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Sustainability of Traditional Unrefined Shea Butter
Environmental Sustainability of Unrefined Shea
Butter
Shea butter is one of the world's most sustainable
natural resources. The shea trees grow naturally in the grasslands
of west and central Africa and do not need any irrigation, fertilizer
or pesticides. Shea trees produce an abundance of fruit without
the need for fertilizers. Because they are native to the West African
savanna and are not grown in dense plantations, pests are also not
a problem. Thus, there is no need for toxic pesticides. Shea trees
are adapted to the savanna environment and do not need to be irrigated.
They are also resistant to the fires that sweep through the savannas
every dry season. Shea trees are wild, and are not grown in plantations.
Efforts to start shea plantations have failed for two reasons. First,
shea trees do not germinate easily and have not been viable in plantation
settings. Second, it takes at least 25 years for a shea tree to
produce large numbers of fruits. For these reasons, there are no
shea tree plantations, and shea butter remains a wild product. Purchasing
unrefined shea butter helps keep this natural resource sustainable.
Economic
Sustainability of Unrefined Shea Butter
As more people become aware of the healing power
of unrefined shea butter, the demand for this natural product increases.
It is important to purchase only shea butter that has been produced
in Africa. The product is sustainable because it is hand harvested
and hand produced. The shea nuts are not over-harvested, and local
people are in control of their resources. Shea butter production
has the potential to help poor African nations. Virtually anyone
can gather and sell the shea nuts, since no equipment or capital
is needed to take part. This does not mean that it is an easy task
to gather shea nuts. In fact, gathering shea nuts is very labor
intensive. Many women and children walk as much as 10 miles a day
in searching for and collecting shea nuts. The gathering involves
a lot of bending and almost all of the nuts are transported by the
gatherers themselves - up to 100 lbs of shea nuts on the head. Then
begins the laborious process of drying and cracking the nuts. This
is why is so important to pay the gatherers a fair price for their
efforts and hard work.
Exporting large quantities of shea nuts to Europe and other countries
and extracting the oil with hexane is not environmentally or economically
sustainable. There is the possibility of over-exploitation; in order
for a shea nut dealer to make money, he must sell very large quantities,
since the nuts are sold at a very low price. In this case, the people
gathering the nuts are not paid a fair price, since their labor
is never factored into the price. For example, a large shea nut
buyer will pay as low as five cents for one kilogram of shea nuts.The
labor that goes into producing one kilogram of shea nuts is immense.
First, they are gathered from the ground around shea trees that
are scattered over a large area. Second, they are boiled, dried,
the outer fruit is removed, the kernels are dried again, the kernels
are cracked, and finally, the nuts are removed and dried a final
time.
The local price for nuts is much higher, and when
the final product is sold rather than the raw resource, the local
people receive a higher percentage of the final price. However,
even in this case one has to be careful. In most cases, the people
making the butter (usually poor women in villages and towns), sell
their product to a middle man for a low price. The middle person
then sells it abroad in large quantities - full container loads
- at a low international price. The percentage of the price that
the consumer pays - USD 1 or more per ounce - which the original
producers receive is very small. As observer noted, "When shea
butter is sold on the Northern markets, either in its natural form
or reprocessed and incorporated into another product, the Southern
producers are lost at the bottom of a long trade chain."
Agbanga Karite members are in control of the entire
process - from gathering to selling the product to businesses around
the world. Therefore, the people making the butter are receiving
a much higher percentage of the final price.
Purchase
Fair Trade, Sustainably Produced Shea Butter
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