Sunday, September 14, 2008

The Rainforest Alliance*


Flowers at your Door is proud to bring you flowers from Rainforest Alliance certified farms in Colombia.

The Rainforest Alliance works to conserve biodiversity and ensure sustainable livelihoods by transforming land-use practices, business practices and consumer behavior.

Agriculture -- farming and grazing -- already uses 38 percent of the Earth's lands. Industrial agriculture is a leading polluter and a rapacious user of water. As population pressures increase everywhere, and the pace of conversion from forests to farmland accelerates, current practices will only continue to accelerate the cycle of poverty experienced by most farmers, especially in and around our planet's most sensitive and unique ecosystems.

But Rainforest Alliance Certified farms have reduced environmental footprints, are good neighbors to human and wild communities and are often integral parts of regional conservation initiatives.

Rainforest Alliance Certified means:

  • Less water pollution

  • Less soil erosion

  • Reduced threats to the environment and human health

  • Wildlife habitat is protected

  • Less waste

  • More efficient farm management

  • Improved conditions for farm workers

  • Improved profitability and competitiveness for farmers

  • More collaboration between farmers and conservationists

    Ferns and Cut Flowers



    Americans and Europeans have an enduring passion for flowers. Since the mid-1980s, growers in the tropics, from Latin America to Africa, have been increasing their production of roses, carnations and other blooms to meet the growing demand in the United States and Europe. Ninety percent of the cut flowers and ferns imported into the United States come from Colombia, Ecuador or another Latin American country, and Kenya provides one-quarter of the European Union’s bouquets. Those roses you bought for your valentine were probably raised in a rainforest country, and many of the ferns which envelop flower bouquets are grown in Costa Rica and Guatemala.

    Woman in a Greenhouse

    The rapid growth of the floriculture industry has created welcome jobs in Latin America. Sales of the smooth, dark green fern known as "leatherleaf" bring $52 million annually to Costa Rica, where fern farms employ 6,000 people at salaries above the rural average. In Kenya, flower production has become the second largest source of foreign exchange, behind tea and ahead of coffee.

    Flower cultivation has very often come at the expense of healthy ecosystems -- and the well-being of workers and surrounding communities.

    Flower and fern growers tend to use liberal doses of agrochemicals -- and because flowers are not food, governments do not impose restrictions on pesticide use. With only weak government controls, pesticide and fertilizer use in flower farms can threaten the health of workers and neighbors as well as drinking water supplies. In many cases the governments of importing countries require extensive pesticide usage to ensure flowers are free of pests.

    Cultivating Earth-Friendly Flowers

    Through a four-year-long process of research, experimentation and field trials, the Rainforest Alliance and its partners in the Sustainable Agriculture Network, a consortium of nine leading environmental groups in Latin America, developed standards for responsible flower and fern farm management.

    The standards protect ecosystems and wildlife habitats, conserve water and soil, promote decent and safe working conditions and ensure that the farms are good neighbors to rural communities and wildlands.

*(Article taken from the Rainforest Alliance website)


    • Top of Page

No comments: