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Summit explores de-commoditisation of food ingredients

Source:Organic Monitor Release Date:2011-12-12 533
Food & Beverage
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LONDON – Growing consumer demand for sustainable products is leading many ingredients to become de-commoditised. A growing share of food commodities – such as coffee, tea and bananas - are now marketed as value-added (sustainable) products. The de-commoditisation of food ingredients by sustainable development is a major focus of the Sustainable Foods Summit taking place in San Francisco on 17-18th January 2012.

Organic Monitor, the organiser of the Sustainable Foods Summit, finds the same development is now occurring for ingredients.

Sustainable ingredients are gaining currency as growers look at value-added production methods to raise income, whilst food & beverage companies consider ways to reduce their environmental and social footprints. Companies are also looking at sustainable ingredients because of the growing importance of sustainability reporting as well as pressure from the media and retailers.

Most strides have been made with coffee, the second largest traded commodity in the world. Almost 10 per cent of coffee in North America and Europe is now certified according to organic, fair trade, Rainforest Alliance, UTZ Certified or similar standards. Major brands and retailers have made pledges to source sustainable coffee, with many making social investments in developing countries.

Sustainable sourcing is also becoming important for cocoa, vanilla, sugar and other ingredient commodities. Large chocolate manufacturers, such as Cadbury’s and Nestlé have made commitments to source fair trade cocoa. UTZ Certified extended its ‘Good Inside’ program to cocoa in 2007. With large companies like Cargill and Mars coming on board, cocoa could become the most traded sustainable food ingredient in the world.

Converting existing supply chains to organic, fair trade and other sustainable ingredients can be a lengthy and sometimes complex process. It can thus be easier to set up new supply chains for such ingredients, as many suppliers of novel ingredients have discovered.

Organic Monitor research finds that many novel ingredients from Africa and Latin America are increasingly produced by sustainable methods. African specialties – including baobab and shea butter – are mostly fairly traded from women’s cooperatives. Argan oil, described as ‘liquid gold’, is almost entirely produced accorded to organic cultivation methods.

Intensive media coverage about the destruction of rainforests has been a factor behind the emergence of Amazonian sustainable ingredients. The American company Sambazon is sourcing organic a?aí berry products from over 10,000 family farmers in the Amazon. As well as becoming the world’s largest supplier of a?aí ingredients, the company makes a range of finished products. New sustainable ingredients like Inca inchi oil are also emerging from the region. They are invariably fairly traded aAir Zoom Pegasus 34 Leather

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