Business Standard

Starbucks sued by group that calls its claim of ethical sourcing misleading

Starbucks said on Wednesday it was aware of the lawsuit and will aggressively defend against the asserted claims. The lawsuit was filed in Superior Court in the District of Columbia

Tata Starbucks

We take allegations like these extremely seriously and are actively engaged with farms to ensure they adhere to our standards, the company said | File image

AP New York

Listen to This Article

A consumer advocacy group filed a lawsuit against Starbucks on Wednesday, saying the company's claim that its coffee is ethically sourced is false and misleading.

The National Consumers League cited media reports of abuses on farms that supply coffee and tea to Starbucks. The group said the cases cast doubt on Starbucks' packaging, which states that the company is committed to 100% ethical coffee sourcing.

Starbucks said on Wednesday it was aware of the lawsuit and will aggressively defend against the asserted claims. The lawsuit was filed in Superior Court in the District of Columbia.

Among the incidents cited in the lawsuit was a 2022 case in which police rescued 17 workers including three teenagers from a coffee farm in Brazil where they were made to work outdoors without protective equipment and lift 130-pound sacks of coffee. The case was covered by Reprter Brasil, a group of journalists that investigates workers' rights and environmental issues.

 

Starbucks said on Wednesday it had no information about that case.

We take allegations like these extremely seriously and are actively engaged with farms to ensure they adhere to our standards, the company said.

The lawsuit also cites a 2023 report by the BBC exposing rampant sexual abuse and gruelling working conditions on the James Finlay tea plantation in Kenya.

James Finlay was a supplier to Starbucks at the time, but Starbucks said on Wednesday it no longer buys tea from that plantation.

Starbucks buys around 3 per cent of the world's coffee. The company says it works with 400,000 farmers in more than 30 countries.

Starbucks developed ethical sourcing guidelines in 2004 and uses third parties to verify conditions at its suppliers. The company says it has zero tolerance for child labour and requires farmers to provide a safe, fair and humane working environment.

But the National Consumers League said Starbucks is misleading consumers by failing to disclose that its certification program doesn't guarantee ethical sourcing.

The group is asking the court to stop Starbucks from engaging in deceptive advertising and require it to run a corrective ad campaign.

Starbucks' failure to adopt meaningful reforms to its coffee and tea sourcing practices in the face of these critiques and documented labour abuses on its source farms is wholly inconsistent with a reasonable consumer's understanding of what it means to be committed to 100 per cent ethical' sourcing," the group said in its court filing.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Jan 11 2024 | 1:20 PM IST

Explore News