Global Coffee Platform

OLAM’S ATSOURCE RECOGNISED BY GLOBAL COFFEE PLATFORM

In a move to advance transparency and sustainability in the coffee value chain, GCP has expanded its GCP Reporting on Sustainable Coffee Purchases by adding 4 newly recognised sustainability schemes and is now inviting more roasters and retailers to get involved in the next round of reporting.

Global Coffee Platform (GCP), is a multi-stakeholder membership association of coffee producers, trade, roasters, retailers, sustainability standards and civil society, governments and donors. Their stated goal is to unite under a common vision to ‘work collectively towards a thriving, sustainable coffee sector for generations to come’.

2 tiers of Olam International’s sustainability insights platform AtSource have been added as new sustainable sourcing schemes to the GCP Reporting on Sustainable Coffee Purchases programme.

AtSource is Olam’s sustainability insights platform for agricultural supply chains. The 2 tiers GCP have added are, AtSource Entry Verified and AtSource Plus.

Launched in April 2018, AtSource provides Olam customers with a verified social and environmental footprint for their product supply chains, calculated from farm-level data, which then informs continuous improvement programmes.

Juan Antonio Rivas, Senior Vice-President & Global Head, Sustainability & Business Development at Olam Coffee, part of Olam Food Ingredients, said:

We are very pleased that two tiers of our AtSource programme have been assessed as being “equivalent” to the Baseline Coffee Code.

This, in addition to other benchmarking studies that have been concluded in the recent months as well as the different awards our programme has received, gives us confidence that our sustainability focus and priorities are well aligned with what the coffee sector requires.

But more importantly, it will allow our coffee customers to report their AtSource purchases as “sustainable” and thus will help them meet their commitments and targets, which we see as critical to ensure increased transparency going forward.

Gelkha Buitrago, GCP Director of Programs and Corporate Partnerships, said:

For the sector, this means that we will be measuring progress on commitments to sustainable sourcing using the same bar, and a common language. Additionally, the equivalence process helped driving improvement in the sustainability schemes through alignment with internationally recognized credible practices and requirements.

Roasters and retailers, including signatories of the ICO London Declaration, are now invited to participate in the next round of GCP Reporting, which commenced on the 5th February.

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