Background
Frans van der Hoff was born in 1939 in a disciplined farming family in Southern Netherlands.
Frans van der Hoff was born in 1939 in a disciplined farming family in Southern Netherlands.
He later received a Doctor of Philosophy in political economy and another one in theology while studying in Germany.
Frans van der Hoff"s contacts with disadvantaged Mexican coffee producers were key in securing the supply and ensuring the success of the very first Fairtrade certification initiative. He became politically active early on in student movements during his studies at Radboud University Nijmegen. In 1970, van der Hoff moved to Santiago de Chile to work in the barrios as a worker-priest.
During the 1973 coup, van der Hoff moved to Mexico to continue his work in the slums of Mexico City.
Seven years later, he moved to Oaxaca in the Southern part of Mexico. As a worker-priest, he quickly integrated the community and started to learn about the misery and economic hardship of local coffee producers.
In 1981, he participates in the launch of UCIRI (Union de Comunidades Indigenas de la Region del Istmo), a coffee producer cooperative created to bypass local traders (also called coyotes) and pool resources. Roozen, who was then responsible for business development at ecumenical development agency Solidaridad, quickly became interested in van der Hoff"s work.
On November 15, 1988, the two launched together the first Fairtrade labelling initiative, Max Havelaar.
The initiative offered disadvantaged coffee producers following various social and environmental standards a fair price, significantly above the market price, for their crop. The coffee, originating from the UCIRI cooperative, was imported by Dutch company Van Weely, roasted by Neuteboom and then sold directly to world shops and retailers across the Netherlands. The initiative was a great success and was replicated in several other markets.
In 2006, Fairtrade-certified sales amounted to approximately €1.6 billion worldwide and over 569 producer organizations, representing roughly over 1.5 million producers, in 58 developing countries were Fairtrade certified.