Subject category:
Ethics and Social Responsibility
Published by:
Harvard Business Publishing
Version: 1 May 2004
Revision date: 11-Apr-2019
Length: 29 pages
Data source: Field research
Notes: Customers will need to be registered on the Harvard Business Publishing website in order to view the video.
http://cb.hbsp.harvard.edu/cb/search/9-303-055?Ntk=HEMainSearch&N=0
Share a link:
https://casecent.re/p/97513
Write a review
|
No reviews for this item
This product has not been used yet
Abstract
This is a Spanish version. This case is accompanied by a Video Short for Premium Educators to show in class. To watch the video or display to students, click on the video icon. Instructors should consider the timing of making the video available to students, as it may reveal key case details. Starbucks, the world's leading specialty coffee company, developed a strategic alliance with Conservation International, a major international environmental nonprofit organization. The purpose of the alliance was to promote coffee-growing practices of small farms that would protect endangered habitats. The collaboration emerged from the company's corporate social responsibility policies and its coffee procurement strategy. The initial project was in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas and resulted in the incorporation of shade-grown coffee into the Starbucks product line, providing an attractive alternative market for the farmer cooperatives at a time when coffee producers were in economic crisis due to plummeting world prices. Simultaneously, the company had to deal with growing pressures from nonprofit organizations in the Fair Trade movement, demanding higher prices for farmers. Starbucks was reviewing the future of its alliance with Conservation International and its new coffee procurement guidelines aimed at promoting environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable coffee production. The nature of the industry puts the case in the global context from both the supply and demand sides.
Locations:
Industries:
Other setting(s):
2002
About
Abstract
This is a Spanish version. This case is accompanied by a Video Short for Premium Educators to show in class. To watch the video or display to students, click on the video icon. Instructors should consider the timing of making the video available to students, as it may reveal key case details. Starbucks, the world's leading specialty coffee company, developed a strategic alliance with Conservation International, a major international environmental nonprofit organization. The purpose of the alliance was to promote coffee-growing practices of small farms that would protect endangered habitats. The collaboration emerged from the company's corporate social responsibility policies and its coffee procurement strategy. The initial project was in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas and resulted in the incorporation of shade-grown coffee into the Starbucks product line, providing an attractive alternative market for the farmer cooperatives at a time when coffee producers were in economic crisis due to plummeting world prices. Simultaneously, the company had to deal with growing pressures from nonprofit organizations in the Fair Trade movement, demanding higher prices for farmers. Starbucks was reviewing the future of its alliance with Conservation International and its new coffee procurement guidelines aimed at promoting environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable coffee production. The nature of the industry puts the case in the global context from both the supply and demand sides.
Settings
Locations:
Industries:
Other setting(s):
2002