Our Sourcing Principles
We are dedicated to expanding models of equitable trade and producing coffee with a less harmful environmental footprint than status quo, because 80% of our world's coffee farmers live in extreme poverty, and over 60% of coffee species are at risk of extinction.
Supporting Smallscale Farmers
Smallholder farmers produce most of our world's coffee supply, yet they remain the most marginalized geographically and economically of all actors in the industry. We put our purchasing dollars into the hands of small-scale farmers where we can have the greatest impact, and support agricultural models which most often promote biodiversity and indigenous and rural communities.
Paying More For Coffee
We pay 60%-100% more than Fair Trade Minimum prices. Commercial coffee prices ("C Price"), and sometimes Fair Trade minimums, fall below the well researched cost to produce coffee sustainably. We pay prices that target surpassing the cost of production for farmers, which varies from country to country, region to region, and farm to farm. We publish our prices paid to producers each year in our annual transparency report.
Reducing Our Environmental Impact
Coffee is a high intensity carbon impact food. Most GHG emissions and landfill waste occur in the final phases of coffee's lifecycle (roasting, distributing, retailing, brewing and consuming). We are committed to delivering a lower carbon impact cup. Today some commitments towards this include using 100% biodegradable packaging for our coffee bags, composting in 2 on 4 of our cafés, incentivising the use of reusable cups in our cafés by offering $0.25c rebate on drinks, donating $0.02c/LB per LB of green coffee that we buy to World Coffee Research, delivering our e-commerce orders when possible by bicycle courrier or electric truck, and roasting our coffee with an Afterburner that reduces harmful emissions by 95%.
FAQ
To get detailed step-by-step Preparation guides for the most common brewing methods at home go here!
Bitterness is a characteristic of over-extracted coffee which means that ground coffee has been in contact with water for too long. The quickest variable to modify that may reduce bitterness is coarsening your grind by one grind setting. This will allow water to flow through the coffee bed at a faster rate and reduce over-extraction. Do this while using the same dose of coffee until you find your desired sweet spot. You can check out our how to brew page for more tips on optimizing your brew, or reach out to us with questions at info@dispatchcoffee.ca
Stay in touch
We share coffee stories, home brew tips, product launches, events and promos.