Abstract

This article investigates the outcomes of mainstream coffee voluntary sustainability standards for high-biodiversity coffee diversification. By viewing voluntary sustainability standards certifications as performative marketing tools, we address the question of how such certification schemes affect coffee value creation based on unique biodiversity conservation properties in coffee farming. To date, the voluntary sustainability standards literature has primarily approached biodiversity conservation in coffee farming in the context of financial remuneration to coffee farmers. The performative analysis of voluntary sustainability standards certification undertaken in this paper, in which such certifications are analyzed in terms of their effect on mutually reinforcing representational, normalizing and exchange practices, provides an understanding of coffee diversification potential as dependent on standard criteria and voluntary sustainability standards certification as branding tools. We draw on a case of high-biodiversity, shade-grown coffee-farming practice in Kodagu, South-West India, which represents one of the world’s biodiversity “hotspots”.

Highlights

  • This article focuses on mass market voluntary sustainability standards (VSS) certifications as marketing tools for highbiodiversity coffee in the global coffee market

  • The market for sustainable coffee has undergone a rapid transformation since 2008, with an annual average growth rate of certified or verified coffee production of 26 %, and VSS are recognized as strategic management tools for the coffee mass market and the specialty coffee market, which is increasingly moving into the mainstream (Potts et al 2014)

  • Our analysis provides an understanding of how VSS certifications configure the mainstream coffee market and affect the potential for coffee diversification based on biodiversity conservation

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Summary

Introduction

This article focuses on mass market voluntary sustainability standards (VSS) certifications as marketing tools for highbiodiversity coffee in the global coffee market. It investigates how mass market coffee VSS certifications such as Rainforest Alliance (RA) and UTZ affect the ability to diversify based on biodiversity conservation and environmental conservation in coffee farming. The market for sustainable coffee has undergone a rapid transformation since 2008, with an annual average growth rate of certified or verified coffee production of 26 %, and VSS are recognized as strategic management tools for the coffee mass market and the specialty coffee market, which is increasingly moving into the mainstream (Potts et al 2014). Coffee is the most standardized commodity on the global market; 40 % of all coffee produced was standards-compliant in 2012, compared with 15 % in 2008 (Potts et al 2014)

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