This program was made possible with financial support of the Government of Manitoba,
and was undertaken with the financial support of the Government of Canada provided through Global Affairs Canada (GAC)


News Update
Posted December 7th 2009
If you buy a bunch of Fair Trade or organic bananas you may get a product with a hidden stamp from Mennonite Economic Development Associates (MEDA).
MEDA has been helping cooperatives in Peru to streamline their certification procedures to maintain the rigorous requirements of Fair Trade and organic distributors and thus gain a premium price. One of the cooperatives, called APPBOSA, comprises 300 banana farmers, each with about an acre of land. It used to sell its bananas to a multinational fruit corporation, but decided to try a different route when the company couldn’t use all of its Fair Trade production. Now it sells directly to Fair Trade buyers in Europe and the United States, and receives an additional premium of $1 per box. This year’s dividend brought APPBOSA more than $600,000. Members of the cooperative decided to use the money to upgrade equipment, such as a conveyor system of cords and hooks that travels through the trees and reaches into all the small farms to bring the bananas back to the central packing shed. Some of the dividend also went for road improvements and a health insurance system for the farmers and their families.
MEDA’s role was to install its Agromonitor software, a tracking system to manage production and organic certification, and to train staff of the coop. The system greatly simplifies the complex process of documenting the various logistical steps required to maintain certification standards required by the Fair Trade and organic industry.
In the past, says Jerry Quigley, director of MEDA’s Production-Marketing Linkages department, an auditor would visit the coop on a regular basis and spend a week analyzing mounds of paper documents. “This program tries to get them into an easy-to-approve database,” he says.