Category Archives: Fair Trade

Fair Trade Cotton!

Buy Fair Trade!

In my blog I am going to tell you a bit about fair trade and I am also going to tell you where you can buy fair trade products.

Where you can buy fair trade products.

  • M&S
  •  Tesco
  • Morrison’s
  • Sainsbury’s

A bit about fair trade cotton.

Cotton is one of the world most oldest commercial crop.  300 million people  are much happier now because of fair trade. Fair trade people have bought their product and these farmers got a fair price. The price of cotton has gone down in the last 30 years so farmers are struggling to survive in these countries- India, Kyrgyzstan and West Africa.

By Amy-Lee

 

 

Fair Trade Cotton

Fair trade is an organisation designed to help farmers get a fair price for their products. Our blog today is about cotton farmers. and how they make their products.

Many cotton farmers are living a life in poverty. The rising cost of production, higher market price and decreasing yields are the challenges faced daily by the farmers. A fall in cotton prices has serious implications for the farmers ability to meet their needs. In India lots of farmers are seriously in debt. This is caused by the high interest loans. Fair Trade help and rebuild small scale farmers industries, finances, and life. In 2012 there were 33 farmer’s organisations in 8 countries. Thanks to Fair Trade thousands of cotton farmers have improved their lives. Fair Trade works with more than 6600 cotton farmers in the poorest parts of the world. Very few people make much profit from it. Fair Trade aim to help millions of farmers worldwide. 6600 isn’t good enough. Buy Fair Trade to help millions and millions of farmers make enough profit to live. You might not think that you will make a difference, but you will. If all of the people who think that they won’t make a difference all bought Fair Trade then it would add up and make a humongous difference.

Thank you for reading our blog!

By Euan Breen and Daniel Kennedy

Fair Trade Cotton

By Fair Trade and save some ones life    

Today I have decided to write about something that matters to the world. Fair Trade cotton is very important to the world because farmers work very hard and deserve a fair amount of money. Here are some places you can by Fair Trade cotton.

  • M & S
  • People tree
  • Pants to poverty
  • Sainsbury’s

Cotton is made from all over the world  but it is better to buy Fair Trade  cotton. There is a man called Massatoma  Mounkoro and he owns his own farm in Mobiom ,Mali. He signed up with Fair Trade to get a Fair amount of money. Some of the places farms work in are.

  • Agrocel pure and fair cotton growers association in India
  • Chentna  organic agriculture  producer company ltd in India
  • Krishan Sianathan  Agrocel in India

 

BY MORGAN LECKIE

 

 

Fair Trade Fortnight

Hello everyone,

This week our class have been focusing on cotton for Fair Trade Fortnight.

Cotton is one of the world’s largest and oldest commercialised crops. Cotton is also one of the most important fibre crops globally. If you buy clothes made with Fair Trade cotton you are helping farmers all around the world, especially in Central and West Asia and Africa. I have researched and found out some shops such as Marks and Spencer’s, Sainsbury’s and People Tree sell Fair Trade clothing items.

Our class also split into groups. One group was to design a poster for Fair Trade. Another one was to create a song and make a product and advertise it. There was a drama group and the last group was to make a rap about Fair Trade. I was in the drama group. We had to create a scene which shows what Fair Trade is.

Please help farmers  by buying Fair Trade. Thank you.

By Chase Reeves

Chocolate Banana-Fair Trade

Hello,

In school we had a fun task to do. We were working in a group to do activities. The group we were working in had to create a product and music to go with it. The product our group came up was a chocolate banana. We had instruments to create a beat along with lyrics. We made a poster it was a banana skin with chocolate in the middle. We really enjoyed our task and we performed it in front of the class. It was funny!.

Thanks for reading !!

By Katie Morrell and Ellie McCondichie

Fair trade

Cotton

For the next  two weeks primary 6 are going to be looking at Fair trade. So far this week we have been looking at cotton. Cotton is the oldest and the biggest commercial crop. The reason cotton farmers are so poor is because of the high levels of illiteracy and the limited land holding. Some of the shops which sell fair trade clothes are M&S, People Tree and Sainsbury’s. We have also been doing raps, posters, making a product and doing drama acts.  I did a rap. Here is my rap.

Helping Fair trade

Before fair trade the farmers were so unhappy

so we came to help which made them happy.

They thought it was so funny to see all the workers lose that money.

The bosses were so lucky, but what they didn’t know was workers were losing.

cotton cotton its so cosy. Its really soft for your nosy.

But there is one thing that disappoints me is that children need to work for forty.

Help us save the children in needy. By getting all the big people un greedy.

Sour as a lemon like bosses are.

But if you buy fair trade they’ll all go very far. So help the farmers for their work.

And make sure everybody’s getting a fair trade.

Thanks for listening to our rap. Remember buy fair trade and make the farmers glow.

by Amy lee Deakin and Rachel Craig

 

Fairtrade Cotton

Over 60 per cent of the world depends on cotton farmers to bring them cotton. Cotton is a plant and it comes from Asia, Africa and India but is dominated by the U.S.A and China. Cotton is a plant that everyone uses and is one of the most vital plants there is. It is a soft material that is farmed on fields.  

by Ben & William

Fairtrade

Cotton is the worlds oldest crop. Cotton is produced mostly by China, India and the USA. Cotton is vital for survival of many low countries such as: Central and West Asia and Africa.

Cotton farmers work in developing countries such as India and China. There are 100 million households engaged with cotton and there are an estimated 300 million people who work in the cotton industry. For farmers, the challenges range from climate change to getting a fair amount of money for their cotton.  Fairtrade cotton was launched to put the attention on cotton farmers who were often left unknown.  60% of cotton around the world is produced by people who are small farmers and often the worlds poorest people. Fair trade works with more than 66,000 farmers in some of the worlds poorest countries.

I hope this has encouraged you to start buying fair trade.

By Declan and Lewis

By Declan and

 

 

 

Fair Trade

Cotton

Primary 6 are looking at Fair trade, especially cotton. This week we are going to look at cotton and how children need to work. Sometimes children are only 6 or 7 years old when they have to go out and work. India and China are leading producers when it comes to cotton. Farmers who produce cotton are sometimes very poor because they have to send lots of cotton over to different shops all around the world and they don’t get paid much.

Thank you for reading

by Amy McAdams