Civet coffee: campaigning for cage-free
Civet
coffee is sold as a luxury product, but we’re campaigning to transform this
industry – which causes huge suffering to civets in South East Asia.
What
is civet coffee?
Civets are small, nocturnal mammals,
native to tropical Asia and Africa. The coffee they help to create – by eating
and excreting coffee beans, which are then collected and cleaned – has become
increasingly popular. But, to keep up with rising demand, civets are now being
cruelly captured and forced to live in inhumane conditions. So World Animal
Protection is pushing suppliers to only stock wild-sourced, ‘cage-free’ civet
coffee.
Civet
coffee: the problem
To fuel the growing demand for civet
coffee, civets are being captured using box traps, snares and hunting dogs.
These methods frequently cause injuries. Many civets are then sold to civet
‘farm’ owners. Others are moved to noisy, bustling wildlife markets. After
being sold, the civets are forced to live in small, bare cages, often without
enough shelter or bedding. Many show signs of great stress – pacing or harming
themselves. Fed a poor diet in terrible conditions, many of them die early or
show signs of injuries.
Civet
coffee: the solution
Wild-sourced, cage-free coffee is
the only humane option. It allows wild civets to live in their natural habitat,
and means rural communities can generate a small income by collecting and
selling the coffee beans excreted by civets. And connoisseurs want this high-quality,
natural product – not the inferior, cruel, caged product, which misleads
consumers and undermines this traditional industry.
What
are we doing?
We have been campaigning to stop the
supply of caged civet coffee since September 2013 and momentum is growing. We
began by asking retailers in Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden and the
UK to investigate their supply chains and stop selling civet coffee if they
could not guarantee it was wild-sourced.
At least 13 retailers – including
big names like Harrods and Selfridges in the UK and Simon Lévelt in the
Netherlands – took civet coffee off their shelves or agreed to
investigate. Harrods even went one step further and helped us push for
global civet coffee certification.
How
can you help us?
To help protect wild civets, please don’t
buy civet coffee unless you can guarantee it is from a 100% ‘cage-free’ source.
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