AbTF Publishes Independent Verification Results for Cotton made in Africa’s Standards
Ein Dokument
Hamburg, 2024-09-02. The Aid by Trade Foundation (AbTF) is releasing the latest edition of its annual, aggregated report on the verification and implementation of Cotton made in Africa (CmiA). This report demonstrates AbTF’s continued commitment to transparency in 2024 and offers the public insight into how its partners in Africa are implementing the requirements of the CmiA and CmiA Organic standards. The published figures pertain to the production of CmiA and CmiA Organic cotton during the last season. They show results ranging from good to very good for all four of CmiA’s sustainability pillars: management, people, planet, and prosperity.
In 2023, 23 verifications were conducted—including 13 at the field level and ten in cotton ginneries (which represent the first step in processing the raw material)—at 20 cotton companies in eleven countries south of the Sahara. Verification results showed that partners had made significant improvements since 2022, for instance earning excellent scores in terms of small-scale farmers’ access to high-quality inputs and to pre-financing for the same as well as in terms of cotton fibre quality. Excellent scores were also awarded for criteria related to transparency in the supply chain, including compliance with traceability requirements for CmiA cotton in the chain, a transparent classification and payment system for seed cotton, and timely payments to CmiA-contracted farmers.
Dignified working conditions and support for small-scale farmers were evaluated as “very good”, due in part to the emphasis placed on protecting the rights and health of employees and labourers through appropriate working hours. Regarding environmental aspects, CmiA cotton continues to be cultivated strictly without genetically modified seeds and without irrigation using surface water or groundwater. “Verifications ensure the credibility of our standards. The latest results clearly show that our close collaboration with local partners, some of whom we have worked with for years, is making cotton cultivation in Africa better and more attractive in the long term. Through our wide and varied training programme, we will continue doing everything we can to build up the adaptability and resilience of small-scale farmers and their systems,” comments Elena Wahrenberg, the CmiA verification manager at the Aid by Trade Foundation.
In the 2022/2023 season, around 900,000 CmiA cotton farmers worked 1.7 million hectares of land in accordance with CmiA or CmiA Organic, producing a total of approximately 508,000 tonnes of ginned cotton for the global textile industry, which is enough cotton for around a billion t-shirts.
In addition to the verification results, the report also focusses on various projects and events through which AbTF worked with verified cotton companies to support small-scale farmers and to implement the standards’ requirements in 2023. For example, the Aid by Trade Foundation increased investment in innovation and communication with the aim of supporting its partners in implementing the standards’ requirements.
Multilateral collaborations—including the recently established Innovations Club, the CAR-iSMa project for promoting adaptation to climate change, and the development of the organic cotton sector in Benin—played a key role in achieving success, as did regional workshops, interdisciplinary professional development activities, and cotton-specific training for farmers. This approach will be maintained in 2024, and investment will be made in further developing communication and training formats in order to sustain and refine the quality of the results. A priority in this regard will be adapting to climate change’s effects on agriculture.
Through regular verifications, independent third parties assess the implementation of the CmiA standards’ requirements in cotton fields and ginneries. The cotton companies that work together with the Aid by Trade Foundation in accordance with the requirements of the CmiA standards commit themselves to engaging in responsible business practices, observing CmiA values, continually improving their CmiA performance, and implementing effective management systems. Their success in upholding these commitments is evaluated by independent third parties on an ongoing basis through the verification process. Following the extensive revision the Cotton made in Africa standard underwent in 2020, the 2023 Aggregated Verification & Implementation Report is the second report to analyse the field- and ginnery-level implementation of CmiA Standard Vol. 4.
Yours sincerely,
Holger Diedrich
Press Contact
Aid by Trade Foundation | Gurlittstraße 14 | 20099 Hamburg | Germany
MAIL holger.diedrich@abt-foundation.org
About Cotton made in Africa
The Cotton made in Africa initiative (CmiA) was founded in 2005 under the umbrella of the Hamburg-based Aid by Trade Foundation (AbTF). CmiA is an internationally recognised standard for sustainably produced cotton from Africa, connecting African small-scale farmers with trading companies and fashion brands throughout the global textile value chain. The initiative’s objective is to employ trade, rather than donations, to protect the environment and to improve the living conditions of small-scale farmers and their families. Apart from the farming families, people working in ginneries also benefit from improved working conditions. Additional projects addressing schooling, health, environmental protection, and women’s empowerment contribute to better living conditions in farming communities as well. Learn more at: cottonmadeinafrica.org/en
About the Aid by Trade Foundation
Founded in 2005, the Aid by Trade Foundation (AbTF) is an internationally renowned non-profit organisation that works throughout the world to promote sustainable raw materials. Its activities make a decisive and measurable contribution to improving the living conditions of people and animals while protecting the environment. AbTF takes a practical approach by creating and maintaining a variety of standards to verify raw materials: Cotton made in Africa (CmiA), Cotton made in Africa Organic (CmiA Organic), Regenerative Cotton Standard (RCS), and The Good Cashmere Standard (GCS). A global alliance of textile companies and brands purchases the verified raw materials, paying a licensing fee to AbTF’s marketing company, ATAKORA Fördergesellschaft GmbH. The payment of this fee entitles partners to sell their goods under the standards’ labels. As the challenges facing textile companies and small-scale farmers grow, the standards have a major role to play in ensuring their resilience and future viability. AbTF collaborates closely with industry experts and with specialists in animal and nature protection. Learn more at: www.aidbytrade.org