Consumer Quality Control

Ethics Gone Bananas

In a world where the concept of ethics seems to have gone bananas, it turns out that bananas can teach a lesson or two about ethics.

Dole Organic now places 3-digit Farm Codes on each banana.Socially and environmentally-conscious buyers can plug the numbers into Dole’s website and look at a bio of the farm where their bananas were raised. The site tells the story of the farm and its surrounding community, lists its organic certifications, posts some photos, and offers a link to satellite images of the farm in Google Earth. Customers can personally monitor the production and treatment of their fruit from the tree to the grocer. The process assures the customer that their bananas have been raised to proper organic standards on an environmentally-friendly, holistically-minded plantation.

And food producers aren’t the only ones jumping on the bandwagon. Flocks, a Rotterdam-based designer clothing company, uses one sheep’s wool in each cardigan it produces. When shipped to its new owner, the sweater is tagged with that specific animal’s “passport,” including its breed, weight, age, birthplace, and photo. By actively communicating their products’ origin, Flocks connects its customers with its clothing in a unique fashion.

this intimate monitoring could bring accountability to other aspects of production: fair wages, child labor, safe facilities, job security, and health care

As the world shrinks, the distance between consumer and manufacturer shrinks too. Customers are taking an active interest in where and how their goods are produced: Is the environment being treated well? Are the methods sustainable? Are the animals treated humanely? Are the humans treated humanely? So far these companies are primarily using this connection to disclose their environmental impact and to give consumers a good story to tell their friends, but this intimate monitoring could bring accountability to other aspects of production: fair wages, child labor, safe facilities, job security, health care, etc. It reminds me of the words of James:

Look! The wages you failed to pay the workmen who mowed your fields are crying out against you. The cries of the harvesters have reached the ears of the Lord Almighty.

And of Jesus in Luke 18:

And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night? Will he keep putting them off? I tell you, he will see that they get justice, and quickly.

While technology won’t bring to light every inhumane and unjust business practice, it does provide unique tools for consumers to hold their producers accountable with. What if providing information about production and manufacturing sources becomes standard? Will your company have to change practices or suppliers? Or will your company be able to say that their treatment of both the environment and their employees is upright and ethical throughout the entire chain of production?

Posted by Andrew Wooldridge on July 20, 2007

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Comments

  • Comment Author
    Doug Fraser
    May 5, 2009 10:44 am | #

    Unfortunately these bananas are sold IN PLASTIC BAGS – duh – real environmental hypocracy!

    Sorry Dole – but you get a failing grade!

  • Comment Author
    jodell bullock
    Jan 13, 2010 7:09 am | #

    Are you using fair trade practices? Are your workers paid a fair wage and are they protected from hazards in their work? I congratulate you on organic bananas, but would like to know more about your workers.

  • Comment Author
    Jill
    May 19, 2010 1:28 pm | #

    Dole employees thank you for doing your best to provide us with safe produce without pesticides if we choose to purchase them. The plastic bags can be recycled, and I am just happy to have a banana without risking my health. You are great! Thank Farm 537 for their tender love and care for me, the consumer. Americans are so quick to judge and here is proof. Two negative thinkers to one positive person concerned about the bottom-line health for individuals. We can recycle the plastics ourself, but, we can’t always find organic produce. Keep up the great work! Double thumbs up!

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