quote:
Oxfam, a British charity, said on Tuesday that [Starbuck’s], which had a turnover of $7.8 billion in the year to October 1, prevented Ethiopia from securing trademark protection for two of its best-known beans, Sidamo and Harar.Had Ethiopia been successful, it would have allowed the impoverished country to control the use of the beans in the market, giving its farmers a bigger share of the retail price, the charity said.
Ethiopia's foreign ministry said in a statement: "Securing the trademark for its Sidamo, Harar and Yirgacheffe coffee beans could have allowed the country to increase its negotiation leverage through control of the names and ultimately drive a greater share of the retail price in the global market."
Starbucks denied being behind the blocking bid by the US National Coffee Association (NCA) at the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).
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But Oxfam said it believed Starbucks was the instigator of the blocking action.
"We have heard from a number of sources that actually Starbucks was involved in alerting the US coffee association to block these applications," the charity's Jo Leadbetter said.
It "stinks of corporate bullying" she told the BBC.
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"Coffee shops can sell Sidamo and Harar coffees for up to £14 a pound because of the beans' specialty status," said Tadesse Maskela, head of the Oromia Coffee Farmers Cooperative Union in Ethiopia.
"But Ethiopian coffee farmers only earn between 30p and 59p [per pound] for their crop, barely enough to cover the cost of production," Maskela said in a statement.