Posts Tagged product

Go Green – Drink Loose Tea with Libre and get a Free Month of Online Yoga

Libre tea Offers Free Month of Online Yoga with Purchase of Loose Leaf Tea Glass at San Francisco Green Festival, Nov 10-11 at the SF Concourse

SAN FRANCISCO – November 2, 2012 This year at San Francisco Green Festival, Libre tea is offering an exciting partnership with My Yoga Online. With every Libre tea glass purchased customers will receive a voucher for one month of free online yoga classes at MyYogaOnline.com.

The portable Libre tea glass is great for every day and an ideal gift for your fave tea lovin’ friends and family. Its unique design includes a glass interior, durable poly exterior and removable stainless steel filter. It’s the eco-friendly and stylish solution for loose leaf tea ‘on the go’ – all BPA-free.

My Yoga Online is passionate about bringing yoga and holistic living to everyone, everywhere. Members have access to one of the largest and most diverse Mind-Body video and article libraries in the global arena. Their top-quality, high-definition videos are online and geared to fit to your needs – wherever you may be.

Be green and be healthy. Enjoy Tea and Yoga – anytime, anywhere.

A terrific gift solution for the health and eco-conscious tea lovers on your list.

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About Libre tea

Libre tea inspires tea moments with environmentally friendly methods and healthy choices for the people and the planet. Libre tea glasses are re-usable thermal containers for enjoying loose leaf tea on the go – unique glass interior, removable stainless steel filter, and stylish design for the loose leaf tea lover.

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Not Every Green Product Can Be a World-Changer

“I have spent several decades in the packaging industry and almost five years specifically in the green packaging market. During that time, I have come to appreciate both innovations that may have limited appeal but solve a specific or unique problem, as well as products that may not be as newsworthy but provide a solution to a much wider group of customers.

What Is a Broad-Based Solution?

In my mind, a broad-based solution is a product that would have mass appeal and solve a common or very typical packaging problem. For example, when we and others began promoting 100 percent recycled content corrugated for shipping boxes, the concept did not win awards or grace the cover of packaging magazines, even though it could potentially benefit every single shipping box buyer and user.”

Not Every Green Product Can Be a World-Changer via Dennis Salazar – GreenBiz

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Research Reveals Increased Consumer Demand for Fair Trade Certified-Labeled Products

Researchers from Harvard, the London School of Economics and Massachusetts Institute of Technology Release Study on the Value of Ethical Labeling

OAKLAND, Calif., Apr. 25 Fair Trade USA, the leading third-party certifier of Fair Trade products in the United States, reports new findings which confirm that the prominent appearance of the Fair Trade Certified™ label increases sales among coffee-buying consumers.

To investigate the topic of consumer demand for Fair Trade products, researchers Jens Hainmueller of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Michael J. Hiscox of Harvard University, and Sandra Sequeira of the London School of Economics, conducted a six-month research study in partnership with a prominent national grocery retailer. As reported this weekend in the Wall Street Journal, the team examined purchasing behavior among actual consumers at 26 stores and key findings show that:

  • The Fair Trade Certified label alone has a large positive impact on sales.
  • Sales of the two most popular bulk coffees sold in each of the 26 test stores increased by up to 13 percent when labeled as Fair Trade Certified.
  • The study also revealed that a substantial segment of consumers are willing to pay up to eight percent more for a product bearing the Fair Trade Certified label.

The findings are consistent with a Globescan study conducted in 2010, which revealed that 75 percent of consumers said Fair Trade certification makes them feel “very positive or positive” about products; 30 percent said Fair Trade is “likely to increase their purchase interest;” and over half said “independent third-party certification is the best way to verify” a product’s social and environmental claims.

“Overall the findings suggest that there is substantial consumer support for Fair Trade,” said Michael J. Hiscox of Harvard University. “The Fair Trade label by itself had a large positive effect on sales, indicating that a substantial number of coffee buyers place a positive value on Fair Trade certification. In addition, a sizeable segment of coffee buyers were willing to pay a premium for coffee if the premium was directly associated with support for Fair Trade. The tests suggest that there are plenty of consumers ready to vote with their shopping dollars to support Fair Trade when it is offered as an option by retailers.”

The study can be referenced online at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1801942.

Fair Trade USA (previously TransFair USA), a nonprofit organization, is the leading third-party certifier of Fair Trade products in the United States. Fair Trade USA audits and certifies transactions between U.S. companies and their international suppliers to guarantee that the farmers and workers producing Fair Trade Certified goods were paid fair prices and wages, work in safe conditions, protect the environment, and receive community development funds to empower and uplift their communities. Fair Trade USA educates consumers, brings new manufacturers and retailers into the Fair Trade system, and provides farming communities with tools, training and resources to thrive as international businesspeople. Visitwww.FairTradeUSA.org for more information.

The Research team consists of Michael J. Hiscox, the Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs at Harvard UniversitySandra Sequeira, Lecturer in Development Economics at the London School of Economics; and Jens Hainmueller, an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Research Reveals Increased Consumer Demand for Fair Trade Certified-Labeled Products via PRNewswire – CSRWire

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Green Festival visits San Francisco in April

Green Festival is currently the largest sustainability event in the world. Ten years and one million attendees later, Green Festivals are going strong in five major US cities.

Six festivals a year are presented: San Francisco has two, and Los Angeles, New York, Seattle and Chicago each have one festival.

A combination of a trade show and educational conference, Green Festival seeks to educate the population and provide the public with opportunities to sample and witness changes in the green movement. The trade show aspect includes about 300 companies showing their products, and the conference aspect encompasses speakers on a wide variety of sustainability topics.

“The goal is to save humanity from itself. We are undermining the planet’s ability to support human existence,” explained Kevin Danaher, Executive Director of the Global Citizen Center. “With Green Festival we are trying to accelerate the transition to the green economy. As the natural resource base gets depleted, the profitability of saving resources goes up. There are many green companies that people are not aware of. Green Festival puts the public in contact with this.”

Green Festival visits San Francisco in April via The Western Edition – San Francisco

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