Rainforest Alliance sees boom in certified farms

NEW YORK, (Reuters) – The amount of forest and  farmland certified by Rainforest Alliance will continue to soar  along with demand for products that meet standards for social  and environmental sustainability, a spokesman said yesterday.

“The amount of Rainforest Alliance certified farmland will  increase dramatically over the next few years because it has  to. We already have the demand so that sets everything in  motion,” said Chris Wille, Rainforest Alliance chief of  Sustainable Agriculture.
Costa Rica-based Wille spoke to Reuters on the sidelines of  a Rainforest Alliance event in New York.
New York-based Rainforest Alliance, an international  nonprofit conservation group, certifies farms that meet its  criteria for sustainability: preservation of the local  environment, farmers and communities.

In 2008, farm and forest land certified by Rainforest  Alliance grew by 23 percent to more than 131 million acres (52  million hectares), from 107 million acres in 2007, Rainforest  said last month.

“The drive is coming from all along the value chain and  especially companies. We’ve never seen more interest from  companies, from consumers and from producers,” Wille said,  adding this was a welcome move amid the current global  financial crisis.

Although Rainforest Alliance does not set a premium, the  seal gives producers negotiating leverage as the buyers  typically pay a premium for goods it has certified.
Companies want to ensure the long-term supply of the  high-quality products, Wille said.
“We have more demand than supply. There’s competition for  the certified goods,” he said.
“So now farmers are lining up outside the doors of our  partner NGOs (non-governmental organizations) and eager to get  involved,” Wille said.
For years, Rainforest Alliance has certified farms that  produce coffee, bananas, tea and cocoa. Recent additions  include grapes, acai, chestnuts, apples and pears.

“We are very much committed to seeing this world as a  better place and to help both the farmers and the growers, but  also the environment. And be socially responsible in every  which way,” said Nabi Saleh, executive chairman of Gloria  Jean’s Coffees International.

The Sydney, Australia-based company has nearly reached its  2010 target selling 85 percent Rainforest Alliance certified  coffee, Saleh said.