Have a look at the Fairtrade website and see if you can find out answers to the following:
What products can be Fairtrade products?
Investigate which shops sell Fairtrade items and make a list of them.
Who stocks the most Fairtrade fruit?
Post your answers as a comment
The eye-catching blue, green, white and black FAIRTRADE Mark was adopted by FLO International in 2002. The symbol is open to interpretation – some see a parrot, others a green leaf, some see the black swirl at the centre as a road leading to a brighter future. The most popular interpretation is to imagine the blue as sky, the green as grass, and the black dot and swirl at the centre as a person holding one arm aloft. That figure represents the people at the heart of the Fairtrade system – it could be a farmer holding up their product, a shopper reaching to purchase, or a campaigner fighting for greater justice in international trade
ReplyDeletedid you know there is a fairtrade day
ReplyDeleteMe AND MY MUM tried a test.the test was if fair trade test to see if fairtrade chocolate tastes different than normal chocolate we think there is no differents
ReplyDeletehi trie each of the choclates there is no differents
ReplyDeletehi there is now differnce
ReplyDeleteI finf fair trade very intersting.
ReplyDeletehi i tried the chocolate and there was no differnce
ReplyDeletethe green part looks like a leaf
ReplyDeletehello the black part is a road to a better future.
ReplyDeletehi fair trade is very cool
ReplyDeletehello th black part is a better road to a better future
ReplyDeletechocalate,mangos,bannas,coffee all these products can be fair trade
ReplyDeletei like fair trade
ReplyDeletehello i love looking and taking about fair trade
ReplyDeletethere is now differnce in the chocolate
ReplyDeletehi i love everything about fair trade
ReplyDeletethe green part is a leaf or grass
ReplyDelete