Renowned British Tea brand Reveals Suppliers

Tea is a way of life in Britain. Of course it’s the national drink of the nation. There are so many well established tea brands in UK. Among them PG tips is a tea brand belongs to Unilever. Below information was based on an article published by Sonia Elks to http://news.trust.org/

PG tips which is one of the largest tea brands in UK has revealed its supplier details in a fast-growing campaign to break a “club mentality” of silence over sourcing and stamp out abuse of workers in plantation sector.

Yorkshire Tea brand, owned by Bettys and Taylors of Harrogate, was the first to publish in July 2018, followed by Twinings, Tetley, Clipper and most recently Ringtons. Typhoo is the only major British tea brand which has not yet shared details of its suppliers, the charity said.

Global giant Unilever shared details of vendors for all its British tea brands, including one of the market leaders PG Tips, following a campaign for transparency by charity Traidcraft Exchange. It means that two in every three cups of tea drunk nationally comes from a company which has opened up about where its products come from.

When the campaign first launched last year, none of the major brands had shared details of their suppliers.

“We are quite surprised – I don’t think we expected it to happen this quickly,” Mary Milne, head of campaigns at Traidcraft Exchange, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“I think there may have been a bit of a club mentality in that none of them did it … and once one or two started moving, the others wanted to catch up.”

India’s tea industry, the second largest in the world after China’s, employs 3.5 million workers, many of whom are paid below minimum wage and live in poverty on the plantations where they work, research has shown.

Traidcraft Exchange launched its ‘Who picked my tea?’ campaign to uplift conditions for tea workers in the Indian state of Assam.

Data published by Unilever showed that it uses a number of suppliers in Assam as well as plantations elsewhere in India and in Indonesia, Japan and Kenya.

“We believe it’s important to know where our tea comes from as this is the starting point for any action that makes a positive impact where it matters most,” Unilever said in a statement.

“As a next step in our journey to become more transparent, we are happy to share this information.”

Milne said Traidcraft will use the data to help workers in Assam, India identify who is purchasing from the plantations where they work and ensure welfare pledges made by brands are upheld.

“By persuading the brands to publish where they source their tea, we’ve succeeded in putting a bit more power in the hands of the people who work on tea estates in Assam,” she said.

“They are the true experts, and the only people who can verify the good practice claims that brands may make.”

Original reference was edited by Jason Fields

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References

1.Original Post: http://news.trust.org/item/20190129185642-6mrxz/

2.More about PG Tips: https://www.pgtips.co.uk/

3.Picture source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2702085/Pyramid-teabags-DO-taste-better-round-ones-Watchdog-says-PG-Tips-make-better-brew-Tetleys-round-ones-firms-battle-claims-TV-advert.html