1. Fairtrade Fortnight: What's in it for retailers? - Retail Gazette

    Fairtrade Fortnight: What's in it for retailers? - Retail Gazette
    news.google.com
  2. Celebrating Fairtrade Fortnight 2021 - CentAUR

    Celebrating Fairtrade Fortnight 2021 - CentAUR
    reading.ac.uk
  3. Oxford to celebrate Fairtrade Fortnight - Oxford City Council News

    Oxford to celebrate Fairtrade Fortnight - Oxford City Council News
    oxford.gov.uk
  4. Fairtrade Fortnight's Virtual Festival

    Fairtrade's Choose The World You Want Festival kicks off online with workshops, panel talks and cooking demos with some of the UK's most sustainable chefs
    pebble magazine
  5. Fairtrade Fortnight

    The Fairtrade Certification Mark was launched in the 1980s, initially for use in the coffee trade, to encourage a new ethical means of trading by…
    Lexology
  6. Oxford to take part in Fairtrade fortnight – The Oxford Student

    Oxford University will be participating in Fairtrade Fortnight an annual event held across the country to encourage greener consumption.
    The Oxford Student
  7. Fairtrade to be highlighted in Leek with two-week event

    'Buying Fairtrade means the farmers get a better deal in return for their hard work'
    InYourArea.co.uk
  8. Why South Africa's winemakers need our help more than ever | Fiona Beckett on wine

    Snap up Fairtrade Cape wines, help support beleaguered agricultural communities and get some choice tipples into the bargain ...
    the Guardian
  9. How Peterborough’s Masteroast is a hidden force behind the UK’s Fairtrade movement

    Around one in seven cups of roast and ground coffee consumed outside the home in the UK is produced in Peterborough, a fact few will know.
    peterboroughtoday.co.uk
  10. Fairtrade Fortnight: food for thought for kids - Essex Magazine

    Fairtrade Fortnight, 22 February-7 March Food for thought This annual event is a great opportunity for children to learn about and celebrate the people who grow so much of our food. This year, the focus is on the climate emergency and how it impacts on producers in the developing world. Former primary school teacher Laura […]
    Essex Magazine
  11. Fairtrade fun lessons to learn

    Fairtrade Fortnight, February 22-March 7, is a great opportunity for children to learn about and celebrate the people who grow so much of our food.
    yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk
  12. Pictures of Doncaster's Fairtrade community over the years but who can you spot?

    For two weeks each year at the end of February and start of March, thousands of individuals, companies and groups across the UK come together to share the stories of the people who grow our food and drinks, grow the cotton in our clothes and of people who are often exploited and underpaid.
    doncasterfreepress.co.uk
  13. Why everyone should be part of Fairtrade Fortnight

    People in Exeter are being encouraged to ‘Choose the world you want’ and consider Fairtrade this February during Fairtrade Fortnight which runs from 22 February until 7 March.
    news.exeter.gov.uk
  14. Interview: Anna Canning of Fair World Project Compares Fairtrade to Rainforest Alliance

    Nestle's decision to switch from Fairtrade to Rainforest Alliance certification for cocoa used in KitKat bars has prompted debate over different standards.
    Treehugger
  15. Fairtrade Fortnight goes online

    FAIRTRADE Fortnight is going online.
    Keighley News
  16. Choose The World You Want: Virtual Fairtrade Festival To Spotlight Climate Impact On Food Systems

    Hosted by the Fairtrade Foundation and free for all to join, the festival will feature more than 100 virtual events, from talks to workshops.
    Green Queen
  17. North Ayrshire group is gearing up for Fairtrade Fortnight

    The event starts this Monday, February 22, with the ‘Choose the World You Want’ Festival running throughout the fortnight.
    InYourArea.co.uk
  18. Pictures of Sheffield's Fairtrade community over the years but who can you spot?

    For two weeks each year at the end of February and start of March, thousands of individuals, companies and groups across the UK come together to share the stories of the people who grow our food and drinks, grow the cotton in our clothes and of people who are often exploited and underpaid.