells that bring safe water to villages. Previously, people carried water from the Shire River, where crocodiles have killed several water-gatherers, and the unsanitary water supply frequently causes diseases such as bilharzia, cholera and dysentery.
Electricity: Bringing power to the village, which previously had no access to electricity.
Medical supplies: Supplying 20,000 tablets of the medication required to treat bilharzia, a common and deadly water borne disease.
Schools and a new clinic: Providing building materials for the construction of schools. They plan to build a school for children in remote villages and a secondary school near the co-op’s offices.
New crops: Helping replant 12% of the members’ land every year.
Credit: Providing co-op members with small, low-interest loans. |
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Costa Rica I think that Fair Trade brings security. We sow the cane thinking it's going to get a good price. But what happens? When the time comes, the price is bad. I know that if I sell to a Fair Trade buyer that I'll get fair treatment. I'm sure that the buyer will be monitored and will buy at a fair price. --Alberto Hernandez, co-op member
Active co-op Members: 48
Average farm size: 3 hectares (7.4 acres)
Premiums invested in:
Infrastructure: Building a community-owned sugar processing mill
Environmental sustainability: Implementing reforestation projects that add help restore the area’s biodiversity and building organic furnaces that can burn the crushed cane, called bagasse.
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