UTZ Certified

Not to be confused with Utz Quality Foods, Inc..
UTZ Certified
Non-profit organization
Industry Product certification, Sustainability
Founded Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2002)
Headquarters Amsterdam, Netherlands
Key people
Han de Groot, Executive Director
Number of employees
100 (2014)

UTZ Certified is a program and a label for sustainable farming. The UTZ Certified label is featured on more than 10,000 different product packages in over 116 countries.[1] As of 2014, UTZ Certified is the largest program for sustainable farming of coffee and cocoa in the world.[2] The UTZ Certified program covers good agricultural practices, farm management, social and living conditions, and the environment.

History

UTZ was launched in 2002 as Utz Kapeh, meaning ‘Good Coffee’ in the Mayan language Quiché. It was founded by Nick Bocklandt, a Belgian-Guatemalan coffee grower, and Ward de Groote, a Dutch coffee roaster, with the goal of implementing sustainability on a large scale in the worldwide market. Solidaridad (www.solidaridadnetwork.org) was another co-initiator of UTZ Certified and assisted UTZ to become a global standard through financial support and field implementation.[3]

On 7 March 2007, the Utz Kapeh Foundation officially changed its name and logo to UTZ Certified.[4]

Products

Coffee

UTZ Certified is the largest sustainability program in the world for coffee. In 2012, 9% of the coffee produced in the world was UTZ certified (716,000 MT, out of global production of 8,200,000 MT[5]).

Cocoa

On 10 October 2007, the Cocoa Program was launched. UTZ Certified cooperated with Ahold, Cargill, Heinz Benelux, Mars, Nestlé and ECOM to set up a new certification and traceability system for sustainable cocoa. Solidaridad and Oxfam Novib also supported the initiative from the beginning. In 2009 the first UTZ Certified cocoa products reached the market. As of 2014, UTZ Certified is the largest sustainability program for cocoa in the world. By now, over 336,300 cocoa farmers from 16 countries are UTZ Certified. In 2012, 13% of the cocoa produced in the world was UTZ Certified (535,000 MT, out of global production of 2,889,000MT[6]).

Tea

The UTZ Certified program for tea and rooibos was launched in 2007.[7]

Hazelnuts

UTZ Certified is currently running a pilot project in Turkey to explore the possibilities for sustainability.[8]

Code of Conduct

Summary of the Code of Conduct

The UTZ certification program is based on the UTZ Certified Code of Conduct:[9] a set of social and environmental criteria for responsible growing practices and efficient farm management. Coffee, cocoa and tea producers who are UTZ certified comply with this code. The Code of Conduct version 2014[9] is based on the international ILO Conventions and the expertise of many different stakeholders, including the farmers who use it. The Code has been developed in a broad stakeholder process and therefore widely accepted. A core code is applicable to all farmers, and there are also additional requirements in product specific modules for coffee, cocoa and tea.[10] The certification system is based on a model of continuous improvement. Producers have to comply with core safety and quality standards from year one. Additional control points are added in the following years.

Common Categories in the Code of Conduct

The criteria of the UTZ Certified Code of Conduct fall into four categories:[11]

Farm Management
Farming Practices
Social and Living Conditions
Environment

Product-Specific Modules in the Code of Conduct

Coffee
Cocoa
Tea
Rooibos

Chain of Custody

To enhance the guarantee that a consumer product with an UTZ Certified logo does indeed credibly link to an UTZ certified producer, the UTZ Certified program contains Chain of Custody requirements. This is a set of chain-wide administrative, logistical and technical requirements for traceability. These requirements include criteria for separation of UTZ Certified products and conventional/non-UTZ Certified products, and keeping records of direct suppliers and buyers.

Traceability

UTZ certified coffee, cocoa and tea is traceable through the supply chain, as UTZ uses a web-based traceability system.

When an UTZ certified producer sells his products (e.g. coffee, cocoa, tea) to a registered UTZ Certified buyer, the product is announced in the UTZ Certified web-based system. By doing so the seller announces when he is shipping what amount to whom. The buyer then gets notified and needs to confirm this in the traceability system. UTZ Certified assigns a unique tracking number to this lot. At the end of the supply chain, the end product manufacturer uses the unique tracking number to know his product credibly links to a certified source. Some brands use this unique tracking system to make the product traceable for their consumers.[12]

Traceability Services

Traceability services UTZ Certified has developed, implemented and is currently managing the traceability system for the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil. This system was launched in December 2008.

Certification

Independent, third party auditors make annual inspections to ensure coffee producers comply with the Code of Conduct.[9]

Certification Body

A Certification body (CB) is an independent, third-party certifier. When approved by UTZ Certified, these organizations conduct annual certification inspections of coffee, cocoa and tea producers to determine whether they comply with the UTZ Certified Code of Conduct[9] and Chain of Custody requirements.[13]

Trained Agronomists

An UTZ Certified trained agronomist is a technical consultant specifically trained in assisting producers to comply with the UTZ Certified Code of Conduct.[9] Trained agronomists can advise on practical implementation of elements of the Code and give directions on improvement of efficiency in farm management.

Impact

In 2014, UTZ Certified published its first impact report.[14] This brought together 24 external studies and data collected by UTZ Certified. It demonstrated that UTZ Certified cocoa, coffee and tea farms generate higher yields and better quality crops than conventional farms, and being trained in the UTZ Code of Conduct helps farmers to improve their knowledge and adopt sustainable farming practices.

Pricing

Coffee, cocoa and tea with an UTZ certification has added value in the sense that it assures buyers that it has been produced according to an internationally recognized standard for responsible production, i.e. according to the UTZ Certified Code of Conduct. The price for UTZ certified coffee is determined in the negotiation process between buyer and seller. UTZ Certified does not interfere in price negotiations. In contrast to Fair Trade, no minimum purchase price is set. Instead, the focus on good agricultural practices in the UTZ program is intended to enable farmers to increase the quantity and quality of their yield, and thus to increase their income.

Criticism

UTZ Certified certification, like the Rainforest Alliance coffee certification program, has been criticized as it offers producers no minimum or guaranteed price for their crop. Some consider UTZ certified producer organizations to be vulnerable to the volatility of the coffee market.[15] The price difference and the fact companies do not pay any marketing costs for logo use, makes the UTZ Certified label considerably cheaper than Fairtrade for companies and farmers interested in tapping the ethical market.

Michael Conroy, an independent consultant on certification for sustainable development, criticized UTZ Certified in his 2007 book Branded!: "the environmental standards of UTZ Certified are far weaker than those of either Fairtrade or Rainforest Alliance".[16] UTZ Certified's standards for example, explicitly announces that genetically modified coffee plants, though not at present available, would be allowable so long as farmers obey local regulations on their use. Any kind of chemical fertilizer may be used as long as an external, technically qualified advisor has determined the quantity of fertilizer to be used. No chemical pesticides or fungicides banned in the European Union, the U.S. or Japan may be used, but any that are acceptable in those three markets are acceptable on coffee farms if they are applied "according to the label".[17]

In July 2012, German magazine "Ökotest" published an article labeling UTZ Certified, among others, as unfair, due to a lack of pre-financing and guaranteed minimum purchase prices.[18] In response UTZ Certified stated that the foundation does not consider its standards fair trade, nor that it claims that they are, while maintaining that its standards contribute positively to sustainable development of tropical farming communities.[19]

See also

References

  1. "2013: bringing good practice to scale" (Press release). Amsterdam: UTZ Certified. 18 April 2014.
  2. Potts, Jason; Lynch, Matthew; Wilkings, Ann; Huppé, Gabriel; Cunningham, Maxine; Voora, Vivek (2014), The State of Sustainability Initiatives [SSI] Review, 2014: Standards and the Green Economy (PDF), Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada: International Institute for Sustainable Development, ISBN 978-1-894784-45-0
  3. "The Story of UTZ". UTZ Certified.
  4. "Utz Kapeh proudly presents its new face: UTZ Certified 'Good inside'" (Press release). UTZ Certified. 7 March 2007.
  5. SSI Review, p 176.
  6. SSI Review, p 146.
  7. "Tea". UTZ Certified.
  8. "UTZ Certified launches sustainable hazelnuts farming initiative in Turkey" (Press release). Amsterdam: UTZ Certified. 16 April 2014.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 "A NEW CODE OF CONDUCT. THAT’S BETTER". UTZ Certified. 2013.
  10. "UTZ’s new code of conduct is more robust and flexible, Simpler structure will enable more farmers to join the program" (Press release). Amsterdam: UTZ Certified. 15 May 2014.
  11. The UTZ Certified Code of Conduct: Summary (PDF), retrieved 14 January 2014
  12. "Trade & Traceability". UTZ Certified.
  13. "Trade and Traceability: Traceability of UTZ CERTIFIED coffee from grower to roaster makes the UTZ CERTIFIED program unique". UTZ Certified. 2006. Archived from the original on 13 February 2008.
  14. "UTZ presents Impact Report 2014" (Press release). Amsterdam: UTZ Certified. 21 January 2014.
  15. Purvis, Andrew (29 January 2006). "Is Global Business Hijacking the Fairtrade bandwagon?". The Observer. Archived from the original on 5 September 2008. Retrieved 27 October 2006.
  16. Conroy, Michael E. (2007). Branded!: How the 'Certification Revolution' is Transforming Global Corporations. Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada: New Society Publisher. ISBN 978-0-86571-579-0.
  17. Conroy, Branded!, p 252.
  18. "Fairer Handel - Unfaire Geschäfte" [Fair trade - Unfair Businesses]. Ökotest. 27 July 2012. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  19. 4C Association; Rainforest Alliance/SAN; UTZ Certified (2012-08-07). "Joint response to Ökotest article" (Press release). UTZ Certified.

External links

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