Description
Customers want to feel good about the place they go and the coffee they drink. Our employees, whom we call partners, want to feel proud when talking to friends and family about where they work. Farmers want to know that they can depend on us for a livelihood that's sustainable. We have come to appreciate that throughout the world many people feel a sense of connection to us. Being their Starbucks is an honor. And also a responsibility.
Starbucks Corporation CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY / FISCAL 2006 ANNUAL REPORT
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 1
Maybe you have a Starbucks you call
your own. And because it is yours,
you expect a lot from it.
Customers want to feel good about the place they
go and the coffee they drink. Our employees,
whom we call partners, want to feel proud when
talking to friends and family about where they
work. Farmers want to know that they can
depend on us for a livelihood that’s sustainable.
We have come to appreciate that throughout the
world many people feel a sense of connection to
us. Being their Starbucks is an honor. And also a
responsibility.
For us corporate social responsibility is not just a
program or a donation or a press release. It’s the
way we do business every day.
This report is one of the ways we openly and
humbly share our commitment to do business
responsibly. To continue to earn the privilege of
being your Starbucks.
STARBUCKS MISSION STATEMENT AND
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
To establish Starbucks as the premier purveyor of the ?nest
coffee in the world while maintaining our uncompromising
principles as we grow.
The following six Guiding Principles will help us measure the
appropriateness of our decisions:
• Provide a great work environment and treat each
other with respect and dignity.
• Embrace diversity as an essential component in the
way we do business.
• Apply the highest standards of excellence to the
purchasing, roasting and fresh delivery of our coffee.
• Develop enthusiastically satis?ed customers all of
the time.
• Contribute positively to our communities and our
environment.
• Recognize that pro?tability is essential to our
future success.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 2
Dear Stakeholders,
We are often asked how Starbucks went from a single co?ee shop in 1971 to one of the most
recognizable and respected global brands today. Delivering great co?ee, exceptional service and
an uplifting and personal customer experience have all contributed to Starbucks success. Equally
important has been our commitment to conducting business in a socially and environmentally
responsible manner, a commitment that stems from Starbucks Mission Statement and
Guiding Principles.
Our store partners (employees) are connecting and creating relationships with our customers
every day. We believe it matters greatly that they feel Starbucks is a great place to work, and a
company that cares not only about their well-being but also about the world we live in. Good
communication is key to all of this and helps to inspire our partners about the company they
work for, the important role they play at Starbucks and the customers they serve. With more than
145,000 partners worldwide, our ability to communicate e?ectively and passionately about what
Starbucks is doing to be a good company – in both a personal yet focused manner – is absolutely
essential and a top priority for us.
We believe the relationships we have with external stakeholders can be strengthened by focusing
much of our communications on Starbucks commitment and passion to improve the world and
the ways in which we are demonstrating this. For instance, we want our customers, shareholders,
communities and others to understand how we are working together with farmers and suppliers to
help create a more sustainable approach to high-quality co?ee production. We also want to share
what Starbucks is doing to contribute positively to local communities; minimize our environmental
footprint; be responsive to our customers’ health and wellness needs; and how Starbucks is serving
as a leader in both our industry and within our global society through our participation in
organizations such as the United Nations Global Compact.
We were very mindful of taking a focused approach when we prepared this year’s Corporate
Social Responsibility Annual Report. Rather than attempt to address every issue in the abridged
print version of our ?scal 2006 report, we conducted a materiality assessment to determine what
topics are of most signi?cance to our stakeholders and to Starbucks, a process explained on the
following page.
As you read through this full report we hope the information helps you assess for yourself how well
Starbucks is doing with regard to our corporate social responsibilities. As always, we encourage you
to share your honest feedback. To do so, we have created an online survey which is described on the
back page of this report.
On behalf of everyone at Starbucks, thank you for taking your time to learn more about how
Starbucks is doing business in a di?erent kind of way.
Sincerely,
Howard Schultz Jim Donald
chairman president and chief executive o?cer
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 3
Focusing on Materiality
Tis is Starbucks sixth annual Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR) Report. Tis year, we took a di?erent approach by
publishing both a printed abridged version and this full report
online.
We began our ?scal 2006 reporting process by conducting
a materiality assessment to ensure that we are aligned with
the materiality principle of the Global Reporting Initiative
(GRI) regarding content. Speci?cally, the topics and indicators
covered in our CSR Report should re?ect Starbucks signi?cant
economic, environmental and social impacts, or substantively
in?uence the assessments and decisions of our stakeholders. We
consulted a variety of sources – both internal and external – as
part of our materiality assessment. Tese sources included:
• Company objectives, strategies, policies, programs and
risk factors.
• Partner (employee) surveys and other input gathered
through various feedback mechanisms.
• Customer contact feedback.
• Shareholder resolutions and anecdotal feedback.
• Input gathered through stakeholder dialogues.
• Informal input from co?ee suppliers.
• Media coverage and blog discussions of issues.
• Stakeholder feedback speci?c to Starbucks 2005 CSR
Report.
• Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) recommended topics
and data for inclusion.
After reviewing these sources, we compiled a list of issues and
prioritized each one based on the following criteria:
• Te importance of the issue to – and potential impact
on – Starbucks.
• Te importance of the issue to – and potential impact
on – external stakeholders.
• Te amount of reasonable control Starbucks has over a
particular issue.
Based on our assessment, we determined that the material
issues of greatest importance to Starbucks and our
stakeholders, which the company has a reasonable level
of control over, fall into ?ve topic areas highlighted in the
top right box below. We chose to focus our abridged print
report on these subjects only. Tis full report includes many
of the topics on the following matrix.
CONTENTS IN THE WEB REPORT CONTENTS IN THE PRINTED REPORT
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Fair Trade Certi?ed™ coffee
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Prices paid to coffee farmers and suppliers
• Respect for workers’ human rights
• Long-term availability of high-quality coffee
Growth and Expansion
• Impacts on local communities
Environmental Impacts
• Climate change
• Energy consumption
• Paper cups
Health and Wellness
• Products
• Nutrition information
Workplace Practices
• Culture and bene?ts
• Satisfaction and engagement
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Organic and conservation
Environmental Practices
• Water usage
• Waste and recycling
• Sustainable packaging
• Transportation/
distribution impacts
Customer Concerns
• rBGH dairy
• Marketing to youth
• Caffeine
Governance
• Executive compensation
• Majority voting for
board members
• Transparency
Stakeholder Engagement
Local Community Engagement
• Charitable giving
• Partnerships
• Partner (employee)
volunteerism
Diversity
• Workplace
• Supplier
• Communities
Sustainable Sourcing
• Supplier Code of Conduct
• Human rights/
working conditions
• Tea
• Paper
• Ethos™ water
Responsible Marketing
• Starbucks™ Liqueurs
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Veri?cation and transparency
• Access to credit
• Social investments
Environmental Impacts
• Store design and operations
Workplace Practices
• Training and development
• Right to organize
• Health and wellness
• Health and safety
Managing Corporate Social Responsibility
• Vision and priority setting
• Ethics and governance
Cocoa Sourcing Practices
Public Policy
Global Philanthropic Programs
SIGNIFICANCE OR POTENTIAL IMPACT ON STARBUCKS
IMPORTANT VERY IMPORTANT
S
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R
Y
I
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STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 4
About This Report
Scope
Tis report includes information on Starbucks U.S. and
Canada company-operated retail and global supply chain
operations – the areas that represent the majority of
Starbucks social, environmental and economic impacts.
Starbucks system for collecting and reporting reliable social,
environmental and economic performance data does not
encompass all of our operations. Where available, anecdotal
information is included for international and licensed store
operations. Information on total co?ee purchases is for both
Starbucks Co?ee Company and Seattle Co?ee Company.
Reporting Year
Starbucks ?scal year 2006 (October 3, 2005–
October 1, 2006), unless otherwise noted.
Currency
All references to currency are in U.S. dollars, unless
otherwise noted.
Starbucks 2006 CSR Report and Previous Reports
www.starbucks.com/csrannualreport
Information Integrity
Starbucks management is responsible for the preparation and
integrity of the information in this report. Trough a system
of internal controls, including a comprehensive veri?cation
process involving internal subject matter experts, we believe
this report fairly represents our CSR activities and results for
the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006. External veri?cation is
provided by Moss Adams LLP. See page 76.
Global Reporting Initiative
Starbucks reporting continues to be in?uenced by the Global
Reporting Initiative’s (GRI) 2002 Sustainability Reporting
Guidelines in determining relevant content and performance
metrics to include. See the Table of Contents on the next
page for a listing of GRI indictors included in this report,
and page 13 for a description of how we applied the GRI
principles. Information about GRI is online at
www.globalreporting.org.
PAGE
GLOBAL REPORTING
INITIATIVE (GRI) INDICATORS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 5
CONTENTS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Starbucks Mission Statement & Guiding Principles 1 3.7
Letter to Stakeholders 2 1.2
Focusing on Materiality 3
About Tis Report 4 2.11-2.13, 2.20, 2.21
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006 7 EC4, EC10, EN17, LA7, LA11
Starbucks Company Pro?le 9 2.1-2.3, 2.8, 2.16, EC1
Integrating Corporate Social Responsibility 10 2.9, 3.1-3.3, 3.6, 3.8, 3.10-3.12, LA11
External Recognition 14 SO4
United Nations Global Compact 15 3.14
PRODUCTS
Our World of Products 16
Sustaining Co?ee Quality 16
Creating a Sustainable Approach 18
C.A.F.E. Practices 19 3.7, 3.16, EC13, EN27, HR2, HR3, HR6
Te Link Between Quality and Price 19 EC13
Respect for Workers’ Human Rights 19 HR2
C.A.F.E. Practices – Hitting Our Targets 20 EC4, EN33
C.A.F.E. Practices – Findings and Next Steps 21
C.A.F.E. Practices – Te Veri?cation Process 23
Economic Transparency 23
Starbucks and Fair Trade 23 EC4, EC13, PR6
Purchasing Certi?ed Organic and Conservation Co?ees 25 EC4, EN27
Access to Credit 26 EC13
Investments in Co?ee Communities 27 EC13
Sustainable Trade: Purchasing Our Non-Co?ee Products 29 3.7, 3.16, HR3
Procurement Practices for Sustainable Agriculture 30
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program 30 3.7, 3.11, 3.16, HR2, HR3, HR6
Tazo
®
Tea – Sustainability Practices 31
Dairy and Bakery Products 32 3.11
Starbucks Social Responsibility Standards – Manufactured Goods 33 3.7, 3.16, HR2, HR3, HR6
Ethos
™
Water 34
Quality Assurance and Product Recalls 35 PR1
(continued on next page)
PAGE
GLOBAL REPORTING
INITIATIVE (GRI) INDICATORS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 6
SOCIETY
Starbucks Growth and Community Impacts 36
Continuing Marketplace Evolution 37
Operating in the Global Community 37
Being Respectful of Community Concerns 37 SO1
Being Locally Relevant 39
Supporting Local Communities and Economic Development 39 EC13
Starbucks Community Investments 40 EC10
Investing in Communities Around the World 44 EC10
Te Starbucks Foundation 46 EC10
Starbucks Commitment to Health and Wellness 49 PR2
Being Responsive to Our Customers 51 PR8, PR9
Public Policy and Government A?airs 53 SO3
ENVIRONMENT
Our Commitment to Environmental Stewardship 54 3.7
Addressing Climate Change 54 EN8, EN17
Greening the Cup 56 EN14
Understanding and Improving our Environmental Footprint 57 EN2, EN3, EN5, EN18
WORKPLACE
Providing a Great Work Environment 63 EC5, LA2
Listening to Our Partners 63 SO2, HR10
Providing Bene?ts to Our Partners 66 LA12
Recognizing Our Partners 69
Partner Training and Career Development 70 LA9, LA17
Workplace Policies and Respecting Partners’ Rights 70 LA3, LA10, HR4, HR5
Health and Safety 71 LA7
DIVERSITY
Fostering Diversity and Inclusion 72
Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace 72 LA11
Supplier Diversity 74 HR2
Urban Co?ee Opportunities 75
Independent Assurance Report 76 2.21, 2.22
Feedback and Further Information 77 3.11, 3.12
CONTENTS continued
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 7
INDICATOR 2005 2006 2007 TARGET WHAT WE SAID IN 2005 WHAT WE DID IN 2006
SELF-
RATING
MORE
INFO
COFFEE
Coffee and Farmer
Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices approved
suppliers
77 million pounds
(goal: 75 million
pounds)
155 million pounds
(goal: 150 million
pounds)
225 million pounds • Explore opening a Farmer Support Center (FSC) in Asia-Paci?c and
begin introducing C.A.F.E. Practices to our local suppliers.
• Began exploring opportunities to open an FSC in Asia Paci?c. Organized
suppliers training sessions in both Indonesia and Papua New Guinea reaching
out to small- and large-scale suppliers from various countries in Asia Paci?c.
Page 19
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
25% 53% • Work with the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) to provide coffee
quality training and encourage adoption of sustainable coffee
practices to cooperatives in Kenya.
• Continued to work with the AWF to provide quality training and expertise and
encourage sustainable coffee practices. Starbucks also conducted training in
Kenya for coffee farmers, cooperatives and exporters from the majority of the
countries we buy coffee from in East Africa.
Page 22
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
cooperatives
11 million pounds
(goal: 10 million
pounds)
18 million pounds
(goal: 12 million
pounds)
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
green (unroasted) coffee
purchases to support forecasted sales.
• Promote our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee blends to increase customer
demand and sales of these products.
• Supported Fair Trade Month in October 2005, featuring Starbucks newest
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
blend, Café Estima Blend
™
, as the “Coffee of the Week”
in U.S. and Canada stores. Increased distribution of packaged Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffees globally. Began selling Kirkland Signature Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffee in Costco stores in the U.S. and Canada.
Page 23
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
4% 6% • Continue to work with regional Fair Trade organizations to introduce
additional Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee products globally.
• Globally, coordinated efforts with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations
International and 10 of the 20 Fair Trade National Initiatives to expand Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
product offerings in 24 markets.
SOCIETY
Charitable
contributions
Total cash and in-kind contributions $30.3 million $36.1 million Do not currently set targets for future
charitable contributions.
• Focus community investments to address global water issues and
education.
• Initiated water projects in Indonesia and in Ethiopia, both supported through
The Starbucks Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund. Completed ?rst of ?ve-year, $5
million commitment to Starbucks China Education Project.
Page 40
Percentage of pre-tax earnings 3.8% 4.0%
Volunteerism
(Make Your Mark)
Number of hours volunteered by partners
and customers in the U.S. and Canada
299,000 383,000
(goal: 375,000)
421,000 • Increase partner volunteerism. • Encouraged partners to leverage their volunteerism through Starbucks Make
Your Mark program.
Page 42
ENVIRONMENT*
Electricity Kilowatt-hours per square foot of retail
space per month
6.40 6.57 Target has not been established. • Purchase renewable energy certi?cates to offset 20% of the energy
used in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
• Quadrupled our renewable energy purchase to equal 20% of the energy used
in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
Page 55
Water Gallons per square foot of retail space
per month
24 26 Target has not been established. • Integrate speci?c environmental practices into our retail operational
standards to help focus on improving store level accountability for
energy and water conservation, recycling and waste reduction.
• Updated a store manager performance tool to emphasize the importance of
managing environmental aspects of store operations and what bottom line
impact – positive or negative – their actions can have.
Page 57
Paper Percentage of post-consumer ?ber (not
including hot cups)
49.5%
(goal: 48%)
66.4%
(goal: 50%)
66.9% • Roll out new hot beverage cups containing 10% post-consumer ?ber
(PCF) in U.S. company-operated and licensed stores.
• Converted all hot beverage cups in Starbucks U.S. and Canada stores to the
10% PCF content version.
Page 56
Percentage of unbleached ?ber (not
including hot cups)
85.9%
(goal: 90%)
86.3%
(goal: 86.5%)
87.1%
WORKPLACE
Partner satisfaction Percentage of satis?ed or
very satis?ed partners
87% 86% We continually strive to strengthen our
workplace practices in ways that make
Starbucks a great place to work.
• Conduct a Partner View Survey approximately every 18-24 months.
Last one took place in October 2004.
• Expanded the reach of latest Partner View Survey, conducted March 2006,
to include partners in company-operated stores globally. Achieved 84%
response rate, our best yet.
Page 64
Partner engagement Percentage of engaged partners 73% 69%
Health and safety Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked –
retail
7.05
1
5.46
(goal: 6.5)
5 • Complete the rollout of anti-slip mats to our North America company-
operated stores.
• Finished replacing mats in more than 3,400 existing stores and all new stores
in North America.
Page 59
DIVERSITY
Women U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 34% 33% While Starbucks values diversity and
inclusion, we do not currently set targets for
representation by race and gender.
• Roll out our diversity and inclusion scorecard to our ceo and senior
leadership team.
• Finalized diversity and inclusion scorecard and delivered it to Starbucks ceo
and his direct reports. It includes data on workforce diversity; individual
leadership performance related to diversity and inclusion; supplier diversity
and customer demographics.
Page 72
U.S. workforce 65% 66%
People of color U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 14% 15%
U.S. workforce 30% 30%
Suppliers Amount spent with certi?ed minority-
and women-owned businesses in U.S.
$166 million
(goal: $140 million)
$213 million
(goal: $206 million)
$250 million • Expose Starbucks buyers and procurement directors to more
opportunities for doing business with diverse suppliers.
• Increase our level of participation in organizations such as the
National Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
• Engaged with National Association of Minority Contractors; participated in
National Minority Business Council annual opportunity fair and other events;
attended Women’s Business Enterprise National Council annual conference;
took part in supplier diversity training for Institute for Supply Management–
Certi?ed Purchasing Manager credits; and served as board chair for local
Northwest chapter of National Minority Supplier Development Council.
Page 74
KEY: ACHIEVED MAKING PROGRESS DID NOT ACHIEVE
To measure how well we are doing at upholding our commitment to social responsibility and to our Guiding Principles, Starbucks has identi?ed the following key performance indicators
as relevant metrics for our business. Each year, we will report our performance relative to these metrics and any new metrics we may add. We strive to include forward-looking targets
for our performance indicators. However, in some cases the information is not available or the company is unable to provide it for other reasons.
STARBUCKS CORPORATE SOCI AL RESPONSI BI LI TY
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006
*We have not measured our greenhouse gas emissions since 2003 and therefore this indicator has been removed from this table. For information about our Climate Change Mitigation Strategy, see page 56.
1
Fiscal 2005 information has been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims that were ?led after the ?scal year ended.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 8
INDICATOR 2005 2006 2007 TARGET WHAT WE SAID IN 2005 WHAT WE DID IN 2006
SELF-
RATING
MORE
INFO
COFFEE
Coffee and Farmer
Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices approved
suppliers
77 million pounds
(goal: 75 million
pounds)
155 million pounds
(goal: 150 million
pounds)
225 million pounds • Explore opening a Farmer Support Center (FSC) in Asia-Paci?c and
begin introducing C.A.F.E. Practices to our local suppliers.
• Began exploring opportunities to open an FSC in Asia Paci?c. Organized
suppliers training sessions in both Indonesia and Papua New Guinea reaching
out to small- and large-scale suppliers from various countries in Asia Paci?c.
Page 19
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
25% 53% • Work with the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) to provide coffee
quality training and encourage adoption of sustainable coffee
practices to cooperatives in Kenya.
• Continued to work with the AWF to provide quality training and expertise and
encourage sustainable coffee practices. Starbucks also conducted training in
Kenya for coffee farmers, cooperatives and exporters from the majority of the
countries we buy coffee from in East Africa.
Page 22
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
cooperatives
11 million pounds
(goal: 10 million
pounds)
18 million pounds
(goal: 12 million
pounds)
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
green (unroasted) coffee
purchases to support forecasted sales.
• Promote our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee blends to increase customer
demand and sales of these products.
• Supported Fair Trade Month in October 2005, featuring Starbucks newest
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
blend, Café Estima Blend
™
, as the “Coffee of the Week”
in U.S. and Canada stores. Increased distribution of packaged Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffees globally. Began selling Kirkland Signature Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffee in Costco stores in the U.S. and Canada.
Page 23
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
4% 6% • Continue to work with regional Fair Trade organizations to introduce
additional Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee products globally.
• Globally, coordinated efforts with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations
International and 10 of the 20 Fair Trade National Initiatives to expand Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
product offerings in 24 markets.
SOCIETY
Charitable
contributions
Total cash and in-kind contributions $30.3 million $36.1 million Do not currently set targets for future
charitable contributions.
• Focus community investments to address global water issues and
education.
• Initiated water projects in Indonesia and in Ethiopia, both supported through
The Starbucks Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund. Completed ?rst of ?ve-year, $5
million commitment to Starbucks China Education Project.
Page 40
Percentage of pre-tax earnings 3.8% 4.0%
Volunteerism
(Make Your Mark)
Number of hours volunteered by partners
and customers in the U.S. and Canada
299,000 383,000
(goal: 375,000)
421,000 • Increase partner volunteerism. • Encouraged partners to leverage their volunteerism through Starbucks Make
Your Mark program.
Page 42
ENVIRONMENT*
Electricity Kilowatt-hours per square foot of retail
space per month
6.40 6.57 Target has not been established. • Purchase renewable energy certi?cates to offset 20% of the energy
used in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
• Quadrupled our renewable energy purchase to equal 20% of the energy used
in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
Page 55
Water Gallons per square foot of retail space
per month
24 26 Target has not been established. • Integrate speci?c environmental practices into our retail operational
standards to help focus on improving store level accountability for
energy and water conservation, recycling and waste reduction.
• Updated a store manager performance tool to emphasize the importance of
managing environmental aspects of store operations and what bottom line
impact – positive or negative – their actions can have.
Page 57
Paper Percentage of post-consumer ?ber (not
including hot cups)
49.5%
(goal: 48%)
66.4%
(goal: 50%)
66.9% • Roll out new hot beverage cups containing 10% post-consumer ?ber
(PCF) in U.S. company-operated and licensed stores.
• Converted all hot beverage cups in Starbucks U.S. and Canada stores to the
10% PCF content version.
Page 56
Percentage of unbleached ?ber (not
including hot cups)
85.9%
(goal: 90%)
86.3%
(goal: 86.5%)
87.1%
WORKPLACE
Partner satisfaction Percentage of satis?ed or
very satis?ed partners
87% 86% We continually strive to strengthen our
workplace practices in ways that make
Starbucks a great place to work.
• Conduct a Partner View Survey approximately every 18-24 months.
Last one took place in October 2004.
• Expanded the reach of latest Partner View Survey, conducted March 2006,
to include partners in company-operated stores globally. Achieved 84%
response rate, our best yet.
Page 64
Partner engagement Percentage of engaged partners 73% 69%
Health and safety Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked –
retail
7.05
1
5.46
(goal: 6.5)
5 • Complete the rollout of anti-slip mats to our North America company-
operated stores.
• Finished replacing mats in more than 3,400 existing stores and all new stores
in North America.
Page 59
DIVERSITY
Women U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 34% 33% While Starbucks values diversity and
inclusion, we do not currently set targets for
representation by race and gender.
• Roll out our diversity and inclusion scorecard to our ceo and senior
leadership team.
• Finalized diversity and inclusion scorecard and delivered it to Starbucks ceo
and his direct reports. It includes data on workforce diversity; individual
leadership performance related to diversity and inclusion; supplier diversity
and customer demographics.
Page 72
U.S. workforce 65% 66%
People of color U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 14% 15%
U.S. workforce 30% 30%
Suppliers Amount spent with certi?ed minority-
and women-owned businesses in U.S.
$166 million
(goal: $140 million)
$213 million
(goal: $206 million)
$250 million • Expose Starbucks buyers and procurement directors to more
opportunities for doing business with diverse suppliers.
• Increase our level of participation in organizations such as the
National Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
• Engaged with National Association of Minority Contractors; participated in
National Minority Business Council annual opportunity fair and other events;
attended Women’s Business Enterprise National Council annual conference;
took part in supplier diversity training for Institute for Supply Management–
Certi?ed Purchasing Manager credits; and served as board chair for local
Northwest chapter of National Minority Supplier Development Council.
Page 74
KEY: ACHIEVED MAKING PROGRESS DID NOT ACHIEVE
To measure how well we are doing at upholding our commitment to social responsibility and to our Guiding Principles, Starbucks has identi?ed the following key performance indicators
as relevant metrics for our business. Each year, we will report our performance relative to these metrics and any new metrics we may add. We strive to include forward-looking targets
for our performance indicators. However, in some cases the information is not available or the company is unable to provide it for other reasons.
STARBUCKS CORPORATE SOCI AL RESPONSI BI LI TY
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006
*We have not measured our greenhouse gas emissions since 2003 and therefore this indicator has been removed from this table. For information about our Climate Change Mitigation Strategy, see page 56.
1
Fiscal 2005 information has been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims that were ?led after the ?scal year ended.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 9
STARBUCKS COMPANY PROFILE
Starbucks Corporation is the leading retailer, roaster and
brand of specialty co?ee in the world, with more than 12,000
company-operated and licensed locations in North America,
Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia Paci?c.
Trough various licensing arrangements and foodservice
accounts, Starbucks co?ee and other products are sold in
designated locations within airports, grocery stores, other
prominent retailers, hotels and universities. Starbucks
international licensed retail stores are operated through
licensing arrangements and joint ventures, primarily with
established retailers or restaurant operators.
Our brand portfolio o?ers a wide variety of consumer
products including Tazo
®
teas, Hear Music
®
CDs, bottled
Ethos
™
water and Starbucks
™
Liqueurs. Te Seattle’s Best
Co?ee and Torrefazione Italia co?ee brands enable Starbucks
to appeal to a broader consumer base by o?ering a variety
of co?ee ?avor pro?les. Starbucks also sells co?ee-brewing
equipment and other merchandise.
Starbucks Corporation is incorporated in Washington State,
in the United States. Te company’s common stock is traded
on Te NASDAQ
®
Global Select Market (“NASDAQ”),
under the symbol “SBUX.” As of January 12, 2007, there
were approximately 603,000 registered and bene?cial
shareholders of record.
Company Data
FISCAL YEAR 2004* 2005 2006
Total net revenues $5.3 billion $6.4 billion $7.8 billion
U.S. company-operated retail stores $3.8 billion $4.5 billion $5.5 billion
U.S. specialty (licensing, foodservice and other)** $465 million $558 million $683 million
International company-operated stores $657 million $852 million $1.1 billion
International specialty (licensing, foodservice and other)** $137 million $170 million $215 million
Total Global Consumer Products Group revenues** (licensing) $235 million $249 million $305 million
Net earnings $389 million $494 million $564 million
Earnings per common share – diluted $0.47 $0.61 $0.71
Shareholders’ equity $2.5 billion $2.1 billion $2.2 billion
Total income taxes $232 million $302 million $325 million
Cash paid for income tax expense $173 million $228 million $274 million
U.S. federal and state $163 million $219 million $258 million
International $10 million $9 million $16 million
Effective tax rate 37.3% 37.9% 35.8%
Number of countries where Starbucks stores are located 34 37 37
Total retail stores 8,569 10,241 12,440
U.S. company-operated stores 4,338*** 4,918*** 5,728
International company-operated stores 978*** 1,144*** 1,374
U.S. licensed stores 1,839 2,435 3,168
International licensed stores 1,414*** 1,744*** 2,170
Number of partners (employees) 97,000 115,000 145,800
* Fiscal 2004 included 53 weeks. For further information about our ?nancial performance, please see our 2006 Annual Report to Shareholders, available online at
www.starbucks.com/aboutus/investor.asp.
** Beginning in the ?scal fourth quarter of 2006, the Company increased its reporting segments from two to three to include a Global Consumer Products Group (“CPG”)
segment in addition to the U.S. and International segments. Tis additional operating segment re?ects the culmination of internal management realignments in ?scal
2006, and the successful development and launch of certain branded products in the U.S. and internationally, commencing in ?scal 2005 and continuing throughout
?scal 2006. Additionally, with the 100 percent acquisition of the company’s operations in Hawaii in ?scal 2006 and the shift in internal management of this market to
the U.S., these operations have been moved from the International segment to the U.S.
*** International store information has been adjusted for the ?scal 2006 acquisitions of Hawaii and Puerto Rico and ?scal 2005 acquisitions of Germany, Southern China
and Chile licensed operations by reclassifying historical information from Licensed stores to company-operated stores. U.S. store information was also adjusted to align
with the Hawaii operations segment change by reclassifying historical information from International company-operated stores to the U.S.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 10
INTEGRATING CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY (CSR)
At Starbucks, our commitment to good
governance, ethical conduct and social
responsibility is core to our way of doing
business, and strongly aligned with our drive
to create and increase shareholder value. We are
also committed to maintaining our relationships
with stakeholders and gaining their input and
feedback on issues of mutual importance.
The Business Case
Starbucks de?nes CSR as conducting business in ways that
produce social, environmental and economic bene?ts for
the communities in which we operate and for the company’s
stakeholders, including shareholders. A few of the tangible
bene?ts are:
• Attracting and retaining our partners – We believe
Starbucks commitment to CSR leads to higher than
typical levels of satisfaction and engagement among
our partners.
• Customer loyalty – Studies have revealed that customers
prefer to do business with a company they believe to be
socially responsible, when their other key buying criteria
are met. We believe customer loyalty has been a driving
force behind Starbucks phenomenal growth and long-
term success.
• Reducing operating costs – Many environmental
measures, such as energy-e?cient equipment or lighting,
involve initial investments, but deliver long-term
environmental and cost-saving bene?ts.
• Strengthening our supply chain – To have a sustainable
business, we need a reliable and responsible supplier base
that can keep pace with our growth. Starbucks invests in
measures to ensure our suppliers have the opportunity to
do so.
• License to operate – Having a strong reputation as a
socially responsible company makes it more likely we will
be welcomed into a local community.
Corporate Governance
Starbucks board of directors holds management accountable
to operate and manage the company according to strong
ethical and governance principles. Te board currently has 11
members, eight of whom meet the independence requirements
of NASDAQ.
®
All three committees of the board are
comprised of independent directors and have speci?c charters:
Audit and Compliance; Compensation and Management
Development; and Nominating and Corporate Governance.
Tere are well-de?ned criteria for the selection of new board
members, foremost being a clear demonstration of their own
personal integrity and ethics. Board diversity is sought in
terms of members’ personal and professional backgrounds,
gender, race, ethnicity or other di?erentiating characteristics,
enabling a wider range of opinions and perspectives to be
considered. Of the 11 members of Starbucks board, one is
Latino, two are African American (one of which is female),
and one other female also serves on the board.
In ?scal 2006, one independent member of the board
resigned, stating that increased demands on his time arising
from his new position as president and chief executive o?cer
of a large media company would make it di?cult for him to
continue to serve on the Starbucks board. Te vacancy created
by his resignation has not yet been ?lled.
For stability and continuity, among other reasons,
Starbucks has historically had a classi?ed board. However,
Starbucks has questioned whether a classi?ed board reduces
accountability of directors because of the limits it places on
shareholders’ ability to evaluate and elect the board annually.
Te board requested that the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee once again consider the merits of a
declassi?ed board in ?scal 2005. Based on the Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee’s recommendation,
the board approved an amendment to our Articles of
Incorporation, which provides for the annual election of
all directors, and then recommended to our shareholders
that they approve this change. Starbucks shareholders
approved the change at the company’s 2006 Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting.
Committee charters, our governance principles, our
director nominations policy (including criteria for board
membership) and pro?les on each board member are available
at Starbucks.com. In addition, speci?c information regarding
declassi?cation of the board can be found in Starbucks ?scal
2005 proxy statement, also available at Starbucks.com.
Business Ethics
Upholding our strong ethical corporate culture is paramount
to Starbucks success. Starbucks Business Ethics and
Compliance (BEC) program provides guidelines in the
Standards of Business Conduct to help partners make ethical
business decisions, facilitates legal compliance and ethics
training, and provides mechanisms for partners to voice
concerns. Partners are urged to report any related concerns
through the Business Conduct Helpline. (More information is
available on page 65.) Starbucks also maintains an Auditline
for third parties, such as vendors, investors, and customers, to
report possible accounting and/or auditing irregularities. Te
Auditline is available to Starbucks partners as well. In North
America the program is well established, having been in place
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 11
since 1999. In 2004, program components were launched
internationally and continue to be rolled out in company-
owned markets following a market opening or acquisition.
Managing CSR
Te way in which CSR is managed at Starbucks continues
to evolve to ensure that emerging issues are identi?ed,
prioritized and addressed in a more systematic and integrated
manner throughout the company. While there is a sense of
shared accountability for CSR at Starbucks, the company
relies on a dedicated CSR group, reporting to the senior vice
president of CSR, for the day-to-day management of speci?c
CSR-related initiatives. Tis group also provides the impetus
for and broad oversight of other CSR programs that are
managed and implemented at the business unit, division or
department level.
Beyond the dedicated CSR group, Starbucks has established
three cross-functional teams with speci?c responsibilities
related to the company’s CSR and governance. Tey are the
Emerging Issues Council, the CSR Executive Committee
and the Policy Governance Council, all described below in
more detail.
Our CSR organizational chart is also presented below.
Currently the board does not have a committee dedicated
to CSR.
Emerging Issues Council (EIC)
Established in 2004, the EIC is a cross-functional team of 18
Starbucks executives responsible for proactively identifying,
prioritizing and mapping key external trends and issues
that may impact Starbucks and/or speci?c business units
on a local, regional or global level. As issues are identi?ed,
the EIC may engage external stakeholders to gain input. It
may also involve appropriate business units to explore an
issue further, de?ne feasible options and present follow-up
recommendations at a later date.
For instance, in 2004 the EIC began to assess potential risks
and issues related to cocoa production, and later determined
that the company needed to develop a sustainable approach
to cocoa purchasing. Tis determination was presented as a
formal recommendation to the CSR Executive Committee
for approval.
In 2006, the EIC continued to focus on issues related to the
health and wellness of Starbucks products and completed its
preliminary review of Starbucks human rights policy. Te
EIC will submit its recommendations regarding a human
rights policy to the CSR Executive Committee in ?scal 2007.
CSR Executive Committee
In ?scal 2006, we ful?lled our commitment to create a CSR
Executive Committee, an e?ort we believe will strengthen
the company’s overall governance of CSR. Te Committee
is charged with setting CSR-related strategy and policies;
monitoring progress against CSR objectives; reviewing and
approving major CSR social investment activity; overseeing
global, regional and local CSR organizational structure and
accountabilities; and ensuring CSR integration throughout
the company. Te CSR Executive Committee is comprised
of Starbucks president and ceo, who heads the Committee,
and several of his direct reports, all of whom are senior level
o?cers of the company.
In 2006, as part of our ethical sourcing commitment,
the Committee made the decision to approve the EIC’s
recommendation and implement Starbucks Socially
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing pilot, which allows for a
premium to be paid for processed cocoa when it is produced
and sourced in a socially responsible manner. (See page 30.)
Environmental Affairs
Corporate Giving
Stakeholder and
Partner Engagement
Public Policy and
Government Affairs
Business Practices
(Supply Chain)
International CSR
Civic and Community Affairs
Transparency and
Reporting
Corporate Social
Responsibility Governance
Board of Directors
president and
chief executive of?cer
senior vice president
Corporate Social Responsibility
Emerging Issues Council
The Starbucks Foundation
A separate 501(c)(3) charitable organization
Corporate Social Responsibility
Executive Committee
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 12
Policy Governance Council
Over the years, Starbucks has adopted certain governance
tools, such as policies, standards, guidelines and procedures
to help guide our business conduct in accordance with the
law and Starbucks Mission Statement and Guiding Principles.
Until recently, Starbucks did not have a formal structure or
process for oversight and management of these governance
tools, a reality that left the company’s reputation, brand
and culture at risk in the event these tools were not properly
managed or enforced.
Starbucks formed a Policy Governance Council in ?scal
2006 to oversee and approve our governance tools at the
global enterprise level, and to ensure they are well de?ned,
consistent with each other, current, stored for easy retrieval,
and e?ectively communicated to partners. Te Council
is comprised of company leaders who represent multiple
business units and functions, and is supported by Starbucks
newly created Policy O?ce and sta?.
Stakeholder Engagement
Starbucks stakeholders include partners (employees),
customers, suppliers, shareholders, governments, community
members, environmental groups, activists and many others.
By proactively engaging our stakeholders, including those
who may be directly impacted by our business decisions, we
are able to better understand their concerns and gain their
input on topics of mutual importance.
We hosted several stakeholder meetings in ?scal 2006,
including the following:
• A nutrition roundtable was held in October 2005 to
explore health and wellness issues in the food industry.
Our objectives were to better understand stakeholder
expectations of the company’s responsibilities regarding
speci?c nutrition issues, to learn how our current e?orts
are being perceived and to establish a platform for ongoing
dialogue on the topic. An important outcome of this
engagement was Starbucks decision to form a health and
wellness advisory panel in ?scal 2007.
• Starbucks engaged stakeholders to discuss water-related
issues in November 2005. Te discussion focused on
Starbucks role as both a user of water resources throughout
our supply chain and operations, and as a supporter of
e?orts to improve access to clean water around the world.
Stakeholders recommended that Starbucks conduct a
resource use assessment to clarify the company’s water
footprint as a ?rst step toward developing an overall
corporate water strategy. Participants urged us to use our
retail footprint and brand to raise awareness of the water
crisis facing people in developing countries, in addition to
funding clean water projects in communities.
• To help us improve our transparency, we engaged various
stakeholders in June 2006 and invited them to provide
feedback on Starbucks Fiscal 2005 CSR Report. Teir
input helped in?uence the changes we made to this current
CSR Report, including our decision to print only an
abridged version focused on our most material issues and
publish the full report online.
• In September 2006, Starbucks held a stakeholder
feedback session to gain initial input on the development
of our sustainable purchasing guidelines for Starbucks
cocoa, which will be piloted in ?scal 2007. Participants
who attended the session represented our suppliers,
governmental agencies, nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs), and chocolate manufacturers. It is likely they will
be consulted again on this issue as we move forward.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 13
Transparency and Reporting
Our stakeholders want to know what Starbucks is doing to
be a socially and environmentally responsible company. Since
2001, Starbucks has published a CSR Report as part of our
broader communications e?orts to provide transparency on
our CSR activities and performance. In preparing our ?scal
2006 and previous reports, we have been in?uenced by the
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) 2002 Guidelines, a set of
internationally recognized sustainability reporting standards.
A GRI Index is available on pages 5 and 6.
Starbucks also reviewed the recently released GRI G3
Guidelines in developing this report, which includes
speci?c guidance for reporting against the GRI principles
for de?ning content and quality. Te principles, along with
a brief description of how Starbucks addressed them, are
listed below:
Materiality: To determine what topics and indicators
to include in our report that re?ect the company’s most
signi?cant impacts and issues of greatest importance to
stakeholders, Starbucks conducted a materiality assessment,
described on page 3.
Stakeholder Inclusiveness: We de?ne who our stakeholders
are, describe the measures we took to engage and solicit
their feedback, and throughout this report explain how we
are addressing their concerns. More speci?c information
on our stakeholder engagement e?orts is described on the
previous page.
Sustainability Context: Discussing our CSR-related
measures and performance in the broader sustainability
context is essential. At the beginning of most sections, we
introduce the speci?c topics to be covered and explain how
they support our approach to sustainability.
Completeness: To provide readers with appropriate context
for what is and is not covered in this report, we de?ne the
scope, boundaries and topics contained in this report on
page 4. Since ?rst publishing a CSR report in 2001, we have
worked to make our report more comprehensive each year
and will continue to do so in the future.
Balance: Troughout this report, Starbucks has included
multi-year performance data and provided self assessments
of our performance. We have also included case studies
and external stakeholder comments as a way of providing
more insight and objectivity about some of the challenges
Starbucks faces.
Comparability: In developing the report each year, we
use our previous reports as starting points. We provide
follow-up information regarding any intended plans we
previously stated and include multi-year performance data
when possible. Self assessments about our performance are
also included. Tis enables our stakeholders to compare our
performance over time.
Accuracy: Te content and data included in this report have
been internally reviewed by numerous subject matter experts
and senior leaders at Starbucks, and been subject to a system
of internal controls. As described below, external veri?cation
was conducted by Moss Adams LLP, an independent
accounting and consulting ?rm. See pages 76 and 77 for
more information.
Timeliness: At the end of our ?scal year, which ends on the
Sunday closest to September 30, our goal is to complete and
release Starbucks CSR Report by the date of our Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting. Te date of the meeting varies year to
year, but usually takes place within six months after the ?scal
year closes.
Clarity: Each year we have worked to improve the design
and readability of our report in a format that is concise,
understandable and user-friendly. We have also reduced
the amount of content covered in our printed report and
presented more information online.
Reliability: External veri?cation of the data and statements
made in Starbucks CSR Annual Reports began in 2002,
when the company retained Seattle-based Moss Adams LLP,
the 12
th
largest accounting and consulting ?rm in the U.S.
Te selection of Moss Adams met Starbucks criteria for a
high-quality ?rm that had not worked with the company
previously, and a ?rm that could develop a customized
approach for verifying CSR-related data and content. (See
pages 76 and 77.)
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 14
External Recognition
Socially Responsible Investments (SRI)
Tere are a variety of socially responsible mutual funds
available to investors who choose to invest in companies
that meet speci?c criteria in areas covering various social,
environmental and economic dimensions. Starbucks was
listed on several SRI indices (mentioned below) and included
in some socially responsible mutual funds in ?scal 2006.
• Calvert Social Index
™
• Citizens Index
®
• Domini 400 Social
SM
Index (DS400)
• Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index (DJSI
North America)
• Dow Jones Sustainability United States Index (DJSI
United States)
• Dow Jones Sustainability World Index (DJSI World)
• Ethibel Sustainability Index, Excellence Constituent
• FTSE4Good Global Index
• FTSE4Good U.S. Index
• FTSE4Good US 100 Tradable Index
• KLD Broad Market Social
SM
Index (BMSI)
• KLD Large Cap Social
SM
Index (LCSI)
• KLD Select Social
SM
Index (SSI)
CSR Awards
We are proud of the following CSR-related recognition that
Starbucks received in ?scal 2006. While these honors are
greatly valued and appreciated, we do not view them as end
results but rather as important acknowledgements of our
ongoing commitment to CSR and our e?orts to date.
Multiple-year awards
Starbucks was ranked 17
th
on the list of “100 Best Corporate
Citizens” by Business Ethics magazine in 2006. Starbucks has
made this list every year since 2000.
Starbucks has made Fortune’s list of “Te 100 Best
Companies to Work For” eight times. Starbucks ranked 29
th
on the list in 2006.
Single-year awards
Te U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Green Power
Partnership list of Top 25 Green Power Partners ranked
Starbucks sixth for our signi?cant purchase of Green Power.
Starbucks was recognized as one of 15 employers to
receive the “Secretary of Defense Employer Support
Freedom Award” given by the National Committee for
Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, a Defense
Department agency.
Starbucks was recognized by DiversityInc in its “Top 50
Companies for Diversity” and “Top 10 Companies
for Latinos.”
Starbucks Calgary received the “Employer of Persons with
Disabilities Award of Distinction” at the Alberta Business
Awards of Distinction Banquet.
Starbucks UK was recognized as one of “UK Top 50 Best
Places to Work” (ranked 34th), awarded by the Great Places
to Work Institute, in partnership with the Financial Times.
Starbucks was ranked 9th by college students as a “Most
Desirable Company to Join,” a listing compiled by Cheers
magazine in Taiwan.
Starbucks was ranked 25th on Newsweek Japan’s “2006
World Corporation Ranking 500” list based on sales,
corporate social responsibility and return on equity.
Starbucks was recognized as “Model Company for
Sustainable Economic Development” by the Luohu
Government in Shenzhen, China.
Starbucks UK was awarded a “Big Tick” by Business in the
Community in recognition of excellence in corporate social
responsibility, for the Partners in Education program.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 15
United Nations Global Compact
In June 2004, Starbucks joined the UN Global Compact,
a voluntary international network of corporations, UN
agencies, trade unions and nongovernmental organizations
that support 10 universal principles. Tese principles are
based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; the
International Labour Organisation’s Declaration of the
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work; and the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development. We consider
these principles to be a natural extension of Starbucks
Guiding Principles, which de?ne the company’s commitment
to social and environmental responsibility.
Trough our participation in the Global Compact, we
are continually learning how the company can strengthen
existing or develop new internal practices and policies. For
instance, Starbucks advanced e?orts to create an overarching
human rights policy during ?scal 2006, and in 2007 will seek
approval of this policy. Tis is an important step as we further
our expansion to areas of the world where human rights
protections are not consistently upheld.
Te table to the right features the Global Compact’s 10
principles and references to sections in this report that speak
to how our priorities are aligned with each principle. We plan
to report our progress annually.
UN Global Compact “Communications on Progress” Report
PRINCIPLES PAGE
HUMAN RIGHTS
1. Business should support and respect the
protection of internationally proclaimed human
rights.
19, 20, 29, 30, 31, 33,
65, 70, 71
2. Business should ensure that they are not complicit
in human rights abuses.
19, 20, 29, 30, 65
LABOR STANDARDS
3. Business should uphold the freedom of
association and the effective recognition of the
right to collective bargaining.
70
4. Business should support the elimination of all
forms of forced and compulsory labor.
19, 20, 29, 30, 33
5. Business should support the effective abolition of
child labor.
19, 20, 29, 30, 33, 70
6. Business should support the elimination of
discrimination of employment and occupation.
65, 70, 73, 74
ENVIRONMENT
7. Business should support a precautionary
approach to environmental challenges.
19, 54-59
8. Business should undertake initiatives to promote
greater environmental responsibility.
19, 30, 31, 54-62
9. Business should encourage the development and
diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies.
55-57
CORRUPTION
10. Business should work against corruption in all its
forms, including extortion and bribery.
10, 65
16 PRODUCTS 16
OUR WORLD OF PRODUCTS
For 35 years, Starbucks has purchased, roasted
and sold high-quality coffee beans through retail
outlets and commercial wholesale accounts.
While coffee continues to be Starbucks core
product, the company markets, sells and/or
licenses a broader range of products, including
Tazo
®
tea, Hear Music
®
CDs, Ethos
™
water,
Starbucks
™
Liqueurs, various food and dairy
items and an array of brewing equipment and
merchandise.
With every product Starbucks brands, markets and sells,
or uses in our operations, we uphold our commitment to
quality and strive to source our products in a socially and
environmentally responsible manner. Tis is what we refer to
as sustainable trade.
In this section, we explain how we are evolving our approach
to sustainable trade by focusing on quality and the social
and environmental conditions under which our products are
produced. Te following major topics are discussed:
• Sustaining Co?ee Quality
• Sustainable Trade – Purchasing Our Non-Co?ee Products
– Agriculture Products
– Cocoa, Tea, Dairy and Bakery
– Manufactured Goods
– Ethos
™
water
• Quality Assurance and Product Recall
Sustaining Coffee Quality
Whenever a customer walks into a Starbucks, we consider it
an opportunity to share our passion and knowledge of co?ee,
serve the highest-quality beverage, and deliver an experience
so rewarding that this customer becomes our customer – and
our store becomes their Starbucks. We strive to create the
ultimate Starbucks Experience for all of our customers, all of
the time.
At its core, the Starbucks Experience is about great co?ee –
the quality that our customers have come to expect from
Starbucks and for which they are willing to pay a premium.
We know to continually earn our customers’ loyalty, the
quality of our co?ee can never be compromised.
Te farmers, millers, exporters and importers who grow,
process and/or supply co?ee to Starbucks share the same
uncompromising commitment to quality we value. Because of
this, they enable Starbucks to deliver on our promise of high
quality to our customers.
In this section we discuss the steps Starbucks is taking
to ensure the sustainable production and supply of high-
quality co?ee. Te underlying force behind all of this is our
relationships with co?ee farmers and suppliers. Tey are
critical to our business and, we believe, Starbucks is vital
to theirs.
Speci?c topics in this section include:
• Overview of the co?ee industry
• Creating a sustainable approach
• C.A.F.E. Practices:
– An overview of Starbucks co?ee buying guidelines
– Veri?cation system
– Results and achievements
– Findings and next steps
• Economic transparency
• Linking premium prices to premium quality
• Respect for workers’ human rights
• Starbucks and Fair Trade
• Purchasing certi?ed organic and conservation co?ees
• Providing farmers access to credit
– Assisting co?ee farmers in Ethiopia
• Investing in projects in co?ee-growing communities
– Black Apron Exclusives
™
program
– Tropical Storm Stan relief e?orts
17 PRODUCTS 17
The Coffee Industry – An Overview
It is believed that co?ee was ?rst consumed as a hot beverage
in East Africa during the 11th century. Today, co?ee is one
of the most popular beverages, with more than $80 billion
in retail sales worldwide.* Furthermore, the co?ee industry
provides a livelihood for an estimated 25 million co?ee
farmers* in more than 60 co?ee-producing countries.*
Te co?ee market has always been prone to ups and downs,
mostly related to the balance between supply and demand.
Back in 2001, co?ee prices fell to a record low of $0.42 per
pound ($0.91 per kilogram), and ?uctuated near the bottom
for several years. Tese particular market conditions created a
climate of economic instability that had an impact on many
farmers and their communities. Today’s market conditions
are greatly improved, evident by recent prices of co?ee traded
on the New York “C” market (the worldwide reference used
by co?ee traders). In ?scal 2006, world co?ee prices averaged
$1.04 per pound ($2.29 per kilogram).
Tere are two commercially viable species of co?ee – robusta
and arabica. High-quality arabica co?ee is grown on farms
that range from very small family-run parcels to large-scale
estates, located primarily between the Tropics of Cancer and
Capricorn and situated at higher elevations. Tese elevations
provide optimal climatic conditions needed to grow the type
of co?ee that is considered specialty grade.
Te higher-quality and more expensive arabica beans are
sold as specialty co?ee, which accounts for approximately
10 percent** of total worldwide co?ee purchases, including
the co?ee Starbucks buys. Starbucks purchases high-quality
arabica co?ee beans, paying premium prices for premium
quality. Tese co?ees are sold under the Starbucks, Seattle’s
Best Co?ee and Torrefazione Italia brands.
* International Co?ee Organization
** Specialty Co?ee Association of America
Quick Coffee Facts:
Total worldwide co?ee production (Oct. 2005–Sept. 2006):
15 billion pounds (7 billion kilograms)*
Total co?ee purchased by Starbucks (Oct. 2005–Sept.
2006): 294 million pounds (133 million kilograms)
Number of co?ee farmers worldwide: 25 million*
Number of countries where co?ee is grown: About 60*
Number of countries where Starbucks bought co?ee in
?scal 2006: 24
18 PRODUCTS 18
Creating a Sustainable Approach
After years of traveling to co?ee-growing regions around the
world, we have come to deeply appreciate the care that goes
into producing high-quality co?ee. Our co?ee buyers, quality
experts and agronomists spent considerable time in the ?eld
during ?scal 2006, sometimes traveling great distances to
reach a particular co?ee farm.
Tese visits are always worthwhile, especially when we have
been able to engage directly with farmers, observe their
best practices, gain insight about their short- and long-term
challenges and identify ways that Starbucks can contribute
to the longevity of their business. More important, they
have helped to raise our awareness about the need for a more
sustainable approach to co?ee production – one that touches
on every essential aspect of the supply chain – from farming
to processing to exporting.
When we began our journey to create a more sustainable
model, there were several key assumptions we considered and
which we still believe to be relevant today. We assume that:
• A holistic strategy for sustainability must include criteria
for quality, social, environmental and economic aspects.
• Premium prices paid for co?ee are linked to
premium quality.
• Economic transparency is required and necessary to
evaluate whether farmers receive equitable payment for
their crops.
• Our strong relationships and direct engagement with
co?ee farmers and suppliers will keep us in touch with
their progress and issues.
• Co?ee-growing communities will bene?t from the
economic stability of local farmers as well as from targeted
community investments.
• Access to credit and other resources will enable
farmers to make quality improvements and strengthen
their businesses.
• Certi?cation labels, such as Fair Trade Certi?ed™ and
organic, help to advance speci?c aspects of sustainable
co?ee farming.
• By embracing sustainability, Starbucks can lead change
within the co?ee industry.
As our journey progressed over several years, we created and
launched a number of programs and initiatives. Collectively,
they represent the key components of Starbucks sustainable
model for co?ee production, and have been the focus of our
ongoing e?orts. Tey are:
• Co?ee and Farmer Equity (C.A.F.E.) Practices, a set of
co?ee-buying guidelines, was formally introduced in
?scal 2004.
• Starbucks Farmer Support Center, an on-the-ground ?eld
o?ce located in Costa Rica, opened in ?scal 2004 to
provide technical resources and ongoing support to co?ee
farmers throughout the world.
• Funding of co?ee community projects was started in
?scal 1998.
• Starbucks Black Apron Exclusives
™
program launched
in ?scal 2004 to showcase and recognize the production
of rari?ed co?ees of exceptional quality, and reward
the origin farming community with funding for a
local project.
• Loans that enable farmers to access credit began in
?scal 2001.
• An alliance with Conservation International began in
1998 to promote environmentally sound practices aimed at
preserving biodiversity in some co?ee-growing regions in
Latin America.
• Te purchasing of certi?ed co?ees, such as Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ and organic co?ees – both of which promote
aspects of a sustainable farming model – began in
?scal 2000.
• A partnership with the African Wildlife Foundation to
advance sustainable farming practices in East Africa was
initiated in ?scal 2005.
My Starbucks –
I want you - my Starbucks friends – to
appreciate the impact your company is
having on higher prices being paid to
coffee farmers in Papua New Guinea.
The local mill is paying the best price
local farmers have ever been paid.
Everyone here knows Starbucks is buying
this coffee, but only if it’s good quality.
So now farmers are competing with their
quality so they can sell to Starbucks.
It shows me how supply and demand is
contributing to a sustainable solution.
Thank you, Starbucks.
Aarlie Hull
(A coffee supplier to Starbucks)
19 PRODUCTS 19
C.A.F.E. Practices
Te Conservation Principles for Co?ee Production, a set
of multistakeholder criteria launched in 2001, became the
original platform that Starbucks used to evolve and eventually
develop a more holistic set of co?ee-buying guidelines that
is now known as Co?ee and Farmer Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices. Tese guidelines were designed to ensure the
sustainable supply of high-quality co?ee; achieve economic
accountability; promote social responsibility within the co?ee
supply chain; and protect the environment.
C.A.F.E. Practices encompasses various sustainability
measures that are de?ned by 28 criteria, extending to both
the farming and processing of co?ee. Te criteria, which serve
as the basis for a comprehensive scorecard, fall under four
focus areas: product quality; economic accountability; social
responsibility; and environmental leadership.
Tousands of participants – from our largest co?ee suppliers
to many small-holder farms and cooperatives – have applied
and been approved as C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers since
2004. When suppliers apply to C.A.F.E. Practices, they
must undergo a third-party evaluation to verify the degree to
which their practices are aligned with the criteria. (For more
information about the veri?cation process, see page 23.)
The Link Between Quality and Price
We believe that with any product there is an inherent link
between quality and price. Trough our close working
relationships with co?ee farmers and suppliers, we have
always emphasized the importance of quality as the best, most
sustainable driver of higher prices paid. We understand that
co?ee farming, like any business, must be pro?table to be
sustainable. Furthermore, we know that when co?ee farmers
do not earn enough to cover their production costs and/or
provide a reasonable income, they may switch to other crops
or perhaps stop growing co?ee altogether.
Starbucks commitment to pay premium prices for premium
quality co?ee has not wavered over the years. It is an
approach that not only serves the short- and long-term
economic interests of co?ee farmers and suppliers; it also
serves Starbucks interests by creating an incentive for farmers
to improve quality and increase production that in turn
contributes to a more sustainable supply of high-quality co?ee
which we depend on to support Starbucks continued growth.
What Determines Price?
Quality is the most important factor in determining the
price we pay for co?ee, but not the only factor. Te cost of
production is also re?ected in the price as well as prevailing
market conditions which vary from country to country and
even from region to region.
What Did Starbucks Pay for Coffee?
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks purchased 294 million pounds
(133 million kilograms) of co?ee and paid an average price of
$1.42 per pound ($3.12 per kilogram).
Respect for Workers’ Human Rights
Starbucks believes every person deserves to be treated with
respect and dignity, and is entitled to a fair, safe and humane
work environment. Tis is a deeply held value at Starbucks
and one of our Guiding Principles. Our commitment to this
value applies as much to our own workforce as it does to the
workers employed by our suppliers.
Child labor is a topic widely reported in the media. Te
coverage has raised awareness about the issue and led to some
reforms. While the concern over child labor remains, it may
not always be well understood. For instance, in many co?ee-
growing communities, it is a natural extension of family life
for children to work alongside their parents. Concerns over
child labor arise when it is considered forced, of a hazardous
nature, inappropriate or prevents a child from attending
school. Tere are international child labor standards that
provide clear guidance on what is and is not acceptable.*
Starbucks is committed to upholding international child
labor standards in our own operations and throughout our
supply chain by making them a stipulation of our supplier
relationships. Like other companies, Starbucks has adopted
policies that require all of our suppliers – from large-scale to
small enterprises – to comply with international or locally
mandated labor standards, whichever is higher.
International labor standards also include principles related
to working conditions, such as the health and safety of
workers; minimum wage requirements; security; and freedom
of association, among others. As part of C.A.F.E. Practices,
Starbucks developed a comprehensive system to verify
our co?ee suppliers’ compliance with international labor
standards, including child and forced labor practices as well
as other socially and environmentally responsible practices.
* International Labor O?ce, 2006
20 PRODUCTS 20
The Four Fundamentals of
C.A.F.E. Practices
C.A.F.E. Practices Criteria – Areas of Focus
Product Quality (prerequisite): All co?ee purchased from
C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers must meet Starbucks standards
of high quality.
Economic Accountability (prerequisite): C.A.F.E. Practices
suppliers are required to submit evidence of payments made at
all levels along our co?ee supply chain, including receipts that
indicate how much was paid to farmers for their co?ee.
Social Responsibility (evaluated components): C.A.F.E.
Practices suppliers – and other entities within their supply
network – must have certain practices in place that ensure
safe, fair and humane working conditions; the protection
of workers’ rights; and adequate living conditions. Te
minimum/living wage requirements and child labor/forced
labor/discrimination criteria are mandatory.
Environmental Leadership (evaluated components): In the
growing and/or processing of co?ee, environmental measures
must be in place to manage waste, protect water quality,
conserve water and energy use, preserve biodiversity and
reduce agrochemical use.
Te C.A.F.E. Practices scorecard of indicators is available at
www.scscerti?ed.com/csrpurchasing/Starbucks.html.
C.A.F.E. Practices – Hitting
Our Targets
Achieving our annual targets for the amount of co?ee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices–approved suppliers
has not always been easy. We have worked to increase
participation in C.A.F.E. Practices by expanding to new
regions, motivating thousands of farmers and suppliers to
apply, and guiding them through the application process.
Currently, suppliers from 10 di?erent co?ee-producing
countries have applied and been approved to participate in
C.A.F.E. Practices.
We took the following speci?c steps in ?scal 2006 to get to
this point:
• Laid important groundwork for the expansion of C.A.F.E.
Practices in Africa and Asia Paci?c.
• Trained 30 potential veri?ers in Africa and Asia Paci?c,
and held a “train the trainer” session in Costa Rica,
attended by lead veri?ers from 14 approved veri?cation
organizations. Te additional veri?ers enabled more
suppliers to be evaluated and approved for C.A.F.E.
Practices. Trainings were conducted by Scienti?c
Certi?cation Systems (SCS), an independent evaluation
and certi?cation ?rm.
• Spent more time in the ?eld with C.A.F.E. Practices
participants, soliciting their feedback, o?ering support
about how they can improve co?ee quality and scores,
and conducting training workshops via Farmer Support
Center agronomists.
• Continued to work with and solicit input from various
parties on ways Starbucks can improve elements of
C.A.F.E. Practices, including Conservation International,
a nonpro?t environmental organization; African Wildlife
Foundation, an organization dedicated to conserving the
wildlife and wild lands of Africa; and SCS.
Results and Achievements
Metrics used to measure the growth of C.A.F.E.
Practices include:
• Total pounds of co?ee purchased annually from C.A.F.E.
Practices–approved suppliers.
• Estimated number of hectares (acres) of sustainable land
linked to C.A.F.E. Practices purchases.
• Percentage of C.A.F.E. Practices co?ee purchased from
approved suppliers by status level.
Economic
Accountability
Product
Quality
Environmental
Leadership
Social
Responsibility
Prerequisites Evaluated
Components
C.A.F.E.
Practices
21 PRODUCTS 21
C.A.F.E. Practices Purchases
Starbucks established an aggressive goal to purchase 150
million pounds (68 million kilograms) of green (unroasted)
co?ee from C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers in ?scal 2006,
approximately double the volume purchased the previous
year. We exceeded that goal with purchases of 155 million
pounds (70 million kilograms), representing more than 50
percent of all co?ee purchased in ?scal 2006 by Starbucks.
(See graph for purchases and future targets.) Te 155 million
pounds of co?ee purchased under the program were produced
on farms that represent a total of approximately 200,000
hectares (494,000 acres) of sustainable land.
Percent Purchased by Supplier Group
Tere are three status levels for C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers:
Strategic, Preferred and Veri?ed. Of the 155 million pounds
of co?ee purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers in ?scal
2006, the percentage from each supplier group is as follows:
• 19 percent purchased from Strategic Suppliers (those with
scores of 80 percent and higher in each of the social and
environmental areas)
• 12 percent purchased from Preferred Suppliers (those with
scores between 60 percent and 79 percent in each of the
social and environmental areas)
• 69 percent purchased from Veri?ed Suppliers (those with
scores of less than 60 percent in each of the social and
environmental areas)
C.A.F.E. Practices – Findings and
Next Steps
When we ?rst introduced C.A.F.E. Practices, we were
inspired and motivated to help create a better future for co?ee
farmers and their communities, based on a shared interest to
sustain the production of high-quality co?ee. Our vision –
and commitment – has not changed, only deepened.
Te amount of time, energy and resources needed to
implement and manage C.A.F.E. Practices across such a
complex, diverse and sprawling supply chain is considerable –
and at times more than we anticipated. We did, however,
expect the process to involve challenges. In fact, there were
a number of obstacles we faced – and overcame – in the last
two years, such as making C.A.F.E. Practices as accessible to
small-scale producers as it has been to larger co?ee producers.
We have encountered some dilemmas that we are continually
working to address. Given our optimistic mindset at
Starbucks, we choose to view these as opportunities
for improvement. We outline a few of these ongoing
opportunities below.
Continued Emphasis on Relationships, Communication
and Training
As our demand for co?ee grows and our already complex
supplier network expands, we understand the importance
of staying in touch with and training our suppliers so they
understand how to complete the application forms for
C.A.F.E. Practices, manage the required veri?cation process,
and adapt their practices to improve their scores. We must
also seek e?ciencies on our end that enable us to respond
more quickly to the needs of our suppliers.
Veri?ers and Improved Systems Needed
Our plan to buy more sustainable co?ee in the future
can only be realized if our network of approved suppliers
participating in C.A.F.E. Practices grows. Te process of
approving more suppliers will involve conducting a great
number of inspections by third-party veri?ers.
At the end of ?scal 2006, we had 143 trained and approved
veri?ers in the ?eld, which was 43 more than the previous
year. Going forward, we expect that more veri?ers will
be needed to keep pace with the increasing number of
veri?cations that will be required.
We see the need for more trained veri?ers as an opportunity,
and we are encouraged by the interest farmers have shown in
becoming approved C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers. And because
of this, veri?ers will need to be responsive to the increasing
demand of more inspections.
13
(6)
Coffee Purchased From C.A.F.E. Practices Suppliers
Fiscal year
Millions of
pounds
(kilograms)
C.A.F.E. Practices Goal C.A.F.E. Practices Actual
2003*** 2004*** 2005 2006 2007
43
(20)
77*
(35)
155**
(70)
225
(102)
150
(68)
75
(34)
30
(14)
* Represents 25% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases for ?scal 2005.
** Represents 53% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases for ?scal 2006.
*** Co?ee purchased under Starbucks Preferred Supplier Program guidelines.
22 PRODUCTS 22
Our priorities are to increase the number of trained
veri?ers and make the veri?cation process more e?cient and
user-friendly. Some adjustments were made in ?scal 2006,
and others are in the works.
Te process improvements we are making are necessary to
ensure that Starbucks co?ee buying guidelines are supported
by a highly e?cient and credible veri?cation system with the
capacity to serve the growing number of suppliers wanting to
participate in C.A.F.E. Practices.
Extending C.A.F.E. Practices to Africa and Asia Paci?c
In 2004, Starbucks opened a Farmer Support Center in Costa
Rica, which has allowed us to work more closely with farmers
and suppliers on their sustainability measures and co?ee
quality. Shortly thereafter, suppliers in that region began
applying and gaining approval for C.A.F.E. Practices, and the
number has kept growing ever since.
Increasing our focus on C.A.F.E. Practices in Africa and
Asia Paci?c has proven to be di?cult, as expected. In Kenya,
Starbucks has been collaborating with the African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF) on various sustainability initiatives as a
?rst step toward advancing C.A.F.E. Practices in Africa.
In both Africa and Asia Paci?c, Starbucks has been working
to introduce C.A.F.E. Practices to co?ee farmers, processors
and suppliers. Progress has been slowed by realities of local
co?ee industries, lack of ?nancial transparency, minimal
understanding of C.A.F.E. Practices among local suppliers,
and too few trained veri?ers. Some headway was made in
?scal 2006 to improve suppliers’ understanding of C.A.F.E.
Practices and train more veri?ers, partly because of e?orts
made by SCS, Starbucks co?ee buyers, agronomists and
business partners to organize training sessions.
We realize there may be a need to consider regional guidance
for C.A.F.E. Practices to make the criteria more relevant to
unique conditions in Africa and Asia Paci?c. Also, the need
for more locally based support through regional Farmer
Support Centers has been con?rmed.
My Starbucks –
In a letter to Starbucks
president and ceo, Jim Donald,
Estuardo Porras wrote:
Since Tropical Storm Stan passed,
I have been spending 24 hours a day
assessing the damage on the El Faro
and Las Delicias coffee farms in
Guatemala. Now I am glad to inform
you that C.A.F.E. Practices has
been by far our best investment.
Both farms are virtually intact in
regards to any disease or soil erosion
issues. I strongly believe that the
implementation of C.A.F.E. Practices on
both farms has greatly contributed to
our ability to withstand any potential
adversities caused by this storm.
Your friend,
Estuardo Porras, Owner
El Faro and Las Delicias farms,
Guatemala
F UT URE G OA L S
Going forward, our efforts will focus on:
• Introducing a revised version of the guidelines to allow
for streamlined, ef?cient and objective scoring.
• Updating our guidelines to account for regional
differences, including clari?cation of minimum
performance levels and compliance with local labor
laws and wages for permanent, temporary and seasonal
workers.
• Implementing a new IT system for online veri?er
reporting and score calculation.
F UT URE G OA L
In ?scal 2007, we plan to hire additional agronomists
who will focus on helping coffee farmers worldwide
implement C.A.F.E. Practices.
23 PRODUCTS 23
C.A.F.E. Practices – The Veri?cation
Process
When suppliers apply to C.A.F.E. Practices, they must
undergo an independent third-party evaluation to verify
the degree to which their practices are aligned with the 28
criteria. Upon completion of each evaluation, the veri?er
submits a report along with a scorecard to the applicant
and to Starbucks for review. Te scores given by the veri?er
determine the supplier’s approval status in C.A.F.E. Practices.
Evaluations involve ?eld inspections, face-to-face interviews
with workers, document reviews and desk audits. Te
conditions of a supplier’s status dictate the terms of
reveri?cation. Reveri?cation is periodically required in order
to measure continuity and sustainability improvements.
Since launching C.A.F.E. Practices in 2004, Starbucks has
retained Scienti?c Certi?cation Systems (SCS), a third-party
evaluation and certi?cation ?rm, to help develop and oversee
the veri?cation system and conduct ongoing veri?er trainings.
By the end of ?scal 2006, SCS had trained 30 additional
individual veri?ers on how to evaluate and score suppliers
against C.A.F.E. Practices’ comprehensive set of criteria.
Independent veri?ers for C.A.F.E. Practices are a?liated
with 25 di?erent organizations conducting veri?cations in
19 countries.
Economic Transparency
To help assure that the farmer receives an equitable share
of the price paid by Starbucks, a requirement for economic
transparency is included in our co?ee contracts, including
all of our contracts with suppliers participating in C.A.F.E.
Practices. Tis provision stipulates that our suppliers must
provide credible evidence of payments, usually in the form
of receipts indicating payments made at all levels along the
co?ee supply chain, including prices paid to farmers. In
?scal 2006, 98 percent of our co?ee contracts included an
economic transparency clause requesting documentation of
payments made to various participants in the supply chain.
In 95 percent of these contracts, economic transparency was
required to the producer level.
Requiring co?ee suppliers to provide evidence of payments
was almost inconceivable several years ago, especially given
the di?used and complex nature of the co?ee supply chain
and the historical lack of record keeping. However, since
Starbucks instituted this requirement, a notable change has
started to take place in the specialty co?ee industry, with
more serious attention now being focused on assuring that
farmers receive an equitable share of the purchase price. We
believe this ultimately bene?ts co?ee farmers and other key
suppliers who add value along the supply chain.
While we are encouraged by the progress to date,
institutionalizing this new requirement has come with certain
challenges. In particular, the co?ee industry does not have a
standardized mechanism in place that allows all parties across
the co?ee supply chain to easily submit evidence of payment
in a consistent, uniform manner. At Starbucks, we receive
di?erent forms of documentation – from a simple receipt
for the co?ee cherries that the farmer delivered to the mill
to full purchase agreements that include more levels along
the co?ee supply chain. Tese documents not only di?er in
quality, they re?ect variations in currency, industry standards
and laws, units of measure and are prepared in many
di?erent languages.
Despite these realities and the unique circumstances of each
producing country, Starbucks will continue to work toward
verifying the submitted evidence in order to assure that
farmers received an equitable portion of the purchase price.
Starbucks and Fair Trade
Starbucks and the Fair Trade movement share common
goals: to help ensure that farmers receive a fair price for their
co?ee and have improved access to international markets.
C.A.F.E. Practices and the Fair Trade system both focus
on cultivating long-term, stable relationships with farmers;
providing supplemental funding for community projects;
and providing farmers with access to a?ordable credit. A
point of di?erentiation is that the Fair Trade co?ee model
focuses on smallholder farmers belonging to cooperatives
and associations, while Starbucks purchases from co?ee
cooperatives, farms and supply networks of all sizes and scale.
Starbucks ?rst relationship with a Fair Trade certi?cation
and licensing organization began in April 2000, when we
established an agreement with TransFair USA that allowed
Starbucks to purchase, roast and sell Fair Trade Certi?ed™
co?ee. We are still actively engaged with TransFair USA, as
well as with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International
(FLO) and nine of the 20 other national initiatives around
the world that oversee and coordinate Fair Trade licensing
and sales promotion in 24 of our international markets.
Each Fair Trade national initiative is unique and has its own
requirements, trademarks and protocols, a reality that has
constrained our ability to o?er Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee
internationally. Starbucks is committed to working together
with FLO and the national initiatives on a streamlined
solution that will make it easier for multinational companies,
like Starbucks, to distribute and sell Fair Trade Certi?ed™
products in other countries.
24 PRODUCTS 24
WHAT IS FAIR TRADE CERTIFIED
™
?
The Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
labels are owned by the Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International and Fair Trade national initiatives
around the world. Starbucks pays licensing fees to the national initiatives in order to af?x the Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
trademark on our
packaging. According to the national initiatives, a majority of the fees support various Fair Trade activities to help market the product,
and the remaining fees are used to fund the certi?cation process, the development of standards and support for producers.
Fair Trade products appeal to socially minded consumers who place a high value on the Fair Trade certi?cation seal. Fairtrade Labelling
Organizations International certi?es to consumers through the seal that a minimum price* of $1.24 - $1.26 per pound ($1.39 - $1.41
per pound for organic) was paid to the farmer cooperative that produced the coffee. However, factors such as market recognition of Fair
Trade coffee quality, higher commodity prices, and supply and demand may work in combination to raise the Fair Trade price.
Fair Trade certi?cation includes criteria to be met by coffee cooperatives, such as fair labor conditions, freedom of association and
certain environmental standards. To be certi?ed as Fair Trade, the coffee is to be produced only by farmers who belong to farmer-
owned, democratically run coffee cooperatives and associations listed on the Fair Trade registry. An estimated four percent of global
coffee production is Fair Trade Certi?ed.
™
* Tese established prices are set by Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International for the purpose of covering the costs of sustainable production and living.
Te pricing components include $1.19-$1.21 for the co?ee (depending on the region), $0.05 for a social premium and an additional $0.15 premium for
organic. When “C” market prices rise above the Fair Trade minimum price, Fair Trade prices are adjusted accordingly to be at least $0.05 above the “C” price.
Starbucks will continue to work with various Fair Trade
national initiatives to promote and market our Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee products in our stores around the world.
We believe these e?orts will help to further increase customer
demand and sales of Starbucks Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ees.
Purchasing enough Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee to meet the
demand will be essential.
Previously, we set arbitrary targets for the amount of Fair
Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee we planned to purchase annually, an
approach that is no longer practical. Instead, we will begin
linking our purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee to
sales forecasts.
Trough our purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee in
?scal 2006, we:
• Provided more than $900,000 in Fair Trade social
premiums through the price we paid for Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee. FLO certi?es that these funds were
redistributed back to the Fair Trade cooperatives we
purchased from to support local community improvement
projects decided upon by the general assembly of
the members.
• Paid approximately $8 million more to Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
cooperatives than they would have received if
they sold their co?ee at “C” market prices. Tis is similar
to the premiums that Starbucks typically pays above the
commodity price for other high-quality co?ees. According
to TransFair USA, the average price of Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee during ?scal 2006 was $1.48 per pound,
including the social premiums. Approximately 80 percent
of the price paid to the Fair Trade registered cooperatives
goes to co?ee farmers, and the remaining 20 percent covers
co-op overhead, export costs and social investments.
• Paid a total of $1.6 million in licensing fees to various
Fair Trade organizations, with the majority paid to
TransFair USA.
Our Purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Co?ee
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks global purchases totaled more
than 18 million pounds (8 million kilograms) of Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ co?ee, representing approximately 14 percent of
global Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee imports, and about 30
percent imported into the United States.
Starbucks remains the largest purchaser, roaster and
distributor of Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee in North America.
At the beginning of ?scal 2006, Starbucks set a 12 million
pound (5 million kilogram) purchasing target for Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee, which we exceeded by more than 6 million
pounds (3 million kilograms) because we extended our line-
up and broadened distribution of our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
product o?erings. In addition to o?ering Café Estima Blend
™
in Starbucks stores, strong sales were achieved through the
rollout of a new Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee product under
the Kirkland Signature brand in Costco stores in the U.S.
and Canada.
*Represents 6% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Coffee
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Pounds
(kilograms)
5 million
(2 million)
11 million
(5 million)
18 million*
(8 million)
25 PRODUCTS 25
Going Forward
Starbucks is committed to purchasing Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee as a way of supporting the network of Fair Trade
registered co?ee cooperatives. Speci?cally, Starbucks plans to:
• Link global purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee
to customer demand in ?scal 2007. Using ?scal 2006
demand as a barometer, we expect that Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ co?ees could represent approximately ?ve
percent of our total co?ee purchases in a given year.
• Work with the Fair Trade national initiatives to promote
and increase customer demand and sales of our Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ees while also collaborating on a
streamlined approach to the global distribution of this
product.
• O?er Kirkland Signature Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee to
Costco for stores located in the UK, Japan, Taiwan and
Korea beginning in ?scal 2007.
• Support and promote the sale of Café Estima Blend
™
co?ee in Starbucks company-operated stores, foodservice
channels and other points of distribution.
• Continue to work with Fair Trade organizations to
communicate key ?ndings and challenges, provide
transparency to the farmer level, augment the business
capacity of participating Fair Trade cooperatives, and
support a multipronged approach to ethical, sustainable
co?ee purchasing.
Purchasing Certi?ed Organic and
Conservation Coffees
Starbucks purchases certi?ed organic and conservation
(shade grown) co?ees. Tese purchases support the
company’s larger e?ort to preserve the natural environment
and/or promote economic stability. (See graphs at right for
amounts purchased.)
As consumer demand for certi?ed organic co?ee continues
to grow, Starbucks purchases of this co?ee has also increased.
Some of the certi?ed organic co?ee Starbucks buys is
produced by farmers participating in the Fair Trade system,
in which case this co?ee is included in our total purchases
of both Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
and certi?ed organic. In
other instances, certi?ed organic co?ee is purchased from
farmers participating in Conservation International’s (CI)
Conservation Co?ee
SM
program, and therefore accounted as
purchases of conservation, organic and possibly even Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ees.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks o?ered two speci?cally labeled
types of certi?ed organic co?ee, and Seattle’s Best Co?ee sold
eight varieties.
Over the years Starbucks has purchased millions of pounds
of conservation co?ees grown by farmers participating in CI’s
Conservation Co?ee
SM
program. Tis particular source of our
supply stems from the alliance Starbucks and CI formed in
1998 to encourage farmers to use ecologically sound growing
practices that help protect biodiversity in environmentally
sensitive areas and to stimulate the production and sale of
high-quality co?ee grown under the canopy of bird-friendly
shade trees.
Today, much of the conservation co?ee grown by
participating farmers is also certi?ed organic or “in-
transition” co?ee, the term used when an agricultural product
is grown under organic conditions but has yet to be certi?ed.
Beginning in ?scal 2007, the co?ee Starbucks purchases from
farmers participating in the Conservation Co?ee
SM
program
will no longer be tracked as conservation co?ee. Instead we
will track only certi?ed organic co?ee purchases rather than
specifying both organic and conservation purchases, which
in many cases is the same co?ee. Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee
that is also certi?ed organic will continue to be tracked in
both ways.
Note: Co?ees may be certi?ed in more than one category.
*Represents 4% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Pounds
(kilograms)
Certi?ed Organic Coffee
6 million
(3 million)
9 million
(4 million)
12 million*
(5 million)
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
*Represents 1% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Conservation (Shade Grown) Coffee
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
2 million*
(1 million)
2 million
(1 million)
2 million
(1 million)
Pounds
(kilograms)
26 PRODUCTS 26
Access to Credit
During the growing and harvest cycles, co?ee farmers rely on
their modest reserves to pay their expenses. It isn’t until their
crops are ?nally shipped that payment is received, which may
take months. It’s common for farmers to experience a cash
shortage, which can lead them to sell their crops early to local
buyers, be charged high interest rates and receive lower prices.
Tis inevitably cuts into farmers’ pro?ts and sets up a similar
scenario for the next year.
Starbucks works with several social investment organizations
to make loans available to co?ee growers, which makes it
possible for farmers to postpone selling their crops until the
price is favorable and to invest in capital improvements. In
?scal 2006, we increased our loan commitment to EcoLogic
Finance by $1 million, bringing the total commitment to
$6 million. EcoLogic uses Starbucks capital to make loans
to both co?ee and cocoa farmers. We also continued our $1
million loan commitment to Calvert Foundation and $2.5
million loan commitment to Verde Ventures, a loan program
managed by Conservation International. (See chart on next
page.)
Assisting Co?ee Farmers in Ethiopia
When the Sidama Co?ee Farmers Cooperative Union in
Ethiopia (SCFCU) was established in 2000, it set bold
objectives: to increase farmers’ share of the Free on Board*
(FOB) price of co?ee, stabilize the local co?ee market,
export directly to foreign buyers, protect co-ops and family
farmers from illegal domestic market actors, take advantage
of economies of scale, and promote and reward production of
high-quality co?ee.
SCFCU is a farmer-owned and managed cooperative union
comprised of 42 primary societies, representing nearly 87,000
local co?ee growers practicing shade-managed and organic
farming techniques in the forests of southcentral Ethiopia. It
is also part of the Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
market system.
In October 2005, SCFCU received a $400,000 loan from
EcoLogic Finance. Te loan is enabling the cooperative
to provide services to its members, including marketing
assistance in developing producer/buyer linkages; direct
export of members’ specialty co?ee; coordination of
warehousing services, processing and transport; promotion
of high-quality co?ee production; ?eld-based training and
education programs; and access to savings and credit services.
Starbucks provided the capital funds that EcoLogic used to
?nance the loan.
As one of the cooperative’s principal foreign buyers, Starbucks
respects SCFCU for its organizational integrity, and values its
premium product. Indeed, the unique ?avor characteristics
of local co?ee beans grown by one primary society belonging
to SCFCU were so distinctive and of such exceptional quality
that this co?ee – “Shirkina Sun-Dried Sidamo” – was chosen
as one of Starbucks Black Apron Exclusives
™
** co?ees in
?scal 2006. As a result, the farming community where this
co?ee was produced was awarded a $15,000 prize from
Starbucks. Tese funds, combined with the funds they
receive through Fair Trade social premiums, are being used
to construct an o?ce space where community meetings and
trainings can be held.
Starbucks and the Ethiopian government have been engaged
in discussions regarding the protection and use of the
intellectual property rights of Ethiopia’s geographic co?ee
names. We are committed to working together in pursuit of a
solution that bene?ts Ethiopian co?ee farmers. For the most
current information on this topic, please visit Starbucks.com.
* Free on Board is a trade term requiring the seller to deliver goods on board a
vessel designated by the buyer. Te seller ful?lls its obligations to deliver when
goods have passed over the ship’s rail. Te word “ free” means the seller has an
obligation to deliver goods to a named place for transfer to a carrier.
** Te Black Apron Exclusives
™
co?ees are a select line of rare, exotic and cherished
co?ees. Te Black Apron name refers to the color of apron worn by Starbucks
most knowledgeable buyers, roasters, tasters and Co?ee Masters while in the
tasting rooms and in Starbucks co?eehouses.
27 PRODUCTS 27
FARMER LOAN PROGRAMS
Name of
Organization
Amount of
Starbucks loans
to Fund
Total number
and value of
loans made by
Starbucks in
?scal 2006
Average loan size
(per borrower)
made from
Starbucks capital
in ?scal 2006
Purposes of
loans made from
Starbucks capital
# of farmers
participating
Countries where
borrowers of
loans made by
Starbucks capital
live
Calvert Foundation $1 million loaned in
?scal 2004
6 loans valued at
$2.25 million*
$371,000 Pre?nancing of Fair
Trade and organic
coffee contracts
24,000 Mexico, Nicaragua,
Peru
Verde Ventures,
managed by
Conservation
International
$2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2004
8 loans using
Starbucks capital
valued at $2.12
million
$265,000 Pre?nancing of
C.A.F.E. Practices
or conservation
coffee farms;
working capital for
the above coffee
farmers
6,000 smallholder
farmers
participating in
CI’s Conservation
Coffee Program
sites, and
applicants to
C.A.F.E. Practices
Mexico,
El Salvador,
Guatemala,
Indonesia, Peru
EcoLogic Finance $2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2004
$2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2005
$1 million loaned in
?scal 2006
63 loans using
Starbucks capital
valued at $11
million*
$175,000 Pre?nancing of
Fair Trade, organic
and specialty
coffee and cocoa
contracts; capital
investments for
infrastructure
44,000 farmers
from 58 various
coffee and
cocoa farming
organizations
Bolivia, Honduras,
Colombia,
Indonesia, Costa
Rica, Mexico,
Nicaragua, East
Timor, Peru,
Ecuador, Rwanda,
El Salvador,
Tanzania, Ethiopia,
Uganda, Guatemala
*Total exceeds amount of Starbucks loan because money is loaned, repaid and loaned again.
• Financial awards given to farming communities that
produce a speci?c co?ee selected as part of Starbucks
Black Apron Exclusives
™
program. For each Black Apron
Exclusives
™
winner, Starbucks awards $15,000 to use for a
targeted project. In ?scal 2006, four co?ees were selected
as Black Apron Exclusives
™
o?erings, three from Africa
and one from Indonesia.
Te combined total of Starbucks investments in co?ee-
growing communities was $2.7 million in ?scal 2006,
which included $1 million towards Tropical Storm Stan
relief e?orts. (See next page.) Te funds were used to
pay for 103 projects located in 11 countries, bene?ting
an estimated 545,000 local farmers, their families and
community residents.
Investments in Coffee Communities
Te majority of high-quality co?ee is grown in remote
communities of developing countries. Tese areas have
historically faced a devastating range of social, environmental
and economic challenges. At times, they have also been left in
ruins by severe natural disasters.
Over the years, Starbucks has worked with co?ee farmers,
cooperatives, mills, exporters and local communities on
various community improvements, which have included
building schools, health clinics and other projects that
strengthen the local infrastructure and bene?t nearby
residents. Tese investments are not only made through our
philanthropic contributions, they are also funded in two
other ways:
• Trough premiums that we add to our co?ee contracts,
which provide additional funds for community projects.
28 PRODUCTS 28
Tropical Storm Stan Relief E?orts
In October 2005, Tropical Storm Stan struck parts of
Mexico, Guatemala and El Salvador, including areas where
co?ee is grown. Te storm caused ?ash ?oods, mudslides,
damage to crops, and it claimed the lives of thousands. We
responded to the immediate needs for humanitarian relief
and longer-term rebuilding e?orts. Within the ?rst week
following the storm, Starbucks co?ee buyers and agronomists
visited some of the a?ected areas where we buy co?ee to make
a human connection with local farmers and gain a better
sense of long-term rebuilding needs. Starbucks was able to
respond rapidly with $1 million toward relief and rebuilding
e?orts in Mexico and Guatemala, which helped to fund 59
local projects and bene?t an estimated 415,000 people.
To assist a?ected communities in El Salvador and Guatemala,
Starbucks earmarked $23,000 of the emergency funds we
had contributed to CARE International earlier, and we also
provided an additional $250,000 via Mercy Corp for relief
e?orts in areas of Guatemala that were especially hard-hit.
My Starbucks –
The ?rst two weeks following Tropical
Storm Stan were very dif?cult for
us. The Chanjul coffee farm was
completely inaccessible after the storm’s
torrential rains had washed away the
road. Now it has been ?xed, thanks to
Starbucks. Along with our neighbors,
we are once again able to transport
our coffee crops to the processing
facility. While the monetary support you
gave was of great help, we are more
uplifted by the solidarity we experienced
with Starbucks coffee buyers.
Marco Lucas
Farm General Manager
Chiapas, Mexico
AFRICAN HEARTLANDS COFFEE PROJECT
The ?rst phase of the African Heartlands Coffee Project, a
collaboration between Starbucks and the African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF), was launched in Kenya in January 2005.
The three-year project is focused on helping farmers improve
the quality and quantity of Kenya coffee, introducing
sustainable growing and processing best practices as well as
supporting wildlife and biodiversity conservation.
The three-year venture is being funded with a $600,000
commitment from Starbucks, which included a contribution
of $187,000 to AWF in ?scal 2006. We believe the positive
developments taking place in the two Kenyan coffee
cooperatives participating in phase one of this project
clearly re?ect the hard work and dedication of coffee
growers to embrace sustainable growing practices and higher
quality standards.
Additional support for AWF’s work in Kenya came from
Starbucks UK. In ?scal 2006, Starbucks UK contributed
approximately $90,000 to AWF to help to fund the
construction of an earth dam, revitalize a reforestation
program and rehabilitate the Kihuyo Wildlife Fence. To
engage partners in this effort, Starbucks UK created an
Africa-themed photo contest, from which 10 UK Starbucks
partners were selected to travel to Kenya in October 2006
and meet with local coffee farmers who are bene?ting from
the project.
29 PRODUCTS 29
Sustainable Trade: Purchasing Our
Non-Coffee Products
In 2003, we introduced Starbucks Supplier Code of Conduct,
a values-based framework that guides our global purchasing
decisions and supplier relationships. Te Code of Conduct
and supporting guidelines set forth our standards for human
rights, social conditions and environmental responsibility. Te
Code applies to agriculture products (such as co?ee, cocoa
and tea) and manufactured goods and services. Trough
adherence to this Code, Starbucks and our suppliers seek
to demonstrate our commitment to the welfare, economic
improvement and sustainability of the people and places that
produce our products and services.
In the remaining pages of this section, we discuss our
approach to sustainable trade and product quality. Speci?c
topics include:
• Procurement Practices for Sustainable Agriculture
– Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program
– Tazo Tea Sustainability Practices
– Dairy and Bakery Products
• Starbucks Social Responsibility Standards for
Manufactured Goods
• Ethos
™
water
• Quality Assurance and Product Recall
Starbucks Approach to Sustainable Trade
Our products are grown, produced
and/or manufactured by a multitude
of suppliers around the world. As our
global supply chain operations expand
and become increasingly complex, we
recognize the importance of instituting
an overarching framework that ensures
ethical trading practices, increases
transparency and continues to build
a sustainable network of suppliers.
Starbucks is working on many levels to
implement such an approach.
Starbucks Supplier Code of Conduct
articulates our core values and the
expectations we have of our suppliers.
The Code includes social responsibility
standards for both agricultural products
and for manufactured goods.
CODE OF CONDUCT
Social Responsibility Standards:
Agriculture Products
Social Responsibility Standards:
Manufactured Goods and Services
Coffee:
C.A.F.E. Practices
Other Agriculture Products:
(Cocoa, Tea, Dairy
and Bakery)
Supplier Social
Responsibility Program
30 PRODUCTS 30
Procurement Practices for Sustainable
Agriculture
In addition to C.A.F.E. Practices, our co?ee buying
guidelines, Starbucks is working to develop sustainable
purchasing guidelines for cocoa and may also develop
guidelines for other products such as tea, paper and dairy.
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program
Cocoa continues to be an important ingredient in many of
the beverages and products we sell in our stores, including
co?ee beverages, bakery items and chocolate bars. We seek to
ensure that the cocoa we buy has been produced and traded
in an ethical, transparent and sustainable manner, and we are
taking signi?cant steps to ensure our supply chain is in line
with our company’s values.
Worldwide cocoa production for the 2005/2006 crop year
was 7.7 billion pounds (3.5 billion kilograms), of which
approximately 70 percent was produced in West Africa. In
?scal 2006, Starbucks purchased just over 15 million pounds
(6.8 million kilograms) of processed cocoa from our suppliers,
sourced primarily from the Ivory Coast.
In ?scal 2006 we launched Starbucks Socially Responsible
Cocoa Sourcing (SSRC) Pilot Program in the Ivory Coast,
with two established cocoa suppliers that included nine
farmer cooperatives and hundreds of farmers. An initial set
of general guidelines for transparency, working conditions
and price premiums for cocoa farmers were developed for this
pilot program.
During the ?rst year of the pilot, Starbucks sourced 11
million pounds (5 million kilograms) of cocoa beans, in
which we expect to have full price transparency throughout
the supply chain – from the cocoa farm to Starbucks. Tis
transparency data will be audited and validated by an
independent third party to ensure farmers are receiving an
equitable share of the sustainability premiums we pay.
Cocoa Practices Sourcing Guidelines
Building upon the initial Socially Responsible Cocoa
Sourcing Pilot, in September 2006 we completed a new
draft of our Cocoa Practices Sourcing Guidelines (Cocoa
Practices). Similar to C.A.F.E. Practices for co?ee, Cocoa
Practices provide guidelines for the cultivation and processing
of cocoa in a manner that is environmentally sustainable,
socially responsible, and promotes equitable relationships with
farmers, workers and communities. We plan to launch Cocoa
Practices in ?scal 2007 as a two-year pilot program, and move
toward our longer-term plan to utilize the guidelines for all of
our cocoa purchases.
Access to Credit & Social Development Projects
In ?scal 2006, EcoLogic Finance provided $400,000 in loans
to three cocoa farming cooperatives. Starbucks provided the
capital funds used for the loans. To further support cocoa
growing communities in the future, Starbucks has authorized
EcoLogic Finance to provide up to $500,000 in a?ordable
loans to cocoa farmers, drawing o? the $6 million in loan
capital Starbucks already provided. We also amended our loan
agreement with Conservation International’s Verde Ventures,
which will now allow up to 25 percent of the $2.5 million in
capital we provided to be loaned to cocoa farmers.
Stakeholder Engagement
In September 2006 we hosted a stakeholder engagement
session with suppliers, government agencies, non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) and chocolate
manufacturers to review the initial draft of the guidelines
and obtain feedback. Tis feedback will be incorporated into
Cocoa Practices prior to the pilot launch in 2007, and we will
continue to consult with stakeholders as we move forward.
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Purchasing 22 million pounds (10 million kilograms)
of cocoa beans from the Starbucks Socially
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program.
• Completing independent audits and sharing results
of the ?scal 2006 pilot.
• Rolling out Cocoa Practices Guidelines for use in the
next crop year (2007-08)
• Delivering quarterly updates to cocoa stakeholders.
• Providing ?nancial support for social development
projects in cocoa growing communities in the
Ivory Coast.
31 PRODUCTS 31
Tazo
®
Tea – Sustainability Practices
Tazo Tea is one of several brands within Starbucks portfolio,
and is sold in Starbucks stores, grocery stores and other
retail outlets.
Global tea production in 2006 was 7.6 billion pounds (3.5
billion kilograms). In ?scal 2006, Tazo purchased 5.7 million
pounds (2.6 million kilograms) of tea and botanicals from
25 countries.
In previous years we focused our sustainability reporting for
Tazo on purchases of organic ingredients. Tazo has moved
away from this singular focus on organic purchasing in order
to pursue a more comprehensive sustainability strategy for our
tea sourcing.
As part of this strategy, Tazo joined the Ethical Tea
Partnership (ETP) to ensure the teas we purchase are
produced in a socially responsible way. ETP is a unique, long-
term ethical sourcing initiative, set up to work in partnership
with producers to independently monitor living and working
conditions in tea gardens. Te organization also works to
improve the working conditions in the tea industry.
Additionally, in ?scal 2006 we began purchasing some tea
from smallholder tea growers in order to develop closer ties
with tea-growing communities and help support smallholder
farmers in and around the Himalayan foothills of Darjeeling,
India. We worked in partnership with the Darjeeling
Earth Group (DEG), a nonpro?t organization focused on
environmental and social issues, to collaborate with tea
growers on better tea production and green leaf handling
techniques.
Similar to Starbucks holistic approach to responsible co?ee
sourcing, Tazo combines its commitment to purchase
responsibly grown tea with a social development strategy.
At the center of Tazo’s social development strategy is our
Community Health and Advancement Initiative (CHAI),
which we launched in conjunction with Mercy Corps in
2002, and which remains our way of giving back to the
regions that produce Tazo
®
tea ingredients. Funding for
CHAI comes from Tazo, its tea suppliers and Starbucks. Since
2003, nearly $1.4 million has been contributed to the CHAI
Project, including donations in ?scal 2006 of $301,000 from
Tazo and its suppliers, and $100,000 from Starbucks.
Today CHAI is a partnership between Tazo, Mercy Corps,
DEG, and the Assam Branch of the India Tea Association
and is aimed at improving the lives of community members
living in tea estates and neighboring communities. Working
with local Community Action Groups, CHAI works to
democratically identify and address common problems
through a community mobilization process to improve the
quality of life through health, economic development and
youth initiatives.
During ?scal 2006, the CHAI Project expanded a pilot
that originally began in 2005 in four cardamom-producing
communities in Guatemala, and now encompasses nine
communities. As a result of expanding the project, an
additional 1,000 people have bene?ted.
In ?scal 2006 we laid the groundwork to expand the CHAI
Project into the Assam region of India, an area where Tazo
purchases tea. Next year, we plan to develop programs
focused on income generation and education programs that
help to improve economic opportunities for farmers and
families living on tea estates in the region.
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Completing development of a long-term strategy for
Tazo’s sustainable tea sourcing initiative.
• Developing a three-year strategic plan for the CHAI
Project.
• Launching the CHAI Assam Project in four tea
estates, and expand CHAI Guatemala to two
additional villages.
32 PRODUCTS 32
Dairy and Bakery Products
Dairy and bakery products comprise a signi?cant part of our
store operations. For all of our products, Starbucks upholds
our high standards for quality and ensures our products are
safe for consumption.
In response to some stakeholders’ concerns about our
dairy products and our own interest in developing a more
sustainable approach to our dairy purchases, we recently
evaluated the feasibility and implications of converting all
core dairy products – ?uid milk, half-and-half, whipping
cream, and eggnog – to rBGH-free and changing our default
milk standard for our beverages to 2% milk from whole milk.
(rBGH is a synthetic growth hormone given to dairy cows to
increase milk production.)
In ?scal 2006, we surveyed our current dairy suppliers to
understand their cost structure and ability to deliver su?cient
supplies of the highest quality certi?ed organic and/or rBGH-
free milk needed for Starbucks operations. We also met with
stakeholders and dairy suppliers to discuss and learn more
about rBGH and options for new products. As a result of
these e?orts, we are able to ensure that 37 percent of the core
dairy products in our U.S. company-operated stores were
rBGH-free as of January 2007.
Starbucks has also been investigating options for using
organic ingredients in some of our bakery products. Our
e?orts during ?scal 2006 included test marketing two 100
percent organic bakery items in more than 100 company-
operated Starbucks stores in North America stores, and
exploring opportunities to incorporate the use of sustainable
wheat into our portfolio of bakery products.
Stakeholder Engagement
In April 2006, Starbucks hosted stakeholders for a two-day
“Dairy Summit.” Our goals in hosting this session were to:
• Deepen Starbucks understanding of supply chain costs and
performance related to rBGH-free milk.
• Discuss dairy industry innovations and supplier/industry
capabilities as well as the health and nutrition impacts
associated with dairy products.
• Build stronger connections to our dairy suppliers.
Attendees of this summit included Starbucks partners,
representatives from Oregon Physicians for Social
Responsibility, and several of Starbucks dairy suppliers. In
addition, we met with the National Dairy Council in ?scal
2006 to discuss Starbucks existing sustainability programs,
including C.A.F.E. Practices, as a ?rst step to introduce
and explore how sustainability applies to dairy, as well as
consumer health and wellness. We are in the process of
evaluating and/or rolling out new products as a result of this
dialogue, and intend to continue consulting with many of
these stakeholders going forward.
For more information on Starbucks health and wellness
initiatives, please see the Health and Wellness section of this
report beginning on page 49.
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007 we plan to:
• Require all core dairy products used in our
handcrafted beverages to be rBGH-free. This
requirement initially will take place in our U.S.
company-operated stores.
• Conduct a market test in our U.S. company-operated
stores and a small group of stores in Canada to
assess the feasibility of making 2% milk the default
for our beverages.
33 PRODUCTS 33
Starbucks Social Responsibility
Standards – Manufactured Goods
Starbucks purchases an increasing number of manufactured
products that are sold in our stores or used in our business
operations. With the aim to ensure these products are
produced without harm to workers or the environment,
in ?scal 2006 we created a new internal organization –
Sustainable Procurement Practices (SPP) – focused on
socially responsible procurement practices, the Supplier Social
Responsibility Program and Supplier Diversity.
Initially launched in 2005, the Supplier Social Responsibility
Program aims to integrate responsible procurement
practices throughout Starbucks global supply chain for
manufactured goods by June 2010. Tis will help ensure
supply chain transparency, encourage a shared responsibility
between Starbucks buyers and suppliers, and support sound
purchasing decisions through a system of standards, tools and
factory assessments.
In ?scal 2006, we advanced our work in responsible sourcing
for manufactured goods by developing an enhanced set
of factory standards, creating tools for monitoring and
compliance, and initiating a pilot test of 10 factories in
China. Our Supplier Social Responsibility Standards
(SSR) for factories include requirements for worker health
and safety, worker treatment and rights, worker hours and
compensation, transparency and environmental protection.
Rather than seek short-term remedies for issues that may
arise, Starbucks stresses the importance of continuous,
measurable improvement among our suppliers.
Additional progress made this year includes:
• Development of new Zero Tolerance Standards to
designate critical non-negotiable behaviors for suppliers
of manufactured goods, including lack of transparency,
denied access, child labor, forced labor, nonpayment of
wages and physical/sexual abuse.
• Development of and testing of processes and tools to
implement the SSR Standards. Tese include factory
assessment forms, an SSR Standards Manual and other
resources.
• Training of our internal buyers on the SSR guidelines,
standards and tools.
KEY SUPPLIER SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
PROGRAM POLICIES
1. Code of Conduct – overarching business standards
and practices
2. Standards for Manufactured Goods & Services –
speci?c guidelines that incorporate applicable laws,
codes and regulations
3. Zero Tolerance Standards – non-negotiable standards
for being a Starbucks supplier
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Selecting factory monitoring ?rms to conduct
independent assessments.
• Rolling out the Supplier Social Responsibility (SSR)
Standards.
• Assessing all new factories and systematically
assessing existing factories.
• Conducting three factory training sessions for an
estimated 60 factories.
• Verifying and reporting on our factory base/supply
chain for manufactured products.
34 PRODUCTS 34
Ethos
™
Water
Starbucks acquired the Ethos Water brand in April 2005 and
began selling Ethos
™
bottled water in our U.S. company-
operated stores that same year. As part of this acquisition,
we began exploring the range of issues associated with
bottled water.
In November 2005 Starbucks hosted a Water Stakeholders’
Summit, moderated by Business for Social Responsibility
(BSR), in order to learn more about stakeholder concerns
related to Starbucks use of water resources throughout
our business, sourcing and packaging for Ethos
™
water,
Te Starbucks Foundation’s investments in humanitarian
water projects resulting from the sale of Ethos
™
water, and
other water-related issues and topics. For information on
Starbucks and Te Starbucks Foundation’s commitment to
providing clean water for children, please see pages 41 and 47,
respectively.
Encouraged by this stakeholder discussion, in 2006 we
focused our e?orts on developing a set of responsible sourcing
protocols for Ethos
™
water. Quickly recognizing that, to
date, there is no one single standard for responsible sourcing
of spring water, we consulted with a number of industry and
environmental experts to further understand the issues, and
to develop a strategy to guide our current and future water
sourcing plans.*
Te result of this work is a responsible water sourcing protocol
designed to ensure that we purchase the highest quality
bottled water product, sourced in an environmentally and
socially responsible manner. Te protocol includes provisions
for a variety of crucial sourcing concerns and speci?c legal
issues, such as the appropriate de?nitions of spring water;
transportation impacts; sustainable yield assessment to
better understand existing water uses (by animals, plants
and communities); bottling issues; and community impacts
and engagement.
Following initial development, we reviewed and re?ned the
protocol with our stakeholders and utilized it to audit our
existing water sources. Moving forward, we intend to use this
protocol as a tool to monitor our existing sites and to qualify
additional sources for Ethos
™
water. Starbucks will also
continue to engage in dialogue with our stakeholders.
* Ethos
™
water is currently sourced from two natural spring sources – Baxter
Springs in the Sierra Nevada Range in Northern California, and Tomhicken
Springs in the Pocono Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Ethos
™
Water Voluntary Product Withdrawal
Starbucks is deeply committed to the health and safety of
our customers and partners, and to delivering high-quality
products. If a concern arises regarding the safety or quality
of one of our products, Starbucks is committed to taking
appropriate measures and immediate action. One recent
example of Starbucks swift response related to an issue that
involved Ethos
™
water.
In December 2005, it was discovered that one of the
suppliers that Starbucks was using at the time to bottle
Ethos
™
water was out of regulatory compliance for levels
of bromate. Bromate is formed from bromide – naturally
occurring minerals found in some spring waters – during the
puri?cation process.
Upon learning of this issue, Starbucks contacted the FDA and
initiated a voluntary product withdrawal for Ethos
™
water
sold in 14 Western states. Supplies of Ethos
™
water on the
East Coast of the U.S. were not a?ected because we utilize a
di?erent supplier for this region.
As a result of the recall, West Coast production of Ethos
™
water was immediately halted, and the impacted inventory in
our stores, warehouses and other retail outlets was destroyed.
Starbucks temporarily supplied our Western U.S. stores with
Ethos
™
water from our East Coast bottler while we located a
new source for the West Coast. Using our new water sourcing
protocol as a guide, we have quali?ed a new supplier that
we believe can consistently meet our quality standards and
sustainable sourcing criteria.
35 PRODUCTS 35
Quality Assurance and Product
Recalls
Starbucks places the highest priority on the safety and
well-being of our customers and our partners. Our quality
assurance (QA) process is extremely rigorous and extends
throughout our entire supply chain – from co?ee, dairy and
other agricultural products to manufactured goods, such as
brewers, mugs and gift items.
Our commitment to product safety means that we not only
comply with government regulations and operate with full
transparency in our QA processes, but ultimately, we seek
to do the right thing – for customers, partners and the
environment – going above and beyond basic regulations
whenever possible and appropriate.
Several years ago we formed an internal “Product Incident
Team,” comprised of representatives from QA, Legal,
Operations and Communications in order to provide
additional monitoring of product quality. Te team is tasked
with weekly review of product performance information,
customer and partner feedback, and other product usage
information in order to proactively assess any potential issues.
Should a product quality, failure or safety issue arise, an
extensive response system, including communications and
operational components, is rapidly implemented.
Despite having extensive QA controls, certain unforeseen
situations can arise, making a product recall necessary in
order to bring a product into government compliance and/or
to ensure the health and safety of partners and customers.
In Starbucks 35-year history, we’ve had only a handful
of incidents that warranted a product recall, and in each
situation we took a proactive and universal approach to
rectifying the situation and maintaining customer trust and
loyalty. In ?scal 2006 we conducted a rapid and voluntary
withdrawal of Ethos
™
water as a result of quality issues,
explained in more detail on the previous page.
36 SOCI ETY
STARBUCKS GROWTH AND
COMMUNITY IMPACTS
In an era of increasing globalization, when
communities around the world are striving to
preserve their cultural uniqueness, one might
assume that a large, global coffee company
is out of touch with the needs of individual
communities or its individual customers.
This assumption runs contrary to what we
believe at Starbucks. We do, however, recognize
that Starbucks continued success depends
greatly on our ability to operate our individual
stores much like a small, local business does – by
building lasting, personal relationships with our
customers and neighbors. It also means honoring
the intent of Starbucks Guiding Principles by
contributing positively to our communities.
Troughout this section, we discuss Starbucks role in our
society and the relationships we have with our communities
and customers. Speci?cally, we address:
• Starbucks growth
• Starbucks community investments
• Investing in communities around the world
• Te Starbucks Foundation
• Starbucks commitment to health and wellness
• Being responsive to our customers
• Public policy and government a?airs
Starbucks Growth
To realize our ambitions for Starbucks long-term growth, we
work to gain the support of local communities to open new
stores and operate our business. Tis comes down to how well
Starbucks is regarded as an enterprise that adds value to local
communities. When Starbucks is viewed as stimulating local
economic development, providing an inviting gathering place
for residents, and supporting neighborhood interests, we are
almost always welcomed in.
Occasionally, Starbucks entry into some areas raises concerns
among local residents. Our approach is to engage openly
and directly in the hope of resolving concerns before or as
they arise.
Over the next few pages, we examine some of the speci?c
issues related to Starbucks growth, explain our perspective,
and share what Starbucks is doing to be a responsible
neighbor. Some of the topics discussed below are:
• Continuing marketplace evolution
• Operating in the global community
• Being respectful of community concerns
• Being locally relevant
• Supporting local communities and economic development
Store Growth
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks opened 2,199 new stores, bringing
the worldwide total to 12,440 locations. We expect to add as
many as 2,400 new locations next year.
In October 2006, Starbucks announced plans to increase
the company’s long-term store target from 30,000 to 40,000
locations worldwide, more than tripling the company’s
current store base. We envision having approximately 20,000
locations in the U.S., and another 20,000 locations outside
the U.S. someday.
37 SOCI ETY
Continuing Marketplace Evolution
Over the past several decades, the marketplace has become
increasingly more competitive and global in nature. Large
retail companies entering the market o?er the most visible
signs of this trend through the replication of their successful
store concepts within and beyond their national borders. Tis
is also true for Starbucks.
A common misperception is that large global brand retailers
and small, independent retailers cannot coexist. Te co?ee
retailer market o?ers an example of such coexistence.
Coinciding with Starbucks growth has been a steady growth
of small, independent co?ee shops throughout the U.S. Tis
would suggest continuing synergy between the growth of
Starbucks and that of smaller co?ee retailers. Starbucks has
long believed that co?ee consumers have a wide variety of
needs and preferences, and, in turn, their demands support a
very diverse range of co?ee retailers.
From the beginning, Starbucks has played an integral part in
creating an industry for gourmet co?ee. Tis growth of the
specialty co?ee industry has, in turn, created opportunities
for competing co?ee businesses that similarly cater to the
increasingly sophisticated consumer palate for specialty
co?ees. As Starbucks has grown, so has the industry, all of
which has bene?ted co?ee consumers.
Operating in the Global Community
In our e?orts to extend Starbucks presence to markets beyond
the U.S., we have been introduced to a multitude of new
places, each one uniquely characterized by its history, culture,
sense of community and natural environment. We have also
been introduced to and welcomed by millions of enthusiastic
customers. Overall, our experience of doing business
throughout the world has been overwhelmingly positive.
Tere are, however, times when doing business on the global
landscape presents some challenges, including dealing with
the wide spectrum of perceptions people have of America.
In some parts of the world, there has been a rise in anti-
American sentiment, much of it attributed to the war in Iraq.
As a global company with an American heritage, we strive to
be respectful of other perspectives and responsive when we
encounter misconceptions that may a?ect our relationships
with our customers, neighbors and/or business partners.
Being Respectful of Community
Concerns
Te growing presence of global brand retailers has heightened
awareness about the level of homogeneity in the marketplace.
Some local citizens are opposed to national retailers entering
their communities, suspicious that these retailers will force
out small independents by driving up commercial rents or
a?ecting the unique complexion of their neighborhoods. On
occasion Starbucks has encountered community opposition,
although it is far more typical for us to receive a warm and
enthusiastic welcome when opening in a new area.
We make every e?ort to understand the underlying issues
related to these situations and work collaboratively and
respectfully with local citizen groups. Looking for ways
to leverage Starbucks economic impact – jobs, support for
community-based organizations, use of local vendors and
suppliers – is one approach we take. Another is to determine
how Starbucks can contribute to the local character of an area
and minimize any undesirable impacts.
Many factors are weighed when considering a speci?c location
to site a new Starbucks, focusing the end goal on being able
to serve our loyal customers in a welcoming environment.
However, if after thoughtful review we determine that
Starbucks is not a good ?t for a particular locale, we may
choose to respectfully withdraw our plans to open a new
store. Tere have been several instances in the past when we
have elected to do this.
On the next page we report on three experiences we recently
had in California, New York City and London.
38 SOCI ETY
Local Community Case Studies
La Mesa, California
When some members of the community learned of our
plans to open a new store in the heart of La Mesa Village,
they expressed concern that Starbucks arrival might erode
competition and change the unique character of this area.
La Mesa Village, the city’s oldest, most established shopping
district, is surrounded by many historic buildings that date
back to 1912, the year this city was incorporated in San Diego
County.
Some residents welcomed Starbucks presence, while others
who were more apprehensive registered their concerns with
local civic leaders and the mayor’s o?ce.
We believe a situation such as this can only be resolved when
a climate of mutual respect and trust exists. We took this
to heart in La Mesa and reached out to the mayor, a?liated
with the local merchant association and looked for other
ways to become immersed and invested in the overall success
of La Mesa Village. Starbucks also identi?ed opportunities
to support important events that helped to strengthen our
connection to the local community, which we had been a part
of since opening our ?rst store in the area in 1995.
As a result of these e?orts, tensions softened and there was
a notable turn in acceptance. To celebrate the opening of
Starbucks new store, we held an event that was attended by
representatives from the City of La Mesa, members of the La
Mesa Merchants Association and many local neighbors.
New York City – Astor Place
When Starbucks began planning to make some much needed
repairs and improvements to the atrium area of the historic
Astor Place building, local residents wanted assurance that
Starbucks would be respectful of this 160-year-old landmark
structure as well as the distinctive character of the surrounding
community. Te atrium o?ers ample seating space, which
many customers of Starbucks Astor Place store enjoy.
Many longstanding structures, such as Astor Place, are
architectural treasures that connect residents to their local
history and add charm and character to their neighborhoods.
In the case of Astor Place, we wanted local residents to
understand Starbucks commitment to their neighborhood
and our intent to preserve this mixed-use building that holds
a commanding view of the immediate area.
Due to our delay in renewing our local business license,
and the community’s overall concerns about the needed
repairs to the atrium, our permit to use the atrium space was
threatened. We resolved this matter in a positive manner by
working with a local council member, area residents, city
employees and the Landmark Preservation Commission to
?nd a suitable process that would ensure the preservation of
this beloved site.
Trough our engagement with the community, we were
able to dispel some misinformation that had previously been
reported, and share our desire to work together on a common
goal. Because Starbucks had been operating in this location
for some time, this process also helped to strengthen our
existing relationships in the community and set the course for
ongoing engagement.
London – Bloomsbury District
Te occasional opposition to Starbucks has not only been
isolated to speci?c communities in the U.S. In 2006 we
experienced an incident in London when some local citizens
signed petitions in an e?ort to keep Starbucks from opening
a store on Lamb’s Conduit Street in the Bloomsbury district.
Te resulting media coverage focused largely on the in?uence
certain celebrities had in galvanizing the community’s
opposition to this new Starbucks.
Since opening in August 2006, our store partners have sought
to establish relationships with neighboring businesses and
community organizations, and looked for opportunities to
support local causes. While some community members have
chosen not to frequent this new Starbucks store, others have
become our customers. Starbucks is committed to building
strong ties to this community and continually looking
for ways we can contribute to the thriving life on Lamb’s
Conduit Street.
My Starbucks –
Through its work with local preservationists,
Starbucks demonstrates how a national
retailer can be a good neighbor by helping to
preserve community character instead of
destroying it.
-Richard Moe, president, National
Trust for Historic Preservation
39 SOCI ETY
Being Locally Relevant
Providing a consistent experience for our customers is
one of Starbucks greatest strengths. At the same time, we
are respectful of our local communities throughout the
world and, when possible, modify our store environment
and customer experience in various ways. For instance, we
have adapted our menu at times to include special food
items in Asia, Europe and elsewhere; adjusted the days and
hours of our store operations depending on local customs;
incorporated architectural elements in our store design
to re?ect the uniqueness of a neighborhood; and created
di?erent types of store environments that are culturally
attuned to and meet our customers’ needs.
In the UK, Starbucks has an initiative aimed at incorporating
features that make our stores relevant to the local
communities. For example, in Manchester, England, we have
purchased several items for our local stores from Benchmark
Furniture Design, a local maker of wood furnishings with a
social mission.
Some of our stores in the U.S. are also adapted with a
local ?air. For instance, instead of building a new store in
Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood, Starbucks refurbished
an existing limestone building and preserved many of the
original features, including a distinctive ?replace mantel
which we designed to be a focal point of our new store.
Supporting Local Communities and
Economic Development
Whether it’s an existing location or we are entering a
neighborhood for the ?rst time, an important way we ensure
strong ties to the community is through our support of local
programs and causes. Tis takes a variety of paths, including
our ongoing support for community-based organizations;
encouraging our partners to actively volunteer; establishing
alliances with nonpro?t organizations; and other local
engagement activities.
In addition to this type of support, Starbucks has been
a catalyst for local economic development. Since 1998,
Starbucks has had a joint venture with Johnson Development
Corporation, a company owned by Earvin “Magic” Johnson,
through Urban Co?ee Opportunities, LLC (UCO). Te
goal of UCO is to bring Starbucks stores to diverse local
communities in the U.S. At the end of ?scal 2006, there were
102 UCO stores in operation.
As the name suggests, UCO focuses on creating opportunities
for communities that may have been overlooked by other
prominent retailers, despite their long-term potential for
economic vitality. At times, Starbucks has been the ?rst
premium brand retailer to site a store in a certain area, a
presence that has helped to serve as an economic stimulus
with the creation of new jobs, use of local suppliers, and by
attracting other major retailers to the neighborhood. (For
more information on UCO, please see page 75)
Building Civic Alliances
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks worked closely with civic
organizations that helped us better understand the
opportunities, concerns and challenges faced by our local
communities, including the U.S. Conference of Mayors
and the National Trust for Historic Preservation – Main
Street Center.
Tese relationships have been mutually bene?cial. Not
only have we forged closer connections to our communities
through these civic relationships, we have also been able
to educate the public about Starbucks brand and the value
we bring to local municipalities, and gain a broader range
of insights and feedback at the civic level. We believe these
organizations have bene?ted from Starbucks support of issues
that are important to their constituents. Historic preservation,
the environment, infrastructure, jobs and urban revitalization
are just a few of the issues we collectively address through
these alliances.
In the following pages, we explain how Starbucks is
investing in our local communities in the U.S. and our
international markets.
40 SOCI ETY
Starbucks Community Investments
Starbucks seeks opportunities to contribute positively
wherever we have a presence. At any given time, we may
be funding a water puri?cation system in Indonesia;
contributing to the rebuilding of a library damaged by a
natural disaster; or helping to establish a new high school in a
rural co?ee-growing village.
Te speci?c topics we discuss include:
• Our overall approach to community investments
• Investing in local communities
– Promoting the need for clean water
– Rebuilding communities struck by natural disaster
– Starbucks partners – supporting their communities
– Localized initiatives
• Investing in communities around the world
– Investing in co?ee- and tea-growing communities
• Te Starbucks Foundation
Our approach to community investments has been shaped by
our increasingly global presence. After thoughtful discourse –
internally and with external stakeholders – Starbucks decided
in ?scal 2006 to begin focusing a signi?cant portion of our
community investments on two universally important issues:
education and access to clean water. Tese two complex yet
critical issues complement Starbucks core values and our
strategic direction. We also believe that by focusing and
aligning the giving priorities of Starbucks Co?ee Company
and Te Starbucks Foundation, Starbucks contributions will
have greater impact and provide more bene?t to communities
around the world.
Given the complex nature of the issues we address, our giving
is done in a number of ways and through various channels.
Tese include:
• Cash contributions made at the corporate, regional and
local level
• In-kind donations of Starbucks products and resources
• Partner (employee) volunteer and gift-matching programs
• Contributing funds to Te Starbucks Foundation for its
grant-making e?orts
• Adding premiums to some of our co?ee contracts to fund
community projects
• Encouraging customer charitable donations
We recognize that our focused approach to community
investments needs to remain ?exible so we can be responsive
to emergent needs in the areas where we have a local presence.
Tis was certainly the direction we took in ?scal 2006, by
targeting our giving in the following ways:
• Launched a campaign to call attention to the global
water crisis and provided funds to address critical water,
sanitation and hygiene programs in regions of Ethiopia
and Indonesia.
• Provided ongoing assistance for rebuilding e?orts in U.S.
Gulf Coast communities a?ected by Hurricane Katrina.
• Supported locally relevant education programs in
communities where we do business.
• Contributed to the local nonpro?ts that our partners
personally support with their contributions of time
and money.
• Invested in projects that bene?t co?ee- and tea-growing
communities.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks cash and in-kind contributions were
valued at $36.1 million, or four percent of the company’s
earnings before income tax. (See pie chart below.)
* Tis chart represents grants and product donations paid by Starbucks Co?ee
Company during ?scal 2006. Tese numbers di?er from grant expenses
recorded in our consolidated ?nancial statements, which are shown on an
accrual basis as required by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in
the U.S.
** Represents the total amount Starbucks paid through some co?ee contracts to
fund various projects to improve co?ee-growing communities.
Total: $36.1 million
Starbucks Donations Paid in Fiscal 2006*
Starbucks
contribution to
The Starbucks
Foundation
$15.9 million
Projects in coffee
communities
$2.7 million**
Product and
in-kind donations
$7.7 million
Corporate giving
$9.8 million
* Tis chart represents grants and product donations paid by Starbucks Co?ee Company during ?scal
2006. Tese numbers di?er from grant expenses recorded in our consolidated ?nancial statements,
which are shown on an accrual basis as required by generally accepted accounting principles
(GAAP) in the United States.
** Represents the total amount Starbucks paid through some co?ee contracts to fund various projects to
improve co?ee-growing communities.
41 SOCI ETY
Investing in Local Communities
Starbucks long tradition of supporting important and locally
relevant causes got its start in the U.S., although today our
giving extends to communities around the world – especially
in places where we have a strong and growing presence.
Below we provide several tangible examples of community
investments Starbucks made in ?scal 2006, beginning with
descriptions of our U.S. initiatives and our support for
disaster relief; followed by a section highlighting our local
community e?orts in some of our international markets.
Promoting the Need for Clean Water
In recognition of World Water Day, a UN day of observance,
on March 22, 2006, Starbucks launched a multiyear e?ort
to call attention to one of the most signi?cant public issues
in the world. More than one billion people globally lack
access to clean, safe drinking water. Te public health
e?ects associated with this global water crisis are enormous,
including the death of an estimated 1.8 million children each
year from preventable waterborne illnesses.*
Solving the problem will take a concerted global e?ort and
resources from many di?erent sources. Our goal is to leverage
Starbucks unique culture and global presence to make a
di?erence. Raising awareness with our partners and customers
about the world water crisis – and what we all can do to
address it – is a ?rst step. In ?scal 2006, we:
• Sponsored World Water Day walks in eleven U.S. cities to
symbolize the di?cult average three-mile daily walk that
women and children in developing countries often make
to get drinking water for their families.
• Launched a World Water Day website,
www.worldwaterday2006.org, to inform and mobilize the
public about the issue.
• Encouraged nearly 4,000 partners and individuals
representing NGOs to participate in World Water Day
Walks for Water in cities around the country and on a
“Virtual Walk for Water” online.
For information about Te Starbucks Foundation’s
international initiatives to bring reliable and clean water to
communities in Ethiopia and Indonesia, see page 47.
* Human Development Report 2006 from the United Nations Development
Programme
Rebuilding Communities Struck by Natural Disasters
Starbucks has been quick to respond to and provide assistance
to local communities devastated by natural disasters in
several regions around the world. Tis includes our relief
e?orts for communities along the U.S. Gulf Coast, and areas
a?ected by the tsunami in South Asia and the earthquake in
Indonesia. Starbucks also provided support to co?ee-growing
communities in Central America a?ected by Tropical Storm
Stan. Our response to Tropical Storm Stan is described on
page 28.
Hurricane Katrina
In September 2005, following Hurricane Katrina, Starbucks
made a $5 million commitment, funded by both Starbucks
and Te Starbucks Foundation, to support the region. Tis
commitment included an immediate $1 million donation that
Starbucks made to the American Red Cross for emergency
relief services.
Te remaining funds will be used for the ongoing rebuilding
of local Gulf Coast communities that are still recovering from
the overwhelming damage caused by this hurricane.
As part of our initial $5 million commitment, Starbucks
pledged a portion of revenues generated by the CD I Believe to
My Soul for the rebuilding e?orts. Ten dollars of the purchase
price of every copy sold in Starbucks company-operated stores
in the U.S. and Canada is donated to aid in the Gulf Coast’s
recovery. Donations are made to the American Red Cross and
the Canadian Red Cross and will continue for the lifetime
of the CD. To date, more than $315,000 has been raised
through the sale of I Believe to My Soul.
To learn how Te Starbucks Foundation is addressing the
restoration of communities in the U.S. Gulf Coast, please see
page 46.
42 SOCI ETY
South Asia Tsunami Communities
As part of our ongoing work with CARE International, a
leading humanitarian organization ?ghting global poverty,
Starbucks provided $50,000 to CARE in ?scal 2006 to
support the restoration of areas in South Asia where the needs
are greatest. With Starbucks support, CARE has been able to:
• Develop innovative and local technology to improve water
and sanitation devices in CARE-constructed houses.
• Organize trainings and provide materials that have helped
16,000 people ?nd a range of ways to earn an income,
including: tailoring, carpentry, cooking, ?shing and
small shops.
• Conduct three-day trainings on maternal and child health
issues for 245 health workers. Each month, approximately
2,500 women are screened for malnutrition and provided
with supplements.
For a complete picture of CARE and its work in South Asia,
see www.care.org.
Indonesia Earthquake
Starbucks Asia Paci?c business established Te Starbucks
Indonesia Earthquake Fund as part of a fundraising e?ort
aimed at helping our partners and others in need who
were recovering from this natural disaster. Starbucks Japan
contributed to the earthquake relief e?orts by initiating a
donation program in conjunction with Starbucks Co?ee
International and Starbucks Co?ee Asia Paci?c. Funds
raised through the sales of Indonesian whole bean co?ee
during June 2006, approximately $17,800 (¥2,100,149), were
contributed to Japan’s chapter of CARE International.
Starbucks Partners – Supporting Their Local
Communities
Our partners have repeatedly demonstrated a strong desire
to engage in their communities, and Starbucks is proud
to encourage and support their e?orts. Te following two
programs are unique to the U.S. and Canada, although our
international partners are involved in their communities in
many similar forms.
Make Your Mark Volunteer Program
Starbucks volunteer program – Make Your Mark (MYM) –
was introduced six years ago in the U.S. and Canada as a way
to encourage and support our partners’ (employees) volunteer
e?orts. Trough MYM, Starbucks matches our partners’
volunteer e?orts by donating $10 for every hour volunteered
to the designated nonpro?t organization, up to $1,000
per project.
If our partners enlist the help of customers, Starbucks
matches their volunteer hours, too. Since its inception, MYM
has inspired our U.S. and Canadian partners and customers
to volunteer more than one million hours for thousands of
local community organizations. Tat’s equivalent to about
480 people working full-time for one year. (See graphs below.)
To learn about Te Starbucks Foundation’s special Make Your
Mark program to support partners’ exceptional community
e?orts in the U.S. Gulf Coast region, see page 46.
Starbucks Make Your Mark Grants
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
$801,000
$1,487,000
$1,559,000
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Make Your Mark Volunteer Hours
214,000
299,000
383,000
43 SOCI ETY
Choose to Give! Gift Matching Program
Starbucks also encourages our U.S. and Canadian partners
to make their own charitable gifts with support from
the company’s gift-matching program, Choose to Give!
Starbucks matches our partners’ charitable gifts, dollar-for-
dollar, up to $1,000 annually. In ?scal 2006, 3,800 of our
partners’ charitable contributions were matched by Starbucks
with $677,000.
Localized Initiatives
In addition to our national community initiatives in the
U.S., Starbucks looks for opportunities to contribute at the
local level in meaningful ways. Based on our belief that
communities greatly bene?t when grants are combined
with volunteerism, we often direct our local community
investments to the organizations where our partners are
actively involved. In other cases, Starbucks supports causes
that are locally relevant and contribute in a meaningful way
to enhancing community life.
Examples of our localized initiatives include the Starbucks
California Giving Program (www.starbuckscalgiving.com),
which awards grants annually to eligible community-based
nonpro?t programs that allow children an opportunity to
grow and ?ourish. Te other is Starbucks Neighborhood
Parks Program (www.starbuckslovesparks.com), an initiative
designed to help improve local area parks in the Greater
Seattle area, Starbucks hometown. With our localized
initiatives, our partners’ involvement is a key component, and
strongly encouraged.
NAACP STRATEGIC ALLIANCE
In May 2006, Starbucks announced a ?ve-year, $2.5
million commitment of both cash and in-kind donations
to the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP), the oldest and largest civil
rights organization in the U.S. This strategic alliance will
enable Starbucks and the NAACP to support programs and
activities re?ecting our shared commitment to social and
economic equality. The NAACP and Starbucks will work
together on an annual basis to identify programs that will
receive funding through Starbucks donations.
44 SOCI ETY
Investing in Communities Around
the World
In our international markets, there are countless examples
of how Starbucks supports local communities through
philanthropy, partner engagement and by opening our doors
for community events. While our international community
e?orts support many causes and often follow the lead of our
partners’ interests, we are beginning to focus more of our
e?orts on support of educational and water-related initiatives
that improve the lives of children. Below are some examples
that represent our activities in ?scal 2006:
Greater China
• Mainland China – Since the opening of our ?rst store
in Beijing in 1999, partners have been involved in
community initiatives, from volunteering in local schools
to assisting other educational nonpro?t organizations.
• Hong Kong/Macau – We facilitated a customer toy
and book drive for Operation Santa Claus, an annual
fundraising e?ort held every December in support of small
charities in urgent need of support.
• Taiwan – Starbucks Taiwan continued its long-term
support of aboriginal children through World Vision
Taiwan, in addition to sponsoring an environmental
awareness campaign and a community cleanup.
Asia Paci?c
• Tailand – On Earth Day, Starbucks Tailand held a
“Green Up” workshop at a central park in Bangkok for
customers and partners. Workshop participants learned
how to minimize their environmental footprint and
planted new trees in Rot Fai Park.
• Japan – Starbucks Japan, in collaboration with Major
League Baseball, donated $248,500 (¥28.7 million) to
four agencies that enhance the lives of children in Japan,
Ethiopia and Indonesia. Revenues for the donations
were raised through sales of a Starbucks Card featuring
Ichiro, a famous Japanese baseball player who plays for
the Seattle Mariners. Te Cards were sold in all Starbucks
Japan stores.
Europe/Middle East/Africa (EMEA)
• Te UK – Starbucks partners have worked with the
National Literacy Trust for six years to develop All Books
for Children, a program that introduces preschool children
and their families to the bene?ts of libraries and reading.
Hundreds of Starbucks partners have been involved with
the program since its inception. For the second year in
a row, UK partners were honored for their outstanding
e?orts in support of literacy with a prestigious award from
Business in the Community, a movement that encourages
positive civic engagement by businesses.
UK partners also supported an African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF) program in Kenya. AWF is working to
improve the accessibility and reliability of water and bring
other basic improvements to a Kenyan co?ee-growing
community. Ten UK partners traveled to Kenya in
October 2006 to meet with local co?ee farmers who have
bene?ted from the project and learn about the other work
of AWF.
• Germany – Literacy was the focus of our partners in
Germany who participated in a nationwide Read-Out
Day in November 2005 in cooperation with the German
Literacy Trust Organization and Die Zeit, a nationwide
weekly newspaper. Twenty-four Starbucks stores hosted
reading sessions for children.
• Greece – Our partners in Greece have continued to
support SOS Children’s Villages and prioritize children’s
health and welfare in their community e?orts. In ?scal
2006, partners lent their support to several programs
for orphaned children. Tey also helped create libraries
and playrooms for children hospitalized in four state-run
organizations.
• Spain – Our partners organized an in-store children’s book
drive during the holiday season in ?scal 2006. Many of
our customers donated books, bringing the total to 1,475
books collected. Te books were then donated to several
di?erent Children’s Hospitals.
• Turkey – Our partners in Turkey identi?ed education as
an important issue in their communities, due to the young
age of the Turkish population (65 percent are below 18
years of age). Working with the Ministry of Education,
each new Starbucks location identi?es a local school to
work with. Partners commit personal time to support
events such as parties, fund raising and gift giving as well
as organizing day trips for the children to theatres and
museums. Tey have found that the trips can be a once-in-
a-lifetime experience for some of the children, and this fact
alone has a positive e?ect on the satisfaction our partners
feel from being involved. As of May 2006, there were 40
schools involved in the program, with an average of 1,000
students each, including two schools that serve students
who are deaf.
45 SOCI ETY
Canada
Starbucks Co?ee Canada is dedicated to supporting family
literacy by working with a variety of national and local literacy
organizations. In ?scal 2006, we partnered with the ABC
Canada Literacy Foundation to launch Gift of Words (GOW),
a national program to address funding shortages in schools,
libraries and literacy organizations. GOW will provide children
with access to books and one-on-one reading opportunities to
encourage their development as lifelong readers and learners.
In its ?rst year GOW delivered thousands of books to children
across Canada, and more than 69,800 children gained access to
new or improved reading circles.
Starbucks Canada donated $264,000 (CAD$305,000), which
represented the full proceeds of latte sales in all Canadian
Starbucks stores on January 19, 2006, to Gift of Words and
Frontier College, another national literacy organization.
Latin America
• Mexico – Until recently, there was no high school
in the rural province of Nuevo Paraiso in Chiapas,
Mexico, an area that is home to many co?ee farming
families. Attending high school – or taking any class
beyond primary school – meant leaving the province
and relocating miles away. When the co?ee cooperative
Comon Yaj Nop Tic looked into building a regional high
school, Tecnológico de Monterrey, a private college, o?ered
to install a virtual education program, transmitted via
satellite to a central location in the province.
After six months of combined e?ort by the cooperative,
Starbucks and many community members, as well
as $10,000 in ?nancial support from Starbucks, a
Community Learning Center was built and opened in
June 2006. Te Center, which now serves 150 co?ee
farming families and others from ?ve neighboring
communities, provides access to a virtual high school and
post-graduate programs, as well as family development and
health programs. Permanent instructors sta? the Learning
Center under the supervision of Instituto Tecnológico y de
Estudios Superiores de Monterrey. More than 50 students
have registered for the 2006-2008 high school program.
Other courses are being developed, including training on
sustainable co?ee production.
• Chile – Starbucks partners in Chile are dedicating
their e?orts to help children with serious medical issues
participate in a special form of movement therapy known
as hipotherapy. Starbucks partners worked twice a week
with these children as they engaged in hipotherapy as
a means to improve their balance and coordination.
Starbucks Chile funded a scholarship to allow one child
to receive the treatment in ?scal 2006, and will continue
supporting the program in ?scal 2007 with an additional
scholarship and partner support.
Investing in Coffee- and Tea-Growing
Communities
Starbucks recognizes the positive impact our trading
relationships and our commitment to education and health
issues can have on co?ee- and tea-growing communities.
Starbucks often works with nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs) with required knowledge and expertise to ensure our
e?orts are e?ective.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks continued to support the
work of Conservation International, African Wildlife
Foundation, CARE International, and Co?ee Kids in the
areas of biodiversity preservation, wildlife conservation,
poverty alleviation and microlending, respectively. We
also maintained our collaboration with Save the Children
in Guatemala and our work with Mercy Corps in tea-
growing communities.
For information about our investments in co?ee- and tea-
growing communities, see pages 27 and 31 respectively.
SAVE THE CHILDREN
In 2005, Starbucks committed $1.5 million over four years
to bring bilingual education to 20 Mayan communities
in the rural highlands of Guatemala, $426,000 of which
was contributed in ?scal 2006. Starbucks selected Save
the Children USA, an international relief and development
organization, to lead our Guatemala Education Initiative.
Save the Children then successfully leveraged Starbucks
support by securing $600,000 in matching funds from the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
to bring additional educational bene?ts to rural Guatemala.
The Guatemala Education Initiative aims to provide quality
preschool, primary and secondary education to rural
indigenous children, with special emphasis on girls. Save
the Children has developed bilingual programs sensitive to
local social and cultural factors, with input from parents,
education of?cials and community leaders.
In the ?rst year of operation, Save the Children worked in 14
schools in 12 communities and established 14 preprimary
centers. More than 50 teachers were trained and as many
as 1,700 children are now participating in the new bilingual
active learning programs. More information is available on
the Save the Children website: www.savethechildren.org/
corporate/partners/starbucks.html
Starbucks partners have supported the Guatemala Education
Initiative enthusiastically. In ?scal 2006, partner support
of the Guatemala Education Initiative provided funding
to furnish two rural Guatemala schools with backpacks
containing school supplies; school playgrounds; and other
valuable supplemental support for the children.
46 SOCI ETY
The Starbucks Foundation
Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz established Te
Starbucks Foundation in 1997 with a mission to create hope,
discovery and opportunity in communities where Starbucks
retail stores are located. Since that time, Te Foundation
has provided more than $18 million in funding initially
to literacy and youth education programs in underserved
communities in the U.S. and Canada. More recently, Te
Foundation has broadened its approach to grant making.
Te Starbucks Foundation, a 501(c)(3) charitable
organization, receives the majority of its funding from
Starbucks Corporation as well as some private donations. Te
Foundation, a separate entity from Starbucks Corporation, is
governed by a board of directors comprised of 11 Starbucks
senior executives and is chaired by Orin Smith, retired
Starbucks president and chief executive o?cer.
In ?scal 2006, Te Foundation made more than 200 grants
to nonpro?t organizations, totaling $7 million.
Te Starbucks Foundation is increasingly focusing more of
its resources on education and addressing issues related to
water. Te Foundation seeks to align its giving with its core
values and mission, and be responsive to emergent needs in
communities where Starbucks has a presence. In ?scal 2006,
Te Foundation supported a variety of initiatives around the
world, including:
• Rebuilding e?orts in areas impacted by two signi?cant
natural disasters
• Projects aimed at improving access to water, sanitation and
hygiene education
• Youth development programs in education, the arts and
environmental education
• Continued support of key nonpro?t partners that promote
literacy
• Funding to establish Te Starbucks China Education
Project at Give2Asia
Hurricane Katrina Rebuilding Efforts
In September 2005, following Hurricane Katrina, Starbucks
made a $5 million commitment, funded by both Starbucks
and Te Starbucks Foundation, to support the region. Te
Starbucks Foundation donated $200,000 to immediate relief
e?orts following Katrina, including $150,000 to Habitat for
Humanity and $50,000 to Jumpstart of New Orleans. Te
Jumpstart funds will be used to rebuild libraries and replace
books, and the donation to Habitat for Humanity supported
a musicians village project. Te Starbucks Foundation has
taken an innovative, community-based approach to helping
the region recover from the hurricane disaster, including:
• Making grants of $50,000 each to four community
foundations to be used where the need was greatest.
• Setting up Donor Advised Funds totaling $700,000 at
three community foundations to take recommendations
from partners (employees) for gifts of up to $10,000 to
grass-roots, neighborhood nonpro?ts.
• Instituting a Gulf Coast version of Make Your Mark to
support our partners’ extraordinary volunteerism in their
communities. Te Foundation donates $25 for every
hour that our partners volunteer their time to nonpro?t
organizations working to restore homes, lives and
communities destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. To date,
nearly $17,000 has been granted to eight projects through
Starbucks match of the volunteer hours of 86 individuals.
Te Foundation will monitor rebuilding e?orts in the region
and work with community leaders to identify the areas of
greatest need and determine how the reserved funds can best
serve local communities.
My Starbucks –
Jerry Moran, store manager, and his
fellow New Orleans partners have been
instrumental in saving ?ood-damaged
homes from the bulldozer. The City
of New Orleans placed a deadline for
homeowners to salvage and treat their
sodden and often mold-infested homes.
The cost was prohibitive for many
families in lower income neighborhoods.
So Jerry and his co-workers, along
with others throughout the Gulf Coast
region, teamed up with ACORN (The
Association of Community Organizations
for Reform Now) to help recover
these homes through a combined 670-
hour volunteer effort. The volunteers
restored 11 homes in ?scal 2006, while
raising an additional $17,000 to support
ACORN through donations from a special
Gulf Coast version of Make Your Mark.
F UT URE G OA L
The Starbucks Foundation will mark its 10-year
anniversary in 2007. Both The Foundation and
Starbucks Coffee Company will announce a global
philanthropic framework focused on supporting
educational initiatives in Starbucks retail markets
around the world.
47 SOCI ETY
Ethos Water Fund and World Water Initiatives
Trough the acquisition of the Ethos Water brand in April
2005, Starbucks embarked on an e?ort to raise awareness of
the world water crisis and support clean water initiatives. For
each bottle of Ethos
™
water sold, ?ve cents is donated toward
Starbucks goal of contributing at least $10 million by 2010 to
help alleviate the world water crisis.
Te Ethos Water Fund is housed within and directed
by Te Starbucks Foundation to support nonpro?t and
nongovernmental organizations working to bring clean water
to those in need around the world. Funding priority is given
to integrated and sustainable water projects that positively
impact the lives of children and their communities.
On World Water Day 2006 Te Starbucks Foundation
announced two new multiyear initiatives to help communities
in Indonesia and Ethiopia gain access to improved water,
sanitation and hygiene education.
Mercy Corps in Sumatra, Indonesia
Te Starbucks Foundation committed $1 million over two
years to support Mercy Corps’ Sumatra Healthy Schools
Program on Sumatra Island, Indonesia. In this region, the
lack of potable water has helped fuel an anemia epidemic
in young people, among other serious nutritional and
health problems.
Mercy Corps has identi?ed four interrelated program
components to improve children’s health by addressing
the problem through 960 schools in four provinces. Te
Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund is providing needed funds to
address the water and sanitation components of the program
in 760 schools.
For more information about the Sumatra Healthy Schools
Program, see www.ethoswater.com and http://indonesia.
mercycorps.org
WaterAid in Ethiopia
Menge Woreda is located in northwestern Ethiopia near the
Sudan border. Surrounded by mountains, it is a remote and
marginalized region of one of the poorest countries in the
world.
Over a period of three years, beginning in 2005, WaterAid
plans to provide all 22 villages in Menge Woreda with
access to safe water, e?ective sanitation, and the hygiene
education necessary to make the best use of these facilities.
Te Starbucks Foundation has committed $1.13 million
over three years to support this potentially life-changing
project for the 38,000 residents of Menge Woreda. For more
information about this project, see www.ethoswater.com,
or see www.wateraid.org for more about WaterAid’s work
in Ethiopia.
My Starbucks –
Sandy Nelson has been engaged in
the world water crisis for the last ?ve
years. She and her husband, Chris, are
actively involved with a Seattle-based
international water organization and
have seen ?rsthand how severe the
water-access issues are in countries
like Honduras, Ethiopia, Bangladesh
and India. “To actually see children
who are sick because their drinking
water is contaminated changes one’s
values tremendously,” Sandy says.
Sandy is a senior designer in the
Starbucks Creative Group, so when
Starbucks acquired Ethos Water in
2005 she was eager to bring her
personal experience to help build the
Ethos Water brand. The passion Sandy
has for bringing safe water to those
in desperate need is now helping to
inform the design and communication
of the Ethos Water mission.
48 SOCI ETY
Supporting Youth: Arts and Literacy, Environmental
Literacy
Trough the Giving Voice grant program, Te Starbucks
Foundation promotes literacy for the 21st century. Te
regional grant program supports programming for youth ages
6-18. Priority is given to programs that integrate literacy skills
with personal and civic action, and that empower youth to
become local champions for a sustainable environment. In
?scal 2006, Te Foundation awarded more than $2 million
in Giving Voice grants, ranging from $5,000–$20,000, to
community-based organizations in the U.S. and Canada.
City at Peace Award
In May 2006, City at Peace, an after-school program for
teens in Los Angeles, honored Te Starbucks Foundation and
Starbucks partners for their support over the last three years.
City at Peace was a ?edgling organization in 2003 when,
with the support of local Starbucks partners, the organization
applied for a grant from Te Starbucks Foundation. Today
City at Peace is a dynamic youth development program that
uses the performing arts to bring together teenagers from
vastly diverse backgrounds to create personal and social
change. Te program supports, guides, instructs and nurtures
youth leaders, corresponding perfectly with the goals of Te
Starbucks Foundation’s Giving Voice grants.
Key Partnerships
In ?scal 2006, Te Foundation continued support of several
national youth organizations in the U.S. and Canada –
America SCORES and Jumpstart – and Earth Day Network,
an environmental education organization.
Jumpstart’s Read for the Record
During August 2006, Starbucks supported Jumpstart’s Read
for the Record campaign to promote awareness of early
learning and school readiness. Te campaign raised national
awareness of Jumpstart’s successful approach to preparing
young children to succeed in school, and achieved the
following goals as well:
• An o?cial Guinness World Record was set when adults
across the U.S. read Te Little Engine Tat Could to more
than 150,000 children on August 24, 2006.
• In partnership with Jumpstart’s corporate partners,
Starbucks was the exclusive retailer and sold nearly 53,000
copies of a special edition of Te Little Engine Tat Could
in four weeks and donated the sales price of the books,
totaling more than $500,000 to Jumpstart.
• Starbucks stores hosted more than 330 reading events
across the U.S., engaging thousands of partners and
customers in Jumpstart’s mission.
• Renewed interest in the classic children’s book pushed it to
?rst place on the New York Times Bestselling Children’s
Book list.
Earth Day Network – National Civic Education Project
Te Starbucks Foundation contributed $75,000 in ?scal
2006 to launch Earth Day Network’s new National Civic
Education Project (NCEP). Te Project recruits teachers and
their students from diverse urban neighborhoods to combine
civic and environmental education through a community
environmental project of their choosing.
In its ?rst year, the NCEP worked with three schools in
Cincinnati and one in Washington, D.C. Te project was
particularly e?ective in Cincinnati where the teachers
focused on greening schools and contributed greatly to the
Board of Education’s decision to adopt greener building
practices. Student projects ranged from building a green
roof on a school to raising awareness of the economic,
educational and environmental bene?ts of green schools. Te
students presented their ?ndings to the Board of Education,
including such bene?ts as higher attendance and greater
academic performance.
More information about Te Starbucks Foundation is available
online at www.starbucks.com/foundation.
THE STARBUCKS CHINA EDUCATION PROJECT
Starbucks ?rst store in China opened in 1999 and ever since
we have been working to simultaneously expand our store
and community presence. At the heart of Starbucks social
responsibility endeavors in China is the China Education Project.
This project was created to support the emphasis that both China
and Starbucks place on the importance of education. In 2005,
The Starbucks Foundation pledged $5 million over ?ve years to
establish the Starbucks China Education Project at Give2Asia, an
organization dedicated to promoting philanthropy in Asia.
The Starbucks China Education Project is also overseen by
a local steering committee in China, comprised of education
experts, foundation and community representatives, and
Starbucks executives. Working with this committee of local
stakeholders helps ensure that Starbucks efforts are locally
relevant and address the areas of greatest need in the rural
communities targeted for assistance. Since the project
was launched in 2005, the steering committee has been
instrumental in shaping the overall direction and structure of
the project.
The committee identi?ed the need for quality teacher training
as one of the top priorities to improve education. In China,
many teachers in rural villages have little or no formal training.
Almost always, they are the only teacher in their village so they
must teach to all grade levels.
To help address this challenge, the Starbucks China Education
Project is supporting the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation
in an effort to provide training for teachers to improve their
skills and offer ?nancial assistance to ?nancially disadvantaged
students pursuing teaching careers in 15 universities in China.
At the ?rst teacher training session held in July 2006, teachers
were trained in the latest techniques and received materials
to continue their education in their home villages. Other
components of the program will offer:
• Training for school administrators
• Books, supplies and teaching tools
By 2010, the teacher-training program is expected to reach
an estimated 3,000 teachers from nearly 1,000 primary and
middle schools located in ?ve western provinces.
49 SOCI ETY
STARBUCKS COMMITMENT TO
HEALTH AND WELLNESS
In 2004 the World Health Organization (WHO)
introduced a major plan, calling attention to
the growing worldwide epidemic of diseases
attributed to poor diet, lack of exercise and
obesity. Among them: heart disease, diabetes,
cancer, osteoporosis and tooth decay – all of
which have an impact on healthcare systems
worldwide and overall quality of life. According
to the WHO, obesity is not only a formidable
problem in some Western countries, it is now
becoming an issue in the developing world.
As concern over this public health issue mounts, Starbucks
has already implemented a number of health and wellness
measures to o?er more choices to our customers. Tese
include:
• Expanding our menu o?erings to include an array of
options, and encouraging customization
• Providing nutrition information on our beverages and food
products
• Reducing trans fats in our products
• Adopting a long-term and holistic approach to promote
health and wellness
Expanded and Customized Menu Offerings
Starbucks actively listens to what our customers tell us and
continually adapts in response to their demands. In recent
years our customers have requested a wider range of menu
options from which to choose and customize. Tey have also
asked for more nutrition information about Starbucks food
and beverage products. Tis feedback, as well as feedback
from nutrition experts, helped inform speci?c actions we
took in ?scal 2006, including the formation of an internal
team to focus on health and wellness initiatives. For
example, this team is looking at nutritional criteria for future
product development.
In addition, Starbucks will drive e?orts aimed at providing
a broader selection of product choices to our customers, on
both a companywide and a regional basis. We will build on
options currently o?ered, such as nonfat, organic and soy
milk; sugar-free syrups used in some of Starbucks handcrafted
beverages; reduced-fat and lowfat baked items; and lower fat
and reduced calorie Frappuccino® blended beverages.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks introduced several beverage and
food items as part of our commitment to health and wellness.
Here are some examples:
• Yogurt parfaits and fresh fruit salads were added to the
menu in various stores.
• Prepackaged nut and dried fruit blends began
being o?ered.
• Pomegranate and Tangerine Frappuccino® Juice
Blends, which contain real fruit juice and are naturally
fat-free, cholesterol-free, and completely non-dairy,
were introduced. Tese lighter beverages can be
customized with any Tazo® tea ?avor, including ca?eine-
free options.
We encourage our customers to customize and create their
favorite beverages exactly as they like – from lighter versions
to indulgent splurges. In ?scal 2006, nearly 40 percent of the
beverages consumed by our U.S. customers were ordered with
fewer calories and less fat, such as co?ee and tea.
50 SOCI ETY
Nutrition Information on Starbucks Beverages and
Fresh Food
We are committed to helping our customers make well-
informed choices about Starbucks food and beverages
by making nutrition information readily available. Our
U.S., Canadian and UK customers can access nutrition
information on Starbucks beverages via an in-store brochure.
Te information is also available on Starbucks.com.
In ?scal 2006, we enhanced our website to include nutrition
information on all fresh food items o?ered at Starbucks stores
in the U.S., the majority of which are regional o?erings.
Customers visiting the nutrition page on Starbucks website
are prompted to enter their local zip code and then access
nutrition information on speci?c fresh food items o?ered at
their local Starbucks store.
Over the past three years, more than six million customers,
nearly half of those in ?scal 2006, visited Starbucks.com for
nutrition information. Tis indicates to us that Starbucks
customers are taking personal responsibility to make their
own well-informed choices.
Addressing the Issue of Trans Fat
Starbucks has taken measures to reformulate our beverage
ingredients in order to reduce trans fat content while still
maintaining the taste and quality our customers enjoy. We are
also working closely with our regional bakeries on e?orts to
reduce or eliminate trans fat content in our pastry items.
Some of our accomplishments in ?scal 2006 are listed below:
• Complied with the new labeling requirements for trans
fats. Tis includes the labeling of our prepackaged foods
and posting information about trans fat content in our
non-packaged foods and beverages online. Since dairy
ingredients contain small amounts of naturally occurring
trans fats, there will always be traces of these fats reported
for our beverages made with dairy products.
• Reformulated our Frappuccino® blended crème base,
bringing all of Starbucks beverages to less than 0.5 grams
of arti?cial trans fat.
• Reduced trans fats to 0 grams (per the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration’s nutrition labeling rounding rule) in
all of Starbucks national promotional pastry items o?ered
in the U.S., including our pumpkin cream cheese mu?ns
and gingerbread loafs.
Our Long-term Approach to Health and Wellness
Our commitment to health and wellness is a deeply
embedded tenet of Starbucks history and culture. It’s re?ected
in the way we care for our partners and in the relationships
we have with our customers. In recent years, Starbucks has
become an advocate for healthcare reform in the U.S.
We believe in being proactive when it comes to addressing
the shared concerns of our customers and the public at large.
In early ?scal 2006, Starbucks held a roundtable discussion
with nutrition experts. We asked for feedback regarding our
health and nutrition e?orts, and we listened to their advice.
Starbucks valued this dialogue greatly and is now moving
forward on plans for continued engagement.
My Starbucks —
Providing nutrition information enables
our customers to make well-informed
decisions, and customize their orders.
Customization can help people cut calories,
fat and sugar without sacri?cing taste
and quality. Customers can tailor their
order by asking for less syrup or
substitute sugar-free syrup; request
a “light” version of their favorite
Frappuccino
®
blended beverage; opt for
nonfat milk; or ask to “hold the whip.”
For instance, my favorite beverage - a
Double Tall Sugar Free Vanilla Nonfat
Caramel Macchiato - contains about 100
calories, 1 gram of fat, 3 grams of added
sugar and provides 20 percent of my
daily calcium and 8 grams of protein.
These types of simple adjustments
can easily save 100 calories, which
day after day and over the course
of a year, can translate to a loss
of 10 pounds of body weight.
Katie Thomson, RD
Starbucks nutritionist
F UT URE G OA L
In ?scal 2007, work with our regional bakeries to
eliminate trans fats from all of our food offerings in
our U.S. company-operated stores.
F UT URE G OA L
Establish a Health and Wellness Advisory Panel to
meet on an ongoing basis, and include experts from
the medical and nutrition communities who will
provide insight and advice to Starbucks on health and
wellness issues; societal expectations of Starbucks
with respect to health and wellness; and our future
initiatives and strategies globally.
51 SOCI ETY
Being Responsive to Our Customers
Starbucks customers expect an outstanding co?ee
experience – at their local store and in every Starbucks
around the world – each time they visit. In the spirit
of our fourth Guiding Principle, which inspires us to
“develop enthusiastically satis?ed customers all of the
time,” we are constantly looking for ways to meet or exceed
their expectations.
At the end of ?scal 2006, we were serving customers around
the world more than 40 million times per week. To ensure
their Starbucks Experience is consistently excellent wherever
they are, it’s essential that we stay in touch. We strive to
respond to every customer comment appropriately and in
a timely manner. We use our customers’ feedback to make
improvements that enhance their experience and earn their
loyalty and respect.
Listening to Our Customers
Several channels are available for customers to provide their
feedback. Tey can call Starbucks customer relations at a
toll-free number, ?ll out in-store comment cards, or submit
comments online at Starbucks.com. We welcome the valuable
comments we receive from our customers, which we share
with store partners, management and others as appropriate.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks received more than 890,000
customer contacts. Te majority of customer contacts
concerned the use of a Starbucks Card or the service in a
Starbucks store. Less than two percent of the total volume of
customer contacts related to Starbucks social responsibility.
Consistent with prior years, the areas of social responsibility
that customers asked about most often pertained to Starbucks
recycling policies and our ethical sourcing of co?ee.
Starbucks is devoted to acting responsibly in all areas of
our business practices and we appreciate that our customers
share our concerns. To learn more about Starbucks ongoing
environmental e?orts or the way we source and purchase
co?ee, please see pages 54 and 16 respectively.
Customer Feedback
Trough various channels, customers also expressed their
interest in other CSR-related issues in ?scal 2006, including:
our support of the U.S. military; our policy on supporting
rodeos; the presence of rBGH in our dairy products; the
ca?eine content in our co?ee; and our marketing practices
related to youth and Starbucks liqueur products. A summary
of Starbucks policies on each of these issues is provided in
this section.
Starbucks Support of the U.S. Military
More than three years ago a single e-mail erroneously
accused Starbucks of not supporting U.S. military personnel.
Te private e-mail began to circulate widely online. In a
subsequent e-mail, the author apologized for the earlier
misstatement and retracted it. Despite this, the original,
inaccurate e-mail has continued to circulate, and customers
frequently ask about it. We assure them that this online
rumor is absolutely false.
Starbucks and our partners have consistently demonstrated
support of U.S. military personnel in a number of ways. We
were honored to receive a 2006 Freedom Award from the
Department of Defense. For speci?c information about the
Freedom Award and our ongoing e?orts with the American
Red Cross to support U.S. military personnel, please visit
Starbucks.com.
rBGH-free Dairy
We are actively working with our suppliers to secure an
adequate milk supply that is rBGH-free. rBGH is a synthetic
growth hormone given to dairy cows to stimulate milk
production. See page 32 for more information about our
e?orts to require our core dairy products to be rBGH-free.
Starbucks A?liation with Rodeos
As a member of the communities we serve, and as a way
to share the joy of co?ee, Starbucks often supports local
activities or events. We frequently donate co?ee or host co?ee
seminars, free of charge, with no expected recognition in
return. Tese community e?orts are not a sponsorship nor
an endorsement of any event or activity. Tey are simply a
way for Starbucks to lend a helping hand and support the
community. It is in this way that Starbucks has been a?liated
with rodeo events in Texas, Wyoming and Calgary, Canada.
We have never sponsored a rodeo event. Our goal is always to
support, not o?end, our community of neighbors.
Ca?eine Content in Starbucks Co?ee
We select the ?nest quality arabica co?ees from around the
world and roast them to our signature Starbucks Roast.
®
No
matter how carefully or precisely we roast our co?ee, not
every cup of Starbucks co?ee will contain exactly the same
amount of ca?eine. Many variables contribute to ca?eine
content from cup to cup, including where the beans were
grown and roasted, the brewing method, grind, and type of
co?ee beverage purchased. We recognize that some people are
sensitive to ca?eine. For customers concerned about ca?eine
content, we o?er several deca?einated co?ees, teas and
other beverages, including Frappuccino
®
blended beverages,
in most markets. Information about the health e?ects of
ca?eine is available online at www.co?eescience.org or
www.ico.org/ca?eine.asp.
52 SOCI ETY
Marketing to Youth
Starbucks customers include people of every ethnicity,
income, and age group with varying tastes and interests. In
addition to our beverages and food items, Starbucks o?ers
products meant to educate and entertain all age groups. We
also seek out philanthropic opportunities, including event
sponsorships, to support the activities and programs that are
important to the communities in which we operate.
Some of our product o?erings and community activities
may appeal to young people. We are extremely mindful of
connecting with youth in a responsible manner.
Responsible Marketing of Liqueurs
Starbucks and Jim Beam are committed to the responsible
marketing of Starbucks
™
Cream Liqueur and Starbucks
™
Co?ee Liqueur. Te pricing, branding, packaging and
marketing are speci?cally designed to target mature
consumers. Additionally, Starbucks partners who manage our
liqueur brands are trained on the Distilled Spirits Council of
the United States (DISCUS) Code of Responsible Practices
for Beverage Alcohol Advertising and Marketing.
Both products are available only in locations licensed to sell
distilled spirits and are not sold in Starbucks retail locations.
Customer Surveys
Customer surveys o?er another mechanism to obtain
feedback about the quality of our customers’ experience.
We recently altered our research methods, moving beyond
surveying for satisfaction and focusing instead on identifying
factors that in?uence our customers’ experience and their
connection to the Starbucks brand.
In ?scal 2006 Starbucks launched a new survey tool to gather
ongoing input from co?ee consumers and our customers,
including those who had visited Starbucks within 30 days of
the time of the survey.
When customers were surveyed between May and August
2006 and asked whether they would recommend Starbucks
to a friend or family, 87 percent responded that they were
extremely or very likely to recommend Starbucks.
Our recent surveys also have found that the majority of
respondents are unaware of the company’s socially responsible
initiatives, including Starbucks support for community
activities such as local education programs and clean water
projects. Awareness among our customers was greater than
among the general population, with 38 percent associating
Starbucks with good corporate citizenship, although we
strive to do a better job informing customers about our
e?orts to be socially responsible in all aspects of our global
business operations.
To gauge customer acceptance of Starbucks in their
neighborhoods, we recently asked survey respondents,
speci?cally those who presently live near a Starbucks, what
their overall feeling was about having a Starbucks co?ee
shop near their home. We found that 66 percent had positive
feelings about having a Starbucks store in their neighborhood,
while ?ve percent indicated negative feelings. When we asked
other respondents, those who do not currently live near a
Starbucks, how they would feel about having a Starbucks
co?ee shop open near their home, 53 percent indicated
positive feelings and 10 percent indicated negative feelings.
(See pie charts.)
Te level of positive consumer acceptance that already exists
for Starbucks is encouraging, particularly given our plans
for future growth. We believe Starbucks demonstrated
commitment to social and environmental responsibility
matters to consumers and, if we are successful in increasing
awareness, will help us continue to gain acceptance in local
communities and among our neighbors.
Respondents who presently have a Starbucks near home.
Q: What is your overall feeling about having a Starbucks coffee shop near your home?
Very positive
25.8%
Extremely positive
23.8%
Extremely negative
1.3%
Very negative
0.9%
Somewhat negative
2.9%
Somewhat positive
16%
Neutral/neither positive
or negative
29.3%
Respondents who do not presently have a Starbucks located near home.
Q: How would you feel about a Starbucks coffee shop opening near your home?
Very positive
17.9%
Extremely positive
22.4%
Extremely negative
4.9%
Very negative
1.7%
Somewhat negative
3.6%
Somewhat positive
12.7%
Neutral/neither positive
or negative
36.9%
53 SOCI ETY
Public Policy and Government Affairs
As a growing and increasingly more complex global business,
Starbucks participates in the public policy arena, which
includes direct and indirect lobbying at the local, state and
federal level in the U.S. In all of our e?orts, we strive to
comply with all applicable laws and regulations, and work
fairly and honestly with government o?cials and others
in our communities. Starbucks policy forbids partners
from o?ering or making payments or gifts on behalf of the
company in order to in?uence a government o?cial, or from
representing their personal views as those of the company.
Presently, Starbucks does not have a Political Action
Committee established for our partners to make political
contributions, nor did the company make any corporate
political contributions in ?scal 2006.
Public Policy Focus Areas
Starbucks has a responsibility to maximize and protect the
company’s value for our partners and shareholders. Our
e?orts are focused on the following:
• Tax Policy – Sound tax policy will continue to play a
key role in the competitiveness of U.S.-based companies.
Starbucks closely monitors tax policy developments and
has advocated for a tax structure that maintains incentives
for increased productivity.
• Trade Policy – Starbucks supports bilateral and
multilateral trade agreements that help to create
opportunities for investment in emerging markets. We
provide input to U.S. and foreign governments on speci?c
trade agreements that help to reduce barriers to U.S.
exports, provide safeguards for intellectual property and
trademarks and promote transparency on both sides of the
trading relationship. In ?scal 2006, our advocacy e?orts
related to Peru and Colombia Free Trade Agreements as
well as general market access issues.
• Healthcare – Providing healthcare bene?ts to our eligible
full- and part-time partners is a commitment Starbucks
stands by. However, we are greatly concerned about the
impact rising healthcare costs will have on our long-term
ability to sustain these bene?ts. In ?scal 2006, we focused
on identifying and prioritizing the macro issues that we
believe will help to solve Starbucks current healthcare
challenges, which we are using to inform our objectives
and action items for ?scal 2007.
54 ENVI RONMENT
OUR COMMITMENT TO
ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
Starbucks commitment to contribute positively
to the environment is a Guiding Principle of our
company. Ever since 1992, when we established
Starbucks Environmental Mission Statement,
we have been expanding our de?nition of what
environmental responsibility means within the
context of our growing and increasingly more
complex business.
In this section we describe the initiatives we have undertaken
to be good environmental stewards, and report on our
performance in this area. Speci?c topics covered include:
• Starbucks climate change mitigation strategy
– Purchasing renewable energy
– Saving energy
– Joining together with others to raise awareness of
climate change
• Reducing the environmental impacts of our cups
• Understanding and improving our environmental
footprint
– Greening the store through design
– Greening store operations
– Waste and recycling
• Looking to our supply chain: sustainable packaging
• Portrait of a typical Starbucks store
– Energy and water use
Addressing Climate Change
Te potentially disruptive changes in the earth’s climate due
to an increase in greenhouse gases (GHG) in the atmosphere
is a major concern for our company, our customers, our
business partners and other stakeholders. We agree with the
consensus of the scienti?c community that climate change
could pose an enormous threat to the future of our planet.
Starbucks core business is high-quality co?ee, an agricultural
product that ?ourishes in tropical microclimates around the
globe. Climatic conditions in?uence the yield and quality
of co?ee crops. We are concerned that climate change could
threaten the production of high-quality co?ee crops and
ultimately impact our business.
Starbucks believes that governments, organizations and
individuals have a responsibility to take meaningful action
to reduce GHG emissions, regardless of the scale of their
contribution to the issue. We have been working to better
understand the risks of climate change for our business, and
identify measures we can take to mitigate those risks.
Since 1992, Starbucks has been evolving and implementing
an environmental strategy focused in part on the stewardship
of key co?ee-growing regions. We revamped our co?ee-
buying practices several years ago to include speci?c criteria
for environmental preservation of these areas. We believe
this approach will help to support and encourage ecological
stability and resilience in co?ee-growing areas across the globe.
To address other aspects of our business operations, Starbucks
established a three-year climate change mitigation strategy
focused on:
1. Purchasing renewable energy
2. Focusing on energy conservation
3. Advocating the need for collaborative action
We selected these areas by analyzing our greenhouse gas
footprint and identifying the points of greatest leverage in our
own operations and in the global community. We are now in
the second year of implementing the strategy. Our progress is
described throughout this section.
Starbucks Greenhouse Gas Emissions
In 2004, we conducted an inventory of our 2003 GHG
emissions as part of a broader e?ort to better understand and
quantify our environmental footprint. We used the World
Resources Institute Greenhouse Gas Protocol to conduct the
inventory of major emissions from our company-operated
retail stores, co?ee roasting, administrative operations and
distribution network. We did not include our international
retail operations or other businesses. Te inventory found
that 81 percent of our GHG emissions are attributable to
electricity purchased for use in our stores, while 18 percent
comes from co?ee roasting. We have used the inventory to
guide development of our climate change strategy. Our focus
is on emission sources under our direct control, primarily
electricity used in our stores and co?ee roasting (Scope 1 and
2 in the WRI Protocol).
Purchased
electricity
81%
Coffee roasting and
natural gas
18%
Company-owned
vehicles and
aircraft
1%
2003 Baseline Greenhouse Gas Emissions – Scope 1 and 2
55 ENVI RONMENT
Powered by Wind
During ?scal 2006, we quadrupled our renewable energy
purchase to equal 20 percent of the energy used in our
U.S. and Canada company-operated stores. According
to Starbucks GHG inventory more than 80 percent of
the emissions within our direct control result from these
store operations.
An energy resource is considered renewable if it can be
naturally replenished. For our renewable energy purchases,
we worked through the World Resources Institute’s Green
Power Market Development Group to buy 100 percent wind
renewable energy certi?cates*, o?setting 124 million pounds
(56,000 metric tons) of CO
2
. Pooling our purchasing power
with other companies has helped us obtain favorable rates for
our renewable energy – less than a two percent premium over
our average rate for conventional electricity.
Starbucks is also a member of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s (EPA) Green Power Partnership. Te
size of our renewable energy purchase in ?scal 2006 ranked
Starbucks sixth overall among other participating companies,
and second in the retail sector. On October 24, 2005,
Starbucks was recognized by the EPA with a 2005 Green
Power Leadership Award.
Our plan is to begin o?ering Starbucks suppliers the
opportunity to purchase renewable energy certi?cates through
our contract, at a “Starbucks preferred pricing” rate. In 2007,
we will extend this o?er initially to 388 of our major suppliers
in the U.S.
* A Renewable Energy Certi?cate represents one megawatt-hour (MWh) of
renewable electricity generated and delivered somewhere on the power grid. Each
MWh of clean renewable electricity results in one less MWh of power coming
from a CO
2
emitting process. Terefore a Renewable Energy Certi?cate also
represents the environmental bene?ts of replacing this type of power with clean
power. (Source: 3 Phases Energy Services)
My Starbucks –
Our reliance on fossil fuel sources for
energy is contributing to the rapid
acceleration of global climate change.
It’s imperative that we transition
to cleaner and renewable forms of
energy to help contain environmental
damage. Working with community-based
groups involved with renewable energy
projects, I’ve seen how dif?cult it can
be to convince businesses to invest in
environmentally sound forms of energy.
The fact that some companies – such
as Starbucks - are willing to step
forward and support renewable energy
development is notable – and extremely
important to the future of our planet.
Jeff Paulson, principal
Jeff Paulson & Associates, a law
?rm specializing in community-
based renewable energy projects
56 ENVI RONMENT
Energy Consumption
Saving energy is often the cheapest, cleanest and most
e?ective way to cut GHG emissions. During ?scal 2006,
we continued to upgrade store equipment to more energy-
e?cient versions, and installed more e?cient technology at
our co?ee roasting plants.
We also updated a performance tool geared for store managers
to emphasize the importance of managing the environmental
aspects of store operations, and highlighted both the positive
and negative impacts their actions can have on the bottom
line and the environment.
Joining Forces
Climate change is believed to be the greatest environmental
threat of our generation. We believe Starbucks can play a key
role by helping to increase awareness of climate change, and
encouraging collective action among multiple parties. Some
of the steps we took in ?scal 2006 included:
• Placing six full-page advertisements in Te New York Times
that highlighted the need for collective action on this issue.
Te advertisements discussed the problem; highlighted
Starbucks emission reductions activities; provided simple,
high-impact actions readers could take to contribute to
solutions; and informed readers of our partnership with
Global Green USA, a nonpro?t organization founded
by former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
(www.globalgreen.org).
• Continuing to educate partners about the issue through
Starbucks internal communications.
• Supporting and participating in organizations that
are taking e?ective action on the issue, including
the World Resources Institute’s Green Power Market
Development Group (www.wri.org); Te Climate Group,
an international organization dedicated to advancing
business and government leadership on climate change
(www.theclimategroup.org); and Global Green USA.
• Acting as a local leader. In Seattle, Washington, the
home of Starbucks global headquarters, Starbucks
former ceo Orin Smith co-chaired Mayor Greg Nickles’
Green Ribbon Commission, which resulted in the
company serving as a founding member of the Seattle
Climate Partnership. Company sta? also chaired the
Seattle Chamber of Commerce Business Sustainability
Committee.
Greening the Cup
As the country’s leading specialty co?ee retailer, Starbucks
goes through a lot of cups – purchasing 2.3 billion in ?scal
2006. Te Environmental Defense paper calculator tool
estimates that Starbucks move in 2006 to use new hot cups
with 10 percent post-consumer recycled ?ber will achieve the
following environmental improvements in the ?rst year alone:
Resource savings Equivalency
11,300 fewer tons of wood
consumed
about 78,000 trees
58 billion BTUs of energy saved enough to supply 640 homes for
a year
47 million gallons (178 million
liters) of wastewater avoided
enough to ?ll 71 Olympic-sized
swimming pools
3 million pounds (1 million
kilograms) of solid waste prevented
equivalent to 109 fully loaded
garbage trucks
Source: Environmental Defense (www.environmentaldefense.org), calculation by
www.papercalculator.org.
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, Starbucks will launch three interrelated
initiatives designed to improve the energy and
environmental performance in our stores. These
include:
• Our work with the U.S. Green Building Council
to develop LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) standards for the retail
sector. These standards set out best practices for
environmentally sound design of new stores, and
provide a basis for third-party certi?cation to ensure
the standards are met. In 2007, we will complete
our participation in the pilot of these standards.
• We will use a representative sample of stores as
a “test bed” to monitor energy and water usage
as part of a comprehensive audit. This audit will
provide us with baseline information on how and
when our stores use energy and water in order to
determine conservation opportunities.
• A complementary program is also being planned
to provide approximately 350 store managers in
six regions with “resource report cards” that give
feedback on store energy and water use, as well
as trend data and comparisons to benchmark
operations. The goal of this program is to help
partners identify ways to use water and energy more
ef?ciently and reduce costs. Based on experience
with the ?rst group of stores, the program will then
be rolled out to all U.S. and Canada company-
operated stores on a voluntary basis.
57 ENVI RONMENT
Paper Hot Beverage Cups
Paper cups provide a convenient way to serve Starbucks
hot beverages, but they also result in some environmental
impacts.
Paper cups account for nearly nine percent of typical in-store
waste by volume, although most cups are disposed of outside
the store after their use. Our e?orts to reduce environmental
impacts of our disposable cups began in the mid-1990s. Over
the last decade, we have taken several actions, including:
• Eliminating most double-cupping by utilizing corrugated
hot beverage sleeves made of 60 percent post-consumer
recycled ?ber.
• O?ering customers a $0.10 discount when they use their
own reusable cups. Customers in the U.S. and Canada
took advantage of this o?er more than 17 million times in
?scal 2006, keeping 674,000 pounds (306,000 kilograms)
of paper from going to the land?ll.
• Introducing hot beverage paper cups made with 10 percent
post-consumer recycled content. Tese cups, which are
the ?rst direct contact food packaging containing post-
consumer recycled content to receive a favorable safety
review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
were introduced in our U.S. and Canada stores in 2006.
Starbucks paper cups, used for hot beverages, are made of
paper ?ber with a lining of low-density polyethylene plastic.
Te paper provides the rigidity for the cup, while the plastic
layer keeps the paper layer intact by protecting it from the hot
beverage. Tis plastic layer also makes the hot beverage cups
unrecyclable in most paper recycling systems.
Understanding and Improving our
Environmental Footprint
When a customer comes into a Starbucks store, we look at it
as an opportunity to exceed their expectations. Te customer
may come for a cup of co?ee, but we know they also take
an interest in our how we run our business, including our
environmental performance.
We continually strive to understand our environmental
footprint and reduce our impacts. We are launching
initiatives in ?scal 2007 that we believe will help us achieve
a consistent, high level of environmental performance across
our operations and the life cycle of our products.
Greening the Store
Both the design and the operation of our stores a?ect their
environmental performance (See “Portrait of a Starbucks
Store” on page 62). For several years, we have led a group
of retailers and worked collaboratively with the U.S. Green
Business Council (USGBC) to explore green building
opportunities in our sector. Te USGBC has developed
a widely used and highly regarded set of standards called
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED).
Buildings that meet the standards receive LEED certi?cation,
signifying that their buildings use environmentally superior
materials and incorporate energy- and water-e?cient systems.
Because we have many stores that generally use similar
materials and building strategies, the process of certifying
each individual store separately would be costly, repetitive
and time-consuming. During ?scal 2006, we registered our
prototype Single Tenant Building
1
with the USGBC LEED
Retail Pilot. Tis represents a new certi?cation model for the
USGBC and has the potential to multiply the impact of green
building throughout the retail sector globally.
Our focus is not just on validating the store building
process through certi?cation, but also on a comprehensive
approach to reduce our environmental impacts. For several
years, we have incorporated sustainable building materials,
furnishings, and energy- and water-e?cient ?xtures to our
stores. For example, we require that the wood used to make
our hardwood furniture is certi?ed by the Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC), a nonpro?t organization that ensures the
wood is produced in a sustainable manner. We also convened
a meeting between our major furniture suppliers and the FSC
to explore ways to expand the use of FSC-certi?ed wood in
products we buy. In addition, the cabinets in our stores use a
core made of 100% post-industrial content.
Greening Operations
To gain a deeper understanding of how energy and water is
used in our stores, it is our intention in ?scal 2007 to conduct
an energy and water audit that will help us implement
strategies to use both more e?ciently.
We also plan to provide stores in six regions (approximately
350 stores) with “resource report cards” that give feedback
on each store’s energy and water usage, as well as trend data
and comparisons to benchmark operations. Te goal of this
program is to help store operators identify ways to use water
and energy more e?ciently and reduce costs. Depending on
the results of the ?rst group of stores, the program will be
rolled out to all U.S. and Canada company-operated stores on
a voluntary basis.
1
A Single Tenant Building is a free-standing building (co?ee house) built from the ground up.
58 ENVI RONMENT
Tese e?orts build on ongoing initiatives to install more
energy- and water-e?cient equipment at our stores globally.
For example, Starbucks Japan stores began using electric
signs that require less energy to operate and last longer.
Our team in Japan also installed water-saving faucets and
began recycling the water used to cool ice cube dispensers as
wash water.
In the UK, severe droughts showed that environmental trade-
o?s are sometimes needed. Stores in the worst-a?ected areas
o?ered customers paper cups rather than ceramic mugs to
reduce the water used for dishwashing. While the use of paper
cups increased the volume of waste generated, the practice
helped to address the immediate threat of a water shortage.
We also have initiatives to address transportation energy use.
We collaborated on Business for Social Responsibility’s Clean
Cargo Working Group and used the Group’s Environmental
Performance Survey to assess the performance of our
ocean transporters.
At our Starbucks Support Center (SSC) in Seattle, our
worldwide headquarters, we encourage partners to use a
variety of transportation options to cut solo commuting.
In ?scal 2006, 34 percent of our partners at the SSC took
advantage of these options.
Closing the Loop – Recycling and Waste Reduction
Starbucks policy for company-operated stores is that where
both space and recycling services are available, stores are
expected to recycle. During ?scal 2006, 79 percent of
stores in the U.S. and Canada recycled where Starbucks
controls waste and recycling of one or more items, including
cardboard, paper, milk jugs, and organic wastes.
New Life for Old Grounds
At a typical Starbucks store, co?ee grounds make up more
than a third of the waste stream by weight (see “Portrait of
a Starbucks Store” on page 62). Tat’s why we introduced
the Grounds for Your Garden program, which o?ers
complimentary ?ve-pound (2.27-kilogram) bags of used
co?ee grounds to customers to add to their soil. Te program
has spread to a variety of locations including Chile, Greece,
Australia, Hong Kong, Canada, the UK and Korea.
Since 2004, Starbucks Taiwan has encouraged all of its stores
to implement the program. In ?scal 2006, customers and the
general public were welcome to pick up co?ee grounds from
their most convenient store.
Some locations in China o?ered the program in ?scal 2006,
and it will be promoted throughout Starbucks Greater China
region in ?scal 2007.
In Winnipeg, Canada, partners took the Grounds for Your
Garden approach a step farther, and are sending their organic
waste, including Starbucks paper cups, to the Wriggler
Wranch, a local worm composting facility.
Percentage
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
28
29
34
Partners Participating in Transportation Options Program
Percentage
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Store Recycling
70
77
79
59 ENVI RONMENT
Other Waste Reduction and Recycling Initiatives
Te waste our stores generate varies by location. So do the
ingenious solutions our partners devise to handle the waste.
Examples of this include:
• Starbucks Chile donated 30,000 milk boxes to Un Techo
para Chile, an organization in Chile that builds small
houses for homeless people. Te organization used the
boxes to cover the ?oors of the houses.
• More than 100 Starbucks UK stores participated in waste
segregation programs for cardboard and plastics, recycling
an average of 35 percent of their general waste.
• Starbucks Hong Kong ran a “Mooncake box” recycling
program, where the company o?ered beverage coupons
to customers who returned their used Mooncake boxes.
Te program resulted in the return of approximately
5,000 boxes.
• Starbucks Japan is working with suppliers to recycle 20
percent of store food waste by March 2007 in response to
the Law for the Promotion of the Utilization of Recyclable
Food Resources.
New Life for Old Mats
Te work areas behind the counters of our stores are equipped
with rubber mats designed to help partners work more
comfortably and safely. Since 2005, all new stores in the
U.S. have been equipped with upgraded mats that have been
shown to reduce slip-type accidents. During ?scal 2006, we
also replaced the mats in more than 3,400 existing stores.
Te easiest course of action would have been to throw away
the old mats. But with an estimated 315,000 pounds (143,000
kilograms) of usable material involved, we decided to recycle
them instead. Tis required setting up a system for our
delivery drivers to pick up the mats from the stores, collect
them at consolidation points and ship them to a recycler
for shredding. Te recycled rubber was used for gaskets and
expansion joints in concrete, among other things, extending
the life of the material and reducing waste.
Involving Our Customers
Our customers share our interest in reducing waste. To help
them help us, we o?er a discount of 10 cents in the U.S. and
Canada to encourage customers to use their own “commuter”
mugs for their beverages. Customers can also request that
their beverage be served in a ceramic mug if it’s a “for-here”
order. Te discount is also o?ered in Japan (¥20), the UK
(10P), several business units in Mainland China (2 RMB) and
Hong Kong (HK$1).
On Earth Day 2006, Starbucks Canada promoted the
commuter mug program by inviting customers to enjoy a
complimentary cup of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Café Estima
Blend
™
co?ee when they used their own mug. Nearly 9,000
customers took advantage of the o?er, increasing commuter
mug usage by 14 percent compared to the same day the
previous year. Te promotion also increased the sales of
commuter mugs.
During ?scal 2006, customers in the U.S. and Canada
used commuter mugs for their beverages 17 million times.
Although this represents a signi?cant achievement, on a
percentage basis, commuter mug usage actually decreased
slightly from 2005. We will continue to evaluate additional
ways to encourage customers to use commuter mugs.
Commuter Mug Usage
Percentage
1.4
1.3
1.2
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
60 ENVI RONMENT
Looking to Our Supply Chain
Beyond our own stores and operations, we have the
opportunity to positively in?uence the environmental
practices of our suppliers. In other sections of this report,
we discuss our work with co?ee suppliers to encourage
environmental stewardship (page 16), our sustainable
sourcing policies (page 29), our approach to water sourcing
(page 34) and our standards for purchasing manufactured
goods (page 33). Trough our membership in the Sustainable
Packaging Coalition, we are exploring more sustainable
alternatives to conventional packaging and also methods
for analyzing material choices. Our e?orts to “green the
cup” described earlier in this section are an example of
this approach.
We also consider environmental impacts when purchasing
paper and have tracked the recycled ?ber and unbleached
?ber content of our paper purchase for six years (see charts).
Starbucks recognizes that the environmental footprint of
paper goes beyond post-consumer recycled and unbleached
?ber. To that end, we have been active participants in the
Paper Working Group, a group of diverse companies led by
the nonpro?t organization Metafore. Te Paper Working
Group developed the Environmental Paper Assessment Tool
(EPAT), designed to help paper buyers consider all major
environmental impacts over the life cycle of paper. Te group
de?nes environmentally preferable paper in terms of a set of
seven interconnected desired outcomes. Tey include:
• E?cient use and conservation of raw materials
• Minimization of waste
• Conservation of natural systems
• Clean production
• Community and human well-being
• Credible reporting and veri?cation
• Economic viability
Key environmental indicators for these outcomes are
measurable and within the normal range of attributes
monitored by the pulp and paper industry.
In 2007, we will test the tool with our top two suppliers of
paper products. We will review the results of the pilot and
determine how to best incorporate the tool into our paper
procurement decision processes.
Starbucks tracks the percentage of unbleached paper ?ber and post-consumer ?ber
contained in our annual paper purchases.
Paper: Unbleached Paper Fiber
Fiscal year
Percentage
With Hot Cups Without Hot Cups
2004 2005 2006
48.1
86.3
47.1
85.9
47.8
86.3
Paper: Post-Consumer Fiber
Fiscal year
Percentage
With Hot Cups Without Hot Cups
2004 2005 2006
26.0
46.5
27.1
49.5
38.8
66.4
61 ENVI RONMENT
Earthwatch Expeditions
Making Connections in the Rain Forest
In the Costa Rican rain forest, Starbucks customer Arlene
Gutterman worked side by side with scientists, Starbucks
partners and other customer volunteers to replant areas where
farming had devastated the native forest. Te experience was
transforming. “I cherish what I saw,” Arlene said. “It opened
me up.”
Te reforestation project is taking place in southern Costa
Rica in the region of La Amistad Biosphere Reserve,
established to protect the rich biodiversity of the area.
Sixteen sites, most owned by Costa Rican farmers, are part
of a long-term research project to ?nd ways to accelerate
the reforestation of formerly farmed lands. Te project
area, once completely forested, is now less than 10 percent
forested. Tis has impoverished the soil and reduced habitat
for the abundance of wildlife that thrives in rainforests.
Deforestation poses a particular challenge because, once
cleared, it is di?cult to re-establish natural rain forest.
Te project seeks not only to research the dynamics of
reforestation but also to establish a model of sustainable use
of tropical forests. One aspect of this is supporting the local
co?ee cooperative in its e?orts to use sustainable farming
practices and to set up a co?ee mill that will allow it to
capture more of the value of co?ee production locally.
A diverse group of people participate in the project, including
academic researchers, students, farmers of co?ee and other
crops, community members and volunteers provided by the
Earthwatch Institute (www.earthwatch.org), a nonpro?t
organization that places volunteers with environmental
research and restoration projects around that world.
Starbucks has worked with Earthwatch since 2000. In
that time, Starbucks has sent partners on a variety of
environmental expeditions around the globe. Our partners
have come back from these expeditions with a new
understanding of the world around them as well as Starbucks
commitment to the environment.
In 2006, Starbucks enabled 19 customers and 11 partners to
participate in the Costa Rica expedition. Te customers and
eight of the partners were winners of a sweepstakes and an
essay contest, respectively, while the other three partners went
as escorts. Te volunteers planted, measured and analyzed
trees, and woke before dawn to capture, count and identify
birds. Several volunteers from the 2006 trip, along with some
volunteers from previous years, became so interested in the
co?ee cooperative’s mill project that they have continued to
support it in various ways, including documenting it on a
website: www.unatazacompartida.org.
Te scientists running the project have found the volunteers’
help invaluable in extending their research resources. Te
volunteers have also been a?ected. Arlene Gutterman, for
example, has started composting, recycling more, driving less
and seeking out locally produced foods. “It’s never too late,”
Arlene said. “Be positive. Plant a tree.”
In 2006, Starbucks also sponsored volunteers for an
Earthwatch Expedition to Brazil through the Urban Co?ee
Opportunities program, a joint venture between Starbucks
and Johnson Development Corporation (JDC). Five college
scholars, a Starbucks partner and a JDC representative
participated in an expedition to the Pantanal, the world’s
largest wetland, researching and analyzing amphibians and
bat habitat.
In 2007 Starbucks will be working with Earthwatch on
a project that takes place where Starbucks is purchasing
co?ee. Tis will deepen our relationship with Earthwatch
because the research will directly a?ect Earthwatch scientists,
Starbucks and the co?ee-buying world. Our partners and
customers will have the opportunity to work on co?ee farms
that have been veri?ed as using C.A.F.E. Practices and learn
how this has improved their growing practices.
My Starbucks –
On June 10 I left for the 17-hour
journey to San Jose, Costa Rica, and
met up with seven other partners
from North America. We continued our
journey to the little town of Agua Buena
in the southern rain forest bordering
Panama, where we got to know our
fantastic hosts, the Corderos, a family
of coffee farmers. They would get many
opportunities to laugh at our Spanish!
Over the next two weeks we worked
with Dr. Karen Holl and her team
at Earthwatch, planting trees and
gathering scienti?c data on rain forest
regeneration in afforested areas. For
the farmers it’s a win/win situation.
They lease the land they don’t use to
others so that in potentially ?ve years
they can let the coffee grow back
within the new forest – thus growing
premium organic shade grown coffee.
When you see trees that have grown
almost 30 feet tall after three years,
you begin to see how easy it can be
with dedication and commitment.
That is what Starbucks is willing to
do, and the eight of us were glad to
be a part of this crucial project.
Rain Weigel, Starbucks store manager
Maida Vale (#12436), London
62 ENVI RONMENT
Portrait of a Starbucks Store
At the end of ?scal 2006, there were 12,440 Starbucks
stores in 37 countries. Tough there are local variations, the
stores operate similarly around the world. A look at a typical
Starbucks store provides a better understanding of Starbucks
environmental pro?le and challenges.
Tough the store may be located on a busy street or in a
bustling mall, it is appointed with furnishings and artwork
in a style that lets someone know instantly they are in a
Starbucks. Less obvious are some of the environmental
features of materials we use in our new stores, and include
as stores are updated: high-e?ciency lighting, ?ooring
containing recycled material, and furniture made from wood
certi?ed as sustainably harvested by the Forest Stewardship
Council, for example.
Out of sight is an area where materials are delivered to
the store. Tese include food (co?ee and other beverages,
pastries, sandwiches, salads, etc.), packaging (cups and other
containers), disposable items (napkins and co?ee stirrers),
and merchandise for sale (co?ee mugs and brewers, CDs,
etc.) Tis is the area where many of our stores have containers
for recycling.
Te store gets its electricity, water and other utilities from
local service providers. On average, it uses about:
• 6.57 kilowatt-hours of electricity per square foot per
month to light and cool the store and operate equipment.
• .059 therms of natural gas per square foot per month to
heat water and warm the store.
• 26 gallons of water per square foot per month to make our
beverages and clean up.
As we continue to integrate sustainable practices into
our store design, development and operations, we will
work to drive these numbers lower, reducing our overall
environmental footprint per store.
As a result of all of these activities, waste is created. Tis
includes:
By Volume By Weight
• 32% cardboard
• 15% milk jugs
• 9% paper cups
• 8% pastry boxes
• 7% other dairy cartons
• 29% other waste
• 37% coffee grounds
• 12% cardboard
• 7% newspaper
• 6% food waste
• 38% other waste
Source: Starbucks 2002 Waste Audit
* Based on data from 4,900 stores.
Electricity
Kilowatt-hours
per square foot
per month
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
6.21
6.40
6.57*
** Based on data from 2,305 stores.
Gas
Therms per square
foot per month
2004 2005 2006
0.061
0.060
0.059**
Fiscal year
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Water
Gallons (liters)
per square foot
per month
23
(89)
24
(92)
26†
(100)
†Based on data from 2,052 stores.
63 WORKPL ACE
Providing a Great Work Environment
When our customers enter a Starbucks store, they expect and
deserve a great cup of co?ee. But their Starbucks Experience
goes beyond the co?ee – it is also based on the connection
they have with their barista at their local Starbucks. Earning
and maintaining the trust and respect of our more than
145,000 employees – whom we call partners – means
improving our customers’ experience and our success as well.
Our goal is to create the best possible workplace environment
for our partners, one that attracts and retains the most
talented individuals and is regarded by them as a great place
to work.
In this section we describe what we are doing to:
• Gather ongoing feedback from our partners
• Partner View Surveys
• Mission Review
• Business Ethics and Compliance Program
• O?er comprehensive and competitive bene?ts
• Partner bene?ts in the U.S. and Canada
• Partner bene?ts internationally
• Support our partners’ health and well being
• Outreach to newly covered partners
• Trive Wellness Initiative
• Advocating for healthcare reform
• Recognize our partners’ e?orts
• Maintain a CUP (Caring Unites Partners) Fund
• Provide training and career development opportunities
• Uphold our workplace policies and respect for
partners’ rights
• Ensure a safe and healthy work environment
Starbucks Employment Pro?le – Fiscal 2006
Number of partners globally 145,800
U.S. partners – retail 116,100
U.S. partners – nonretail 7,500
International partners – retail 21,200
International partners – nonretail 1,000
Net jobs created (Starbucks partners) in
?scal 2006
31,000
Total wages and bene?ts paid to U.S. and
Canada partners*
$2.5 billion
*Includes salaries, bonuses, vacation, payroll taxes, healthcare
bene?ts, workers’ compensation and 401(k) match
STARBUCKS HONORED AS A GREAT
PLACE TO WORK IN 2006
FORTUNE 100 BEST COMPANIES TO WORK
FOR IN AMERICA
Starbucks was named one of the “100 Best Companies
to Work For” in 2006 by Fortune magazine. This
marks the eighth time Starbucks has received this
prestigious recognition.
FINANCIAL TIMES 50 BEST WORKPLACES
IN UK
Starbucks UK was recognized in the Financial Times as one
of the 50 Best Workplaces in the UK. The award, sponsored
by the Great Place to Work
®
Institute UK, is based on
employee surveys of the level of trust and the quality of
relationships that exist within the company.
CHEERS MOST SOUGHT AFTER
ENTERPRISE – TAIWAN
In 2006, Starbucks earned ninth place in a study of the
most “sought after enterprise” in Taiwan among 100
private enterprises and 50 state-owned enterprises. Cheers
magazine sponsored the competition.
64 WORKPL ACE
Listening to Our Partners
Our workplace culture is ?rmly rooted in our ?rst Guiding
Principle: “Provide a great work environment and treat each
other with respect and dignity.” Tis is a deeply held value
that has inspired and driven our workplace practices for
nearly two decades. Tis is the basis of our belief that our
partners’ opinions should be heard and valued. We act on our
belief by inviting partners to give us their feedback through
a variety of channels. We then use partner input to shape our
actions and enhance the partner experience. One method we
use to get feedback is by conducting Partner View Surveys.
Partner View Surveys
Starbucks conducts a Partner View Survey approximately
every 18-24 months to solicit anonymous feedback from
partners around the globe. Te survey touches on many
facets of the partner experience, including development,
communication, senior leadership, co?ee knowledge and
work/life e?ectiveness. By participating in the survey,
partners point out what Starbucks is doing well, and they
identify issues at all levels of the company that need closer
attention. We use this feedback to make adjustments and
improvements in order to increase our partners’ satisfaction
and engagement – the connection our partners have to
their store or work group and to our company. Trough
this process, our partners are given a voice in shaping and
enhancing their own workplace experience.
Te most recent survey was conducted in March 2006. All
partners who work in company-operated stores, support
o?ces and roasting plants or warehouses in the following
countries were invited to participate: Australia, Canada,
Costa Rica (Farmer Support Center), Germany, Hong Kong,
Ireland, the Netherlands, Singapore, Switzerland, Tailand,
United Kingdom and the United States. Tis was a signi?cant
expansion over past Partner View Surveys in both its global
reach and response – 101,800 partners participated, an 84
percent response rate.
Partner View Survey Results – Fiscal 2006
Partners’ overall satisfaction rate and level of engagement
remained high – see chart at right. Te survey called out
speci?c areas where Starbucks is succeeding in creating a
great work environment, including training and development
opportunities and the focus on promoting co?ee knowledge.
Partners identi?ed several areas that called for attention by
the company:
• Pay and bene?ts
• Communication within and between groups
• Future job opportunities
Starbucks began to address these issues in ?scal 2006.
Speci?cally, we:
• Increased wages for the majority of hourly store partners in
all U.S. markets
• Are working to improve our online tools, and consolidate
publications where appropriate
• Are designing a global “Look Internal First” sourcing
strategy for ?lling all jobs
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, additional steps will be taken to
respond to the survey results. We will:
• Complete a study of pay for international store
partners.
• Share the success of the company, consistent with
our philosophy, through additional incentive and
bene?ts programs.
• Look at new ways to communicate pay and bene?ts
information to our partners, including a new online
training module for store partners.
• Develop tools to enable internal talent sourcing and
improve career opportunity access and preparation
for partners.
% of engaged partners % of satis?ed partners
* We did not conduct a survey in ?scal 2004.
Partner View Survey Results
Fiscal year
Percentage
2003
73
82
2005
73
87
2006
69
86
65 WORKPL ACE
Other Channels for Partner Feedback
In addition to the Partner View Survey, several other
resources o?er partners the opportunity to communicate
concerns, provide input about our business practices, and
report matters that appear inconsistent with the company’s
Mission Statement and Guiding Principles and/or legal
and ethical objectives. Tese include Mission Review and
the Business Conduct Helpline, as well as frequently held
Open Forums.
Mission Review
Mission Review allows partners a way to voice concerns when
they believe company polices or practices are inconsistent
with Starbucks Mission Statement and Guiding Principles,
and to o?er suggestions on how the company can do better.
Mission Review comments have helped shape and continue
to in?uence a variety of programs: Tuition Reimbursement,
Recognition, Risk Management’s Shoes for Work and
the Barista-Level Training Program are a few examples.
Currently, the Mission Review team handles between
350 and 500 comments each month. In ?scal 2006, our
Mission Review team recorded more than 4,600 contacts
from partners.
Each partner submission receives a personal and timely
follow-up, either by someone knowledgeable about the
issue or topic raised or a member of the Mission Review
team. Executives receive a monthly summary of the volume
and types of issues raised through Mission Review, so that
emerging issues can be identi?ed and addressed.
We are working to improve partner access to Mission
Review. Electronic submissions through Starbucks website
were successfully tested in selected stores in ?scal 2006.
Our goal is to make this capability available to all North
American company-operated stores in ?scal 2007. Some of
our international markets also have embraced this concept
and provide similar feedback forums to their partners.
E?orts are currently underway to connect and coordinate
these programs.
Business Ethics and Compliance
Starbucks Business Ethics and Compliance (BEC) program
develops and distributes Starbucks Standards of Business
Conduct, facilitates legal compliance and ethics training,
investigates sensitive issues including potential con?icts
of interest, and provides mechanisms for partners to
voice concerns.
Te following channels are available for partners to raise any
questions or concerns, including potentially sensitive matters
they are uncomfortable reporting elsewhere:
• Business Conduct Helpline, a toll-free phone number that
partners may call anonymously, and which is answered
24 hours a day, seven days a week by an independent
call center
• Email via [email protected]
• Direct contact with BEC team members
• Auditline, a toll-free phone number for third parties, such
as vendors, investors, and customers, to report possible
accounting or auditing irregularities
• Referrals from other departments and programs, such as
Mission Review
Te majority of reports received by the BEC program
involve employee relations issues, a trend which is consistent
with other companies – retail or otherwise – that provide
alternative reporting mechanisms as part of a comprehensive
ethics and compliance program. Starbucks does not limit
the types of issues or concerns that partners may report to
the BEC program through these communication methods.
We welcome any and all concerns that partners are not
comfortable reporting to others or do not know how to report
to others. By providing these means of reporting, the program
helps to ensure that Starbucks continues to provide a great
work environment for partners and to remain an employer
of choice.
Our comprehensive e?orts to ensure an ethical workplace are
detailed in Starbucks Standards of Business Conduct, which
can be reviewed in the “About Us” section of Starbucks.com.
Categories of Partner Concerns Reported to
Starbucks Business Ethics and Compliance Program
Employee Relations
Pay, bene?ts,
disciplinary action,
and other categories
that impact
day-to-day work
83%
Customer Relations
Comments or questions
that involve customers –
reported by partners, or in
rare circumstances by
customers who obtained
the Business Conduct
Helpline number in error
2%
Business Practices
Corporate policy questions
and concerns (e.g., con?icts
of interest, privacy and
?nancial reporting)
3%
Safety & Security
Categories involving
partner and customer
safety, facility conditions
and allegations of theft
12%
66 WORKPL ACE
Providing Bene?ts to Our Partners
Starbucks Total Pay package is the cornerstone of our pledge
to treat partners with respect and dignity. Te Total Pay
package varies by country to make sure it is locally relevant.
Te components may include competitive base pay, bonuses,
comprehensive health coverage, income protection, vacation,
stock options, a savings program, adoption bene?ts, tuition
reimbursement and partner perks, including a discount on
merchandise in our stores.
Pay at Starbucks re?ects the knowledge, skills and experience
required for a speci?c job. We regularly consult industry
salary surveys to determine competitive rates, and pay
accordingly. Partners are also eligible for merit pay increases
based on performance.
Te chart below summarizes the core bene?ts that our eligible
part- and full-time partners receive.
Starbucks Bene?ts
PARTNER BENEFITS PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS
AND COVERAGE
ELIGIBILITY
Comprehensive healthcare bene?ts
(U.S. and Canada)
Bene?ts include medical, dental, vision,
prescription drugs and alternative health coverage.
In the U.S., Starbucks paid 77 percent of health
coverage costs for partners and 60 percent for
dependents. In Canada, 73 percent of costs were
paid for partners and 45 percent for dependents.
Once initially eligible, full- and part-time partners who
are paid a minimum of 240 hours per calendar quarter
and their eligible dependents, including spouses,
domestic partners and children. In ?scal 2006, 65
percent of U.S. partners and 61 percent of Canadian
partners were eligible for these bene?ts.*
Bean Stock – Starbucks stock
option plan (eligible partners in
the U.S., Canada, UK, Hong Kong,
Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany,
Australia, Costa Rica, China,
Thailand, Singapore, Chile, Republic
of Ireland and Puerto Rico)
The board of directors determines annual stock
option grants based on company performance up
to 14 percent of our partners’ eligible base wages.
Every partner through the director level receives
the same percentage of his or her ?scal-year
wages. For ?scal 2006 performance, the basis for
stock option grants was 14 percent.
Full- and part-time partners up through director level
who have been employed by Starbucks since April
1 and have been paid for at least 500 hours from
the ?rst of the ?scal year through March 31 or from
April 1 through the end of the ?scal year. (Eligibility
requirements may vary slightly by country.) More than
70,000 partners quali?ed for Bean Stock for ?scal
2006 performance.
S.I.P. – Stock Investment Plan (U.S.
and Canada), Share Incentive Plan
(UK)
Partners can purchase company stock at a
discounted price on a quarterly basis (U.S. and
Canada) or a semiannual basis (UK).
Partners who have worked as a regular Starbucks
partner for at least 90 days and have been paid for an
average of 20 hours a week during the three months
preceding the offering. No hours requirement in the
UK. In ?scal 2006, 32 percent of eligible U.S. and
Canadian partners participated in S.I.P.
Future Roast – Starbucks 401(k)
Plan (U.S.), RRSP – Registered
Retirement Savings Plan (Canada)
Starbucks matches from 25 percent to 150 percent
(based on the length of service from the partner’s
most recent date of hire) on the ?rst four percent
of pay that partners contribute to the U.S. 401(k)
Plan. Eligible Canadian partners receive a 25
percent match on the ?rst four percent of pay that
they contribute to the RRSP.
U.S. partners age 18 or older may participate after the
completion of 90 days of service. Canadian partners
are eligible after one year of service. In ?scal 2006,
21 percent of eligible U.S. partners participated in
Future Roast. Sixteen percent of eligible partners in
Canada participated in the RRSP.
*With approximately four company-operated stores opening daily in the U.S. and Canada, we have a large number of partners in their eligibility waiting period,
typically three months.
Partner Bene?ts – Internationally
While speci?c bene?ts di?er between regions and countries,
all of our international business partners share Starbucks
Total Pay philosophy. Below are several representative
examples of bene?ts received by Starbucks partners outside
North America.
• Japan: All partners who work 30 hours per month or
more are eligible for health insurance including annual
medical checkup. Stock and annual leave (vacation) are
also o?ered.
• Chile: All partners are eligible for health insurance, paid
vacation and sick leave, among other bene?ts.
• Greece: All partners are eligible for health insurance, paid
vacation and sick leave, among other bene?ts.
• China: All eligible partners receive health insurance, sick
leave and maternity leave.
• Australia: Bean Stock, paid vacation, sick leave and career
training are among the bene?ts o?ered.
67 WORKPL ACE
My Starbucks —
When I joined Starbucks in 1994 I
began acquiring Starbucks stock
through Bean Stock and S.I.P., and
invested in my future through Future
Roast - Starbucks 401k plan. A couple
years ago, I sold my Starbucks stock
to buy a car and a house in Mexico
for my parents. Today I am a new
mom and am buying my ?rst home.
When my sister joined Starbucks in 1996,
I encouraged her to take full advantage
of these bene?ts. She told me this
advice is the best gift a sister could give.
-Noemi Guevara, Starbucks store
manager in Missouri City, TX
68 WORKPL ACE
Focusing on Healthcare and Wellness
Starbucks remains committed to providing healthcare
bene?ts to eligible full- and part-time partners, despite rapidly
rising costs. Starbucks U.S. and Canada healthcare plans are
self-insured, which means healthcare providers are paid with
Starbucks funds, as well as the money our partners personally
contribute toward their coverage. In ?scal 2006, we did
not increase healthcare premiums to partners. Starbucks is
working in a variety of ways to ensure the continuation of our
health coverage plan, and assist our partners in their e?orts to
reach and maintain their optimal health.
Outreach to Newly Covered Partners
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks began testing a novel outreach
e?ort to newly enrolled partners. Partners receive a welcome
call from our health plan administrator who can answer
questions about their health coverage – from how to select
a physician to how to ?nd weekend or after-hours care. Tis
approach is being tested in 10 locations in the U.S. We hope
to ?nd that through a simple welcome call we can improve
partners’ health, and encourage e?ciencies in the use of
healthcare resources.
Trive Wellness Initiative
Starbucks commitment to the health and wellness of our
partners – and our customers – is evident in many of our
programs and policies. One very direct e?ort to care for
our partners’ health is the Trive Wellness Initiative, which
combines education, communication and participation to
help our partners live healthy lives. Over 15,000 partners have
registered on the Trive website since its inception. Below are
some of the components of the program.
• A web-based health risk assessment that creates a personal
“health map” for each partner.
• Online programs for ?tness, smoking cessation and
improvement of eating habits.
• Health club discounts at contracted ?tness facilities.
• Partner Connection subsidies for up to 50 percent of
fees for clubs or sports teams that include three or more
active partners.
• Anti-slip work shoes at a discounted price online to help
reduce the risk of slip and fall injuries.
Kinetix, the newest bene?t in the Trive Wellness Initiative,
was piloted in ?scal 2006 and launched in October 2006
at no cost to partners in our support o?ces in Seattle,
Washington, the location of Starbucks global headquarters.
Kinetix is a comprehensive wellness program that teaches
proper nutrition and exercise through an interactive website,
classes and workshops, an eight-week session with a personal
trainer and phone and e-mail support to keep partners on
track to reach their personal ?tness goals.
Advocating for Healthcare Reform
Rising healthcare costs and other challenges of providing
healthcare bene?ts have led Starbucks to advocate for a more
a?ordable and e?cient U.S. healthcare system. For the past
several years, we have focused our e?orts on building public
awareness about the seriousness of escalating healthcare costs,
and seeking reform of the healthcare system generally.
In ?scal 2006, we worked to become more strategic in
our e?orts. First, we analyzed the greatest challenges that
Starbucks faces in delivering a?ordable, accessible healthcare.
We then identi?ed the following areas where we will focus
e?orts: access, technology, innovation, quality and lifetime
solutions. In ?scal 2007, we will highlight speci?c initiatives
in these key areas. Trough our e?orts, we hope to alleviate
healthcare challenges for Starbucks and our partners, and
all other U.S. companies and employees whose healthcare
bene?ts are threatened.
My Starbucks –
Sean Couture, a Starbucks store
manager in Williston, Vermont, saw
golf as a great team-building activity
for fellow partners and managers
in his region, but wondered whether
the expensive golf fees could be put
to better use. When Sean learned
about Starbucks Partner Connection
program, he found a way to combine
his passion for golf with his desire to
bring together a group of partners
for camaraderie and a good cause.
Sean formed a Starbucks Partner
Connection Golf Team and put out a
call to the three stores in his region,
asking partners if they’d like to join. For
their ?rst outing, the team participated
in a Muscular Dystrophy Cornerstone
Cup Tournament that raised a total of
$12,000 for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association (MDA). In addition to
contributing half of the team’s entry
fees, Starbucks also donated cups and
coffee to the event. The team has teed
up for other good causes including the
local Chamber of Commerce and Chill, an
intervention program for disadvantaged
kids. According to Sean, “Once you get a
team set up, it’s easy. It’s a great way
for partners to get to know each other
better, get closer, feel more like a team
and also contribute to a great cause.”
69 WORKPL ACE
Recognizing Our Partners
Starbucks success re?ects the quality, imagination and
initiative of our partners. We developed the Starbucks Partner
Recognition Program to honor our partners’ contributions.
Currently there are 18 formal recognition programs
that partners can use as tools to reward and inspire one
another. Tey range from company awards for leadership
and exceptional service to “on the spot” awards given by
co-workers for a job well done.
In recognition of our outstanding performance as a company,
Starbucks shared a special cash award with more than
100,000 partners in May 2006.
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FREEDOM AWARD
Starbucks was honored by the U.S. Department of Defense
with the 2006 Secretary of Defense Employer Support
Freedom Award for outstanding support of activated partners
who serve in the National Guard and Reserve. The Freedom
Award is the highest award bestowed by the Department of
Defense in recognition of an employer. Starbucks partner
Matt Parkinson nominated Starbucks for the award after
serving 15 months in Iraq. Starbucks supports partners, like
Matt, by making up the difference between partners’ military
and civilian pay as well as continuing bene?ts. Partners are
able to continue medical, dental and vision coverage for up
to 24 months of active duty and to continue Starbucks life
and disability insurance for up to 12 months
The CUP Fund
Since 1999, the CUP (Caring Unites Partners) Fund has
assisted partners with ?nancial support as a result of an
unexpected event such as the death of a partner or family
member, ?re or natural disaster. Starbucks partners support
the CUP Fund with personal contributions. All Starbucks
partners are eligible to apply for assistance. In total, the CUP
Fund provided more than $1.4 million in direct ?nancial
assistance to more than 1,600 partners in ?scal 2006.
My Starbucks –
Starbucks CUP Fund rescued my family
from a dif?cult ?nancial situation. We
were drowning ?nancially, due primarily
to tens of thousands of dollars in
medical expenses. My family is so thankful
for the small but regular contributions
that many Starbucks partners make
to the CUP Fund. These partners
embody the truth that “we are a people
company that sells coffee.” In addition,
the partners that I spoke with about
the CUP Fund were kind, compassionate
and timely in their response to our
request. In times of need, it’s nice to
know Starbucks partners provide each
other a lifeline through the CUP Fund —
caring really does unite partners.
Dave Mahoney, barista, Memphis, TN
70 WORKPL ACE
Partner Training and Career
Development
Starbucks continually invests in training programs and career
development initiatives to help partners grow and advance
their careers at Starbucks.
All store partners receive comprehensive training. Baristas
receive two weeks of initial training to become experts in the
preparation and delivery of our products. After 90 days on
the job, they receive additional training to deepen their co?ee
knowledge and build their con?dence. When a barista moves
into another retail position, he or she receives four weeks of
training as a shift supervisor, eight months of development as
an assistant store manager, eight weeks as a store manager and
15 weeks as a district manager trainee. In total, in ?scal 2006,
our U.S. and Canadian retail partners received an estimated
4.9 million hours of training, in addition to practice hours.
In ?scal year 2006 Starbucks added two new career
development programs for store managers:
• Store Manager 200 o?ers over 50 hours of in-place
training to develop leadership and other key
managerial skills.
• Store Manager 301 is a year-long mentorship and
development program that helps high-potential store
managers build the competencies necessary for the next
level in their careers.
We believe in looking internally ?rst and o?ering our
partners opportunities to grow and advance. Partners receive
information about career advancement opportunities on
mypartnercareer.com, and through partner and leadership
communications.
Te following ?gures re?ect internal promotions for certain
positions in ?scal 2006:
• 86% of shift supervisor positions were ?lled by
Starbucks baristas.
• 67% (approximately) of assistant and store managers were
?lled by internal partners.
• 54% of district manager positions and over 70% of
regional director positions were ?lled by internal partners.
STARBUCKS NAMED TO THE TRAINING
MAGAZINE TOP 100 LIST IN 2006
For the third year in a row, Starbucks has been named to the
Training magazine Top 100 list. This recognition is based
on an evaluation of the company’s training and development
programs and resources. Starbucks training programs noted
in this award include those for career development, coffee
education, leadership and front-line manager training.
Workplace Policies and Respecting
Partners’ Rights
Starbucks workplace policies provide for equal employment
opportunities, and strictly prohibit discrimination or
harassment on the basis of age, race, gender, color, national
origin, religion, sexual orientation, physical or mental
disability, as well as any other basis prohibited by federal,
state, local or provincial laws. We follow all laws regarding the
employment of minors. Te current standard minimum age
of employment at Starbucks is 16, although it may be higher
or lower in some locations as required by local regulations.
Starbucks also recognizes our partners’ right to organize.
We have always focused on providing a great workplace
environment and a comprehensive Total Pay package. (See
page 66 for information about Total Pay.) At the end of ?scal
2006, 129 Canadian partners in two cities were the only
Starbucks partners who had certi?ed union representation.
In March 2006 Starbucks entered into an informal settlement
agreement with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB),
resolving all outstanding unfair labor practice charges ?led
by the International Workers of the World (IWW) Local
660. Te charges originally were ?led in connection with
a May 2004 petition by the IWW, which it subsequently
withdrew, to unionize one Starbucks store in New York City.
Te settlement agreement provided that Starbucks admitted
no wrongdoing or liability, but allowed Starbucks to resolve
all charges without the distraction of a long and expensive
hearing process.
Tis settlement and the underlying claim have generated some
national and international press attention. We understand
that the press coverage stems from a belief that employees
should be treated fairly, with dignity and respect. Tis is a
value very much shared by Starbucks.
Starbucks has always sought to provide a great place to
work for all our partners, while staying true to our Mission
Statement and Guiding Principles. Starbucks is committed
to following any and all labor laws in a fair and consistent
manner. We do not take action or retaliate against partners
who express their views about unions or who take part in
union activity.
71 WORKPL ACE
Health and Safety
Starbucks is committed to creating a safe environment for
our partners and customers by reducing the risk of injuries.
Safety programs for Starbucks stores and roasting plants are
designed to meet or exceed the most stringent regulatory
standards wherever we do business.
Partner and customer safety is a primary consideration in
the development and selection of all Starbucks products
and equipment in an e?ort to engineer out as many causes
of injury as possible. Where potential risks of injury are
identi?ed in our stores and production facilities, speci?c
programs are implemented to remove or mitigate those risks
through design, engineering, equipment or materials changes
that further protect partners and customers from common
causes of injury such as hot liquids, repetitive stress, lifting
or falls. In addition, the company stresses partner awareness
of Starbucks safety standards and potential risks in the work
environment, and reinforces awareness through partner
training, safe work procedures, regular communication,
inspections and audits.
Te Interstate Experience Modi?cation Factor, a metric
provided in this report in previous years, has been removed
going forward to ensure that we accurately report our partner
injury experience. Starbucks has chosen to become self-
insured for Workers’ Compensation insurance in a number
of states, and the Experience Modi?cation Factor – which
is calculated by an outside agency and does not take into
account Starbucks injury experience in self-insured states –
does not accurately re?ect the company’s partner injury
experience. Te Injury Rate per 200,000 Hours Worked
continues to be the best measure of Starbucks workplace
injury experience. (See graph.)
* Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked is an average for all U.S.
full- and part-time store partners, the majority of whom are baristas.
** Data have been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims
that were ?led after the ?scal years ended.
Injury Rate Per 200,000 Hours Worked – Starbucks Retail Stores*
4.00
6.00
8.00
Fiscal year 2004** 2005** 2006
7.92
7.05
5.46
72 DI VERSI TY
FOSTERING DIVERSITY AND
INCLUSION
At Starbucks, we “embrace diversity as an
essential component in the way we do business.”
This is a Guiding Principle of the company and
one of our core values.
As we expand throughout the world, Starbucks
is recruiting and operating within a broad range
of multicultural, multilingual, and multiracial
environments. Not only must Starbucks actively
prepare to embrace and navigate diversity across
the globe, we must tailor our efforts to each
unique area of the world.
Our continued success compels us to create a business that, at
all levels, re?ects the communities in which we operate, the
customers and marketplaces we serve, and the shareholders
who invest in our company. Featured in this section are our
companywide e?orts to embrace diversity, which include
the following:
• Diversity and inclusion in the workplace
• Supplier diversity
• Urban Co?ee Opportunities: Bringing the Starbucks
Experience to diverse communities
STARBUCKS MAKES DIVERSITYINC
TOP 50 LIST
Starbucks was recognized as one of the Top 50 Companies
for Diversity in 2006 by DiversityInc magazine, which
reports and analyzes diversity issues and their impact on
business in the U.S. Starbucks also ranked in the Top 10
Companies for DiversityInc’s Latinos sub list. The application
process for the Top 50 list entails an in-depth analysis of a
company’s diversity management, leadership and marketing.
CORPORATE EQUALITY INDEX
In 2006, Starbucks achieved a score of 85 out of 100 on
The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation’s Corporate
Equality Index (CEI), a nationally recognized measure of
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) workplace
equality. This index is the principal method of evaluating
diversity efforts toward GLBT employees and consumers.
Scores are based on a voluntary survey of company policies
as well as independent research by HRC.
To achieve a higher score, Starbucks must ?rst have a
written nondiscrimination policy covering gender identity
and expression. We are currently working on updating our
nondiscrimination policy and hope to achieve a higher HRC
score in the future.
Diversity and Inclusion in the
Workplace
At Starbucks, our diverse workforce includes men and
women of various ages, races, national origin, religious
a?liations, sexual orientation, physical and mental attributes,
and di?ering levels of education, skills and experiences.
Our partners also come with their own ideas, opinions and
communication styles. We respect the di?erences our partners
bring to the workplace. We view their di?erences as assets
that can help us to be more creative and innovative in our
approach and products, more competitive globally and more
attractive as an inclusive employer wherever we do business,
We implemented the following initiatives and programs in
?scal 2006 in an e?ort to reach our diversity and inclusion
workplace goals and objectives.
• A “Diversity and Inclusion Scorecard” was created
for our ceo and his direct reports, which includes key
metrics for diversity and inclusion in the workplace. Te
scorecard establishes benchmarks related to workforce
representation, diversity leadership competencies,
workplace environment, supplier diversity and customer
experience.
• Partner Network Groups were initiated to bring partners
together voluntarily to partner with the business in an
advisory capacity. Additionally, these groups provide
personal and professional networking opportunities,
address issues of concern and opportunity, and provide
mutual advocacy to help the company achieve our diversity
and inclusion goals. Te program was piloted with three
groups: Te Pride Alliance Network: (lesbian, gay, bi-
sexual, transgender), Partners with Disabilities Network,
and Emerging Workforce, a group of partners that is
working to develop ?exible workplace solutions in order to
achieve both their business and personal goals. Te Partner
Network Groups are currently available to partners at the
Starbucks Support Center (SSC), the company’s global
headquarters in Seattle.
• Diversity and Inclusion Leadership Teams were organized
to identify strengths, gaps and opportunities within
speci?c business units and regions as well as to create
structures to foster sustainable, robust diversity and
inclusion strategies throughout the company. Team
members are partners from all levels of the company
bringing cross-functional expertise in e?orts to drive
ownership of the diversity and inclusion strategy within
Starbucks. In ?scal 2006, two regional teams were
launched in the U.S. and seven were launched within
speci?c business units or functions at the SSC.
73 DI VERSI TY
• Te Disability Standard Assessment, a comprehensive
tool that addresses disability, access and accommodation
as it a?ects every aspect of our company, was initiated.
Starbucks is undertaking the Assessment in partnership
with the Employer’s Forum on Disability, an organization
that provides guidance on all aspects of disability,
access and accommodation as a business and an equal
rights issue. We will complete the assessment in ?scal
2007 and use the results to guide the development of a
comprehensive plan.
• Executive diversity education was researched and designed
in ?scal 2006, with plans to pilot and integrate it into a
comprehensive educational plan for partners in ?scal 2007.
Diversity and inclusion education at Starbucks includes
integration into existing and developing programs, stand-
alone o?erings and experiences that extend beyond the
classroom, such as forums, facilitated discussions and
reciprocal mentoring.
• Several partner training programs, focused on workplace
disability matters, were enhanced or developed at many
levels. Additionally two new workshops were created and
piloted: “Best Practices: Creating a Deaf Friendly Work
Environment” and “Best Practices: Disability 101.”
Starbucks is dedicated to developing our diversity and
inclusion strategy globally. In ?scal 2006 we began working
to de?ne diversity and inclusion priorities by region, but we
have not yet completed a global strategy.
Te following table represents the percentage of women and
people of color holding senior positions at Starbucks:
Starbucks Senior Of?cers*
Fiscal 2006
Women 28%
People of color 22%
*Senior vice presidents and above
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, we will strive to:
• Make Partner Network Groups a permanent
diversity and inclusion program at the Starbucks
Support Center.
• Design and deliver customized diversity and
inclusion educational programs to our Partner
Resources (HR) department.
• Audit Starbucks core educational offerings from a
diversity and inclusion perspective.
• Incorporate the new Best Practices: Creating a Deaf
Friendly Work Environment into our educational
offerings.
• Develop a diversity and inclusion DVD in which
Starbucks partners, with a facilitator, share their
personal stories in an effort to increase awareness in
the areas of diversity and inclusion.
• Continue the creation and implementation of
business unit–speci?c Diversity and Inclusion
Leadership Teams across the company.
• Solidify a strategic initiative to link the Diversity and
Staf?ng organizations.
Women
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
31%
63%
34%
65%
33%
66%
Executives (vice presidents
and above)
Total U.S. workforce
People of Color
Fiscal year
Executives (vice presidents
and above)
Total U.S. workforce
2004 2005 2006
15%
30%
14%
30%
15%
30%
74 DI VERSI TY
My Starbucks –
The National Braille Press honored
Starbucks barista Cindy Rogers and
Starbucks with its prestigious Hands On!
Award in September 2006. The award
recognized Cindy’s outstanding work on
behalf of braille literacy, and Starbucks
supportive workplace environment and
emphasis on literacy. Cindy shared
the honor this year with First Lady
Laura Bush at a Gala event in Boston.
Since June 2005, Cindy has hosted
a Children’s Story Hour in her Mesa,
Arizona, Starbucks store to read braille
storybooks to children and adults.
She also has visited 75 schools in the
past year, talking to children about
her blindness, and passing out braille
alphabet cards to help children learn
letters. Cindy credits Starbucks for
encouraging her to start her Story
Hour series. “Starbucks inspires us
to give back to our communities, so I
decided to make it my mission to share
my passion for braille literacy as a
vehicle to transform lives,” Cindy said.
Supplier Diversity
To operate and grow our business, Starbucks depends on a
broad network of suppliers that ranges in size and scope. We
are dedicated to providing a world-class supplier program that
supports diversity. Starbucks instituted a Supplier Diversity
program several years ago to ensure that quali?ed and
certi?ed diverse U.S. businesses have equal opportunities to
provide our goods and services. A diverse supplier is de?ned
by Starbucks as a business that is certi?ed by an independent
third party to be at least 51 percent owned, operated and
managed by women, minorities, or individuals who are
socially or economically disadvantaged.
Te commitment we’ve made to supplier diversity is intended
to provide not only opportunities for diverse businesses, but
also to create a positive and sustained economic impact on the
local communities where these businesses are based.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks did $213 million in business with
?rst tier* women- and minority-owned businesses, exceeding
our goal of $206 million.
* First tier suppliers are paid directly or relationships are managed directly by
Starbucks for their products and services. Only ?rst tier suppliers are counted in
our diverse supplier spending.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks made the following improvements
in our supplier diversity program:
• Developed a new coding system to better identify
minority- and women-owned suppliers, which we plan to
implement in ?scal 2007.
• Increased our presence at minority business events and
diversity trainings.
• Increased our level of participation with the National
Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
More information about Starbucks Supplier Diversity
program is available at Starbucks.com.
Spending with Diverse Suppliers
(in millions)
$114
$166
$213
2006 Fiscal year 2004 2005
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Spending $250 million on purchases from certi?ed
diverse suppliers.
• Implementing a supplier diversity training program
for all new buyers.
• Developing a ?ve-year supplier diversity plan that
enables Starbucks to further advance our diverse
supplier base.
• Creating a supplier diversity advisory council to
support the advancement of supplier diversity at
Starbucks.
• Developing meaningful key performance indicators
(KPIs) to help track and measure progress toward
our supplier diversity goals.
75 DI VERSI TY
Urban Coffee Opportunities
Bringing the Starbucks Experience to Diverse
Communities
In 1998, Starbucks formed a joint venture with Johnson
Development Corporation (JDC), which is owned by
Earvin “Magic” Johnson. Together we created Urban Co?ee
Opportunities, LLC (UCO), bringing Starbucks stores to
diverse communities. We opened 15 new UCO stores in ?scal
2006 and ended the year with a total of 102.
We are close to meeting our goal of opening 125 UCO stores
in the U.S. and expect to reach the 125 store benchmark by
late 2007 or early 2008.
When scouting for new UCO locations, Starbucks and JDC
consider the economic vitality and long-term potential of
a given market. In many of the communities where UCO
stores have opened, Starbucks arrival has helped to serve as an
economic stimulus with the creation of new jobs, use of local
suppliers, our support for community-based organizations,
and by attracting other retailers to the area. Te collective
economic impact that our UCO stores generated in ?scal
2006 included:
• Providing more than 2,100 jobs in 102 UCO stores.
• Paying an estimated $29.8 million in salaries/wages
and bene?ts to UCO partners.
• Providing healthcare bene?ts to eligible and participating
part- and full-time store partners, their spouses, domestic
partners and eligible dependent children.
76
Independent Assurance Report
To the Stakeholders Starbucks Co?ee Company:
We have been engaged to provide assurance on the Corporate Social Responsibility (“CSR”) Fiscal 2006 Annual Report (the
“Report”) of Starbucks Co?ee Company (“Starbucks”), for the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006.
We have performed evidence-gathering procedures on the following subject matter:
• Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006;
• Information and data provided in each area of focus of the Report (Products, Society, Environment, Workplace, and
Diversity) and
• Te management and reporting for the preparation of this information and data.
We have considered the subject matter against the following evaluation criteria:
• Te procedures by which the CSR information and data were prepared, collated and compiled internally and
• Te control environment over the quality of the information and data.
Our statement should be considered in conjunction with the inherent limitations of accuracy and completeness for CSR data,
as well as in connection with Starbucks internal reporting guidelines.
Te Board of Directors of Starbucks is responsible for both the subject matter and the evaluation criteria.
Our responsibility is to report on the internal reporting processes, information and data for CSR based on our evidence-
gathering procedures. Currently there are no statutory requirements or generally accepted veri?cation standards in the
United States of America that relate to the preparation, presentation, and veri?cation of CSR reports. Tere are international
standards for the CSR reports that were approved by the International Auditing and Assurances Standards Board (IAASB) in
January 2005. Using the IAASB approved standards as a guideline, we planned and performed evidence-gathering procedures
to provide a basis for our conclusion. However, we have not performed an audit in accordance with the International
Standards on Auditing. Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.
Our evidence-gathering procedures included, among other activities, the following:
• Testing the e?ectiveness of the internal reporting system used to collect and compile information on each area of focus in
the Report;
• Performing speci?c procedures, on a sample basis, to validate the CSR data on site at Starbucks co?ee buying operations in
Switzerland; C.A.F.E. Practices operations in Costa Rica; and corporate headquarters in Seattle, Washington;
• Interviewing partners responsible for data collection and reporting;
• Interviewing partners at retail locations;
• Assessing the information gathering and compiling process of each area of focus in the Report;
• Reviewing relevant documentation, including corporate policies, management and reporting structures and
• Performing tests, on a sample basis, of documentation and systems used to collect, analyze and compile reported CSR
information and data.
In our opinion, based on our work described in this report, the CSR information contained in the Report gives a fair
representation of CSR performance and activities of Starbucks Co?ee Company for the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006.
Statements, assertions and data disclosed in the Report are reasonably supported by documentation, internal processes and
activities, and information provided by external parties.
Moss Adams LLP
Seattle, Washington
January 15, 2007
77
Your Feedback Matters
In preparing Starbucks Fiscal 2006 CSR Annual Report,
we provided a copy of our previous year’s report to a broad
cross-section of stakeholders, and asked for their candid
feedback and advice on the ways in which we could improve
transparency. We also received a great deal of feedback from
readers of last year’s report via an online survey, something we
are doing again. Tis collective input provided some excellent
suggestions that we incorporated into this year’s report,
including the changes we made to print only an abridged
version focused on our most material issues and to publish the
full report online.
We invite our readers to help us improve our future reporting
by providing feedback on Starbucks ?scal 2006 CSR Annual
Report. Tis can be done via an online survey at www.
starbucks.com/csrsurvey. Please be assured that all feedback
will be thoughtfully considered and greatly appreciated.
Veri?cation
External veri?cation of the data and statements made in
Starbucks CSR Annual Reports began in 2002, when the
company retained Seattle-based Moss Adams LLP, the
12th largest accounting and consulting ?rm in the U.S.
Te selection of Moss Adams met Starbucks criteria for a
high-quality ?rm that had not worked with the company
previously, and a ?rm that could develop a customized
approach for verifying CSR-related data and content. (See
page 76.)
About the Paper Used for this Report
To minimize the environmental impact, this report was
printed on 100 percent post-consumer recycled ?ber.
For more information:
Starbucks Co?ee Company
Customer Relations
PO Box 3717
Seattle, WA 98124-3717 USA
Phone: 800-23-LATTE
(800-235-2883)
Contact us through the “customer service” section of
Starbucks.com.
To receive a printed copy of this report, please call the
number listed above. Te report is also available online at
www.starbucks.com/csr.
© 2007 Starbucks Co?ee Company. All rights reserved.
Printed in the USA. CSR-199 SKU-XX
Tis report includes forward-looking statements regarding trends
in or expectations regarding store openings. Tese forward-
looking statements are based on currently available operating,
?nancial and competitive information and are subject to various
risks and uncertainties. Actual future results and trends may
di?er materially depending on a variety of factors including but
not limited to successful execution of expansion plans, ?uctuations
in U.S. and international economies, the impact of initiatives by
competitors, and other risks detailed in the company’s ?lings with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the “Risk
Factors” section of Starbucks Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006. Te company assumes no
obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements.
doc_962174639.pdf
Customers want to feel good about the place they go and the coffee they drink. Our employees, whom we call partners, want to feel proud when talking to friends and family about where they work. Farmers want to know that they can depend on us for a livelihood that's sustainable. We have come to appreciate that throughout the world many people feel a sense of connection to us. Being their Starbucks is an honor. And also a responsibility.
Starbucks Corporation CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY / FISCAL 2006 ANNUAL REPORT
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 1
Maybe you have a Starbucks you call
your own. And because it is yours,
you expect a lot from it.
Customers want to feel good about the place they
go and the coffee they drink. Our employees,
whom we call partners, want to feel proud when
talking to friends and family about where they
work. Farmers want to know that they can
depend on us for a livelihood that’s sustainable.
We have come to appreciate that throughout the
world many people feel a sense of connection to
us. Being their Starbucks is an honor. And also a
responsibility.
For us corporate social responsibility is not just a
program or a donation or a press release. It’s the
way we do business every day.
This report is one of the ways we openly and
humbly share our commitment to do business
responsibly. To continue to earn the privilege of
being your Starbucks.
STARBUCKS MISSION STATEMENT AND
GUIDING PRINCIPLES
To establish Starbucks as the premier purveyor of the ?nest
coffee in the world while maintaining our uncompromising
principles as we grow.
The following six Guiding Principles will help us measure the
appropriateness of our decisions:
• Provide a great work environment and treat each
other with respect and dignity.
• Embrace diversity as an essential component in the
way we do business.
• Apply the highest standards of excellence to the
purchasing, roasting and fresh delivery of our coffee.
• Develop enthusiastically satis?ed customers all of
the time.
• Contribute positively to our communities and our
environment.
• Recognize that pro?tability is essential to our
future success.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 2
Dear Stakeholders,
We are often asked how Starbucks went from a single co?ee shop in 1971 to one of the most
recognizable and respected global brands today. Delivering great co?ee, exceptional service and
an uplifting and personal customer experience have all contributed to Starbucks success. Equally
important has been our commitment to conducting business in a socially and environmentally
responsible manner, a commitment that stems from Starbucks Mission Statement and
Guiding Principles.
Our store partners (employees) are connecting and creating relationships with our customers
every day. We believe it matters greatly that they feel Starbucks is a great place to work, and a
company that cares not only about their well-being but also about the world we live in. Good
communication is key to all of this and helps to inspire our partners about the company they
work for, the important role they play at Starbucks and the customers they serve. With more than
145,000 partners worldwide, our ability to communicate e?ectively and passionately about what
Starbucks is doing to be a good company – in both a personal yet focused manner – is absolutely
essential and a top priority for us.
We believe the relationships we have with external stakeholders can be strengthened by focusing
much of our communications on Starbucks commitment and passion to improve the world and
the ways in which we are demonstrating this. For instance, we want our customers, shareholders,
communities and others to understand how we are working together with farmers and suppliers to
help create a more sustainable approach to high-quality co?ee production. We also want to share
what Starbucks is doing to contribute positively to local communities; minimize our environmental
footprint; be responsive to our customers’ health and wellness needs; and how Starbucks is serving
as a leader in both our industry and within our global society through our participation in
organizations such as the United Nations Global Compact.
We were very mindful of taking a focused approach when we prepared this year’s Corporate
Social Responsibility Annual Report. Rather than attempt to address every issue in the abridged
print version of our ?scal 2006 report, we conducted a materiality assessment to determine what
topics are of most signi?cance to our stakeholders and to Starbucks, a process explained on the
following page.
As you read through this full report we hope the information helps you assess for yourself how well
Starbucks is doing with regard to our corporate social responsibilities. As always, we encourage you
to share your honest feedback. To do so, we have created an online survey which is described on the
back page of this report.
On behalf of everyone at Starbucks, thank you for taking your time to learn more about how
Starbucks is doing business in a di?erent kind of way.
Sincerely,
Howard Schultz Jim Donald
chairman president and chief executive o?cer
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 3
Focusing on Materiality
Tis is Starbucks sixth annual Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR) Report. Tis year, we took a di?erent approach by
publishing both a printed abridged version and this full report
online.
We began our ?scal 2006 reporting process by conducting
a materiality assessment to ensure that we are aligned with
the materiality principle of the Global Reporting Initiative
(GRI) regarding content. Speci?cally, the topics and indicators
covered in our CSR Report should re?ect Starbucks signi?cant
economic, environmental and social impacts, or substantively
in?uence the assessments and decisions of our stakeholders. We
consulted a variety of sources – both internal and external – as
part of our materiality assessment. Tese sources included:
• Company objectives, strategies, policies, programs and
risk factors.
• Partner (employee) surveys and other input gathered
through various feedback mechanisms.
• Customer contact feedback.
• Shareholder resolutions and anecdotal feedback.
• Input gathered through stakeholder dialogues.
• Informal input from co?ee suppliers.
• Media coverage and blog discussions of issues.
• Stakeholder feedback speci?c to Starbucks 2005 CSR
Report.
• Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) recommended topics
and data for inclusion.
After reviewing these sources, we compiled a list of issues and
prioritized each one based on the following criteria:
• Te importance of the issue to – and potential impact
on – Starbucks.
• Te importance of the issue to – and potential impact
on – external stakeholders.
• Te amount of reasonable control Starbucks has over a
particular issue.
Based on our assessment, we determined that the material
issues of greatest importance to Starbucks and our
stakeholders, which the company has a reasonable level
of control over, fall into ?ve topic areas highlighted in the
top right box below. We chose to focus our abridged print
report on these subjects only. Tis full report includes many
of the topics on the following matrix.
CONTENTS IN THE WEB REPORT CONTENTS IN THE PRINTED REPORT
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Fair Trade Certi?ed™ coffee
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Prices paid to coffee farmers and suppliers
• Respect for workers’ human rights
• Long-term availability of high-quality coffee
Growth and Expansion
• Impacts on local communities
Environmental Impacts
• Climate change
• Energy consumption
• Paper cups
Health and Wellness
• Products
• Nutrition information
Workplace Practices
• Culture and bene?ts
• Satisfaction and engagement
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Organic and conservation
Environmental Practices
• Water usage
• Waste and recycling
• Sustainable packaging
• Transportation/
distribution impacts
Customer Concerns
• rBGH dairy
• Marketing to youth
• Caffeine
Governance
• Executive compensation
• Majority voting for
board members
• Transparency
Stakeholder Engagement
Local Community Engagement
• Charitable giving
• Partnerships
• Partner (employee)
volunteerism
Diversity
• Workplace
• Supplier
• Communities
Sustainable Sourcing
• Supplier Code of Conduct
• Human rights/
working conditions
• Tea
• Paper
• Ethos™ water
Responsible Marketing
• Starbucks™ Liqueurs
Coffee Purchasing Practices
• Veri?cation and transparency
• Access to credit
• Social investments
Environmental Impacts
• Store design and operations
Workplace Practices
• Training and development
• Right to organize
• Health and wellness
• Health and safety
Managing Corporate Social Responsibility
• Vision and priority setting
• Ethics and governance
Cocoa Sourcing Practices
Public Policy
Global Philanthropic Programs
SIGNIFICANCE OR POTENTIAL IMPACT ON STARBUCKS
IMPORTANT VERY IMPORTANT
S
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N
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F
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T
O
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X
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N
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STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 4
About This Report
Scope
Tis report includes information on Starbucks U.S. and
Canada company-operated retail and global supply chain
operations – the areas that represent the majority of
Starbucks social, environmental and economic impacts.
Starbucks system for collecting and reporting reliable social,
environmental and economic performance data does not
encompass all of our operations. Where available, anecdotal
information is included for international and licensed store
operations. Information on total co?ee purchases is for both
Starbucks Co?ee Company and Seattle Co?ee Company.
Reporting Year
Starbucks ?scal year 2006 (October 3, 2005–
October 1, 2006), unless otherwise noted.
Currency
All references to currency are in U.S. dollars, unless
otherwise noted.
Starbucks 2006 CSR Report and Previous Reports
www.starbucks.com/csrannualreport
Information Integrity
Starbucks management is responsible for the preparation and
integrity of the information in this report. Trough a system
of internal controls, including a comprehensive veri?cation
process involving internal subject matter experts, we believe
this report fairly represents our CSR activities and results for
the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006. External veri?cation is
provided by Moss Adams LLP. See page 76.
Global Reporting Initiative
Starbucks reporting continues to be in?uenced by the Global
Reporting Initiative’s (GRI) 2002 Sustainability Reporting
Guidelines in determining relevant content and performance
metrics to include. See the Table of Contents on the next
page for a listing of GRI indictors included in this report,
and page 13 for a description of how we applied the GRI
principles. Information about GRI is online at
www.globalreporting.org.
PAGE
GLOBAL REPORTING
INITIATIVE (GRI) INDICATORS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 5
CONTENTS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
Starbucks Mission Statement & Guiding Principles 1 3.7
Letter to Stakeholders 2 1.2
Focusing on Materiality 3
About Tis Report 4 2.11-2.13, 2.20, 2.21
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006 7 EC4, EC10, EN17, LA7, LA11
Starbucks Company Pro?le 9 2.1-2.3, 2.8, 2.16, EC1
Integrating Corporate Social Responsibility 10 2.9, 3.1-3.3, 3.6, 3.8, 3.10-3.12, LA11
External Recognition 14 SO4
United Nations Global Compact 15 3.14
PRODUCTS
Our World of Products 16
Sustaining Co?ee Quality 16
Creating a Sustainable Approach 18
C.A.F.E. Practices 19 3.7, 3.16, EC13, EN27, HR2, HR3, HR6
Te Link Between Quality and Price 19 EC13
Respect for Workers’ Human Rights 19 HR2
C.A.F.E. Practices – Hitting Our Targets 20 EC4, EN33
C.A.F.E. Practices – Findings and Next Steps 21
C.A.F.E. Practices – Te Veri?cation Process 23
Economic Transparency 23
Starbucks and Fair Trade 23 EC4, EC13, PR6
Purchasing Certi?ed Organic and Conservation Co?ees 25 EC4, EN27
Access to Credit 26 EC13
Investments in Co?ee Communities 27 EC13
Sustainable Trade: Purchasing Our Non-Co?ee Products 29 3.7, 3.16, HR3
Procurement Practices for Sustainable Agriculture 30
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program 30 3.7, 3.11, 3.16, HR2, HR3, HR6
Tazo
®
Tea – Sustainability Practices 31
Dairy and Bakery Products 32 3.11
Starbucks Social Responsibility Standards – Manufactured Goods 33 3.7, 3.16, HR2, HR3, HR6
Ethos
™
Water 34
Quality Assurance and Product Recalls 35 PR1
(continued on next page)
PAGE
GLOBAL REPORTING
INITIATIVE (GRI) INDICATORS
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 6
SOCIETY
Starbucks Growth and Community Impacts 36
Continuing Marketplace Evolution 37
Operating in the Global Community 37
Being Respectful of Community Concerns 37 SO1
Being Locally Relevant 39
Supporting Local Communities and Economic Development 39 EC13
Starbucks Community Investments 40 EC10
Investing in Communities Around the World 44 EC10
Te Starbucks Foundation 46 EC10
Starbucks Commitment to Health and Wellness 49 PR2
Being Responsive to Our Customers 51 PR8, PR9
Public Policy and Government A?airs 53 SO3
ENVIRONMENT
Our Commitment to Environmental Stewardship 54 3.7
Addressing Climate Change 54 EN8, EN17
Greening the Cup 56 EN14
Understanding and Improving our Environmental Footprint 57 EN2, EN3, EN5, EN18
WORKPLACE
Providing a Great Work Environment 63 EC5, LA2
Listening to Our Partners 63 SO2, HR10
Providing Bene?ts to Our Partners 66 LA12
Recognizing Our Partners 69
Partner Training and Career Development 70 LA9, LA17
Workplace Policies and Respecting Partners’ Rights 70 LA3, LA10, HR4, HR5
Health and Safety 71 LA7
DIVERSITY
Fostering Diversity and Inclusion 72
Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace 72 LA11
Supplier Diversity 74 HR2
Urban Co?ee Opportunities 75
Independent Assurance Report 76 2.21, 2.22
Feedback and Further Information 77 3.11, 3.12
CONTENTS continued
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 7
INDICATOR 2005 2006 2007 TARGET WHAT WE SAID IN 2005 WHAT WE DID IN 2006
SELF-
RATING
MORE
INFO
COFFEE
Coffee and Farmer
Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices approved
suppliers
77 million pounds
(goal: 75 million
pounds)
155 million pounds
(goal: 150 million
pounds)
225 million pounds • Explore opening a Farmer Support Center (FSC) in Asia-Paci?c and
begin introducing C.A.F.E. Practices to our local suppliers.
• Began exploring opportunities to open an FSC in Asia Paci?c. Organized
suppliers training sessions in both Indonesia and Papua New Guinea reaching
out to small- and large-scale suppliers from various countries in Asia Paci?c.
Page 19
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
25% 53% • Work with the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) to provide coffee
quality training and encourage adoption of sustainable coffee
practices to cooperatives in Kenya.
• Continued to work with the AWF to provide quality training and expertise and
encourage sustainable coffee practices. Starbucks also conducted training in
Kenya for coffee farmers, cooperatives and exporters from the majority of the
countries we buy coffee from in East Africa.
Page 22
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
cooperatives
11 million pounds
(goal: 10 million
pounds)
18 million pounds
(goal: 12 million
pounds)
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
green (unroasted) coffee
purchases to support forecasted sales.
• Promote our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee blends to increase customer
demand and sales of these products.
• Supported Fair Trade Month in October 2005, featuring Starbucks newest
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
blend, Café Estima Blend
™
, as the “Coffee of the Week”
in U.S. and Canada stores. Increased distribution of packaged Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffees globally. Began selling Kirkland Signature Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffee in Costco stores in the U.S. and Canada.
Page 23
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
4% 6% • Continue to work with regional Fair Trade organizations to introduce
additional Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee products globally.
• Globally, coordinated efforts with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations
International and 10 of the 20 Fair Trade National Initiatives to expand Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
product offerings in 24 markets.
SOCIETY
Charitable
contributions
Total cash and in-kind contributions $30.3 million $36.1 million Do not currently set targets for future
charitable contributions.
• Focus community investments to address global water issues and
education.
• Initiated water projects in Indonesia and in Ethiopia, both supported through
The Starbucks Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund. Completed ?rst of ?ve-year, $5
million commitment to Starbucks China Education Project.
Page 40
Percentage of pre-tax earnings 3.8% 4.0%
Volunteerism
(Make Your Mark)
Number of hours volunteered by partners
and customers in the U.S. and Canada
299,000 383,000
(goal: 375,000)
421,000 • Increase partner volunteerism. • Encouraged partners to leverage their volunteerism through Starbucks Make
Your Mark program.
Page 42
ENVIRONMENT*
Electricity Kilowatt-hours per square foot of retail
space per month
6.40 6.57 Target has not been established. • Purchase renewable energy certi?cates to offset 20% of the energy
used in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
• Quadrupled our renewable energy purchase to equal 20% of the energy used
in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
Page 55
Water Gallons per square foot of retail space
per month
24 26 Target has not been established. • Integrate speci?c environmental practices into our retail operational
standards to help focus on improving store level accountability for
energy and water conservation, recycling and waste reduction.
• Updated a store manager performance tool to emphasize the importance of
managing environmental aspects of store operations and what bottom line
impact – positive or negative – their actions can have.
Page 57
Paper Percentage of post-consumer ?ber (not
including hot cups)
49.5%
(goal: 48%)
66.4%
(goal: 50%)
66.9% • Roll out new hot beverage cups containing 10% post-consumer ?ber
(PCF) in U.S. company-operated and licensed stores.
• Converted all hot beverage cups in Starbucks U.S. and Canada stores to the
10% PCF content version.
Page 56
Percentage of unbleached ?ber (not
including hot cups)
85.9%
(goal: 90%)
86.3%
(goal: 86.5%)
87.1%
WORKPLACE
Partner satisfaction Percentage of satis?ed or
very satis?ed partners
87% 86% We continually strive to strengthen our
workplace practices in ways that make
Starbucks a great place to work.
• Conduct a Partner View Survey approximately every 18-24 months.
Last one took place in October 2004.
• Expanded the reach of latest Partner View Survey, conducted March 2006,
to include partners in company-operated stores globally. Achieved 84%
response rate, our best yet.
Page 64
Partner engagement Percentage of engaged partners 73% 69%
Health and safety Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked –
retail
7.05
1
5.46
(goal: 6.5)
5 • Complete the rollout of anti-slip mats to our North America company-
operated stores.
• Finished replacing mats in more than 3,400 existing stores and all new stores
in North America.
Page 59
DIVERSITY
Women U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 34% 33% While Starbucks values diversity and
inclusion, we do not currently set targets for
representation by race and gender.
• Roll out our diversity and inclusion scorecard to our ceo and senior
leadership team.
• Finalized diversity and inclusion scorecard and delivered it to Starbucks ceo
and his direct reports. It includes data on workforce diversity; individual
leadership performance related to diversity and inclusion; supplier diversity
and customer demographics.
Page 72
U.S. workforce 65% 66%
People of color U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 14% 15%
U.S. workforce 30% 30%
Suppliers Amount spent with certi?ed minority-
and women-owned businesses in U.S.
$166 million
(goal: $140 million)
$213 million
(goal: $206 million)
$250 million • Expose Starbucks buyers and procurement directors to more
opportunities for doing business with diverse suppliers.
• Increase our level of participation in organizations such as the
National Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
• Engaged with National Association of Minority Contractors; participated in
National Minority Business Council annual opportunity fair and other events;
attended Women’s Business Enterprise National Council annual conference;
took part in supplier diversity training for Institute for Supply Management–
Certi?ed Purchasing Manager credits; and served as board chair for local
Northwest chapter of National Minority Supplier Development Council.
Page 74
KEY: ACHIEVED MAKING PROGRESS DID NOT ACHIEVE
To measure how well we are doing at upholding our commitment to social responsibility and to our Guiding Principles, Starbucks has identi?ed the following key performance indicators
as relevant metrics for our business. Each year, we will report our performance relative to these metrics and any new metrics we may add. We strive to include forward-looking targets
for our performance indicators. However, in some cases the information is not available or the company is unable to provide it for other reasons.
STARBUCKS CORPORATE SOCI AL RESPONSI BI LI TY
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006
*We have not measured our greenhouse gas emissions since 2003 and therefore this indicator has been removed from this table. For information about our Climate Change Mitigation Strategy, see page 56.
1
Fiscal 2005 information has been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims that were ?led after the ?scal year ended.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 8
INDICATOR 2005 2006 2007 TARGET WHAT WE SAID IN 2005 WHAT WE DID IN 2006
SELF-
RATING
MORE
INFO
COFFEE
Coffee and Farmer
Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices approved
suppliers
77 million pounds
(goal: 75 million
pounds)
155 million pounds
(goal: 150 million
pounds)
225 million pounds • Explore opening a Farmer Support Center (FSC) in Asia-Paci?c and
begin introducing C.A.F.E. Practices to our local suppliers.
• Began exploring opportunities to open an FSC in Asia Paci?c. Organized
suppliers training sessions in both Indonesia and Papua New Guinea reaching
out to small- and large-scale suppliers from various countries in Asia Paci?c.
Page 19
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
25% 53% • Work with the African Wildlife Foundation (AWF) to provide coffee
quality training and encourage adoption of sustainable coffee
practices to cooperatives in Kenya.
• Continued to work with the AWF to provide quality training and expertise and
encourage sustainable coffee practices. Starbucks also conducted training in
Kenya for coffee farmers, cooperatives and exporters from the majority of the
countries we buy coffee from in East Africa.
Page 22
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee
Pounds of green (unroasted) coffee
purchased from Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
cooperatives
11 million pounds
(goal: 10 million
pounds)
18 million pounds
(goal: 12 million
pounds)
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
green (unroasted) coffee
purchases to support forecasted sales.
• Promote our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee blends to increase customer
demand and sales of these products.
• Supported Fair Trade Month in October 2005, featuring Starbucks newest
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
blend, Café Estima Blend
™
, as the “Coffee of the Week”
in U.S. and Canada stores. Increased distribution of packaged Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffees globally. Began selling Kirkland Signature Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
coffee in Costco stores in the U.S. and Canada.
Page 23
Percentage of total green (unroasted)
coffee purchases
4% 6% • Continue to work with regional Fair Trade organizations to introduce
additional Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
coffee products globally.
• Globally, coordinated efforts with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations
International and 10 of the 20 Fair Trade National Initiatives to expand Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
product offerings in 24 markets.
SOCIETY
Charitable
contributions
Total cash and in-kind contributions $30.3 million $36.1 million Do not currently set targets for future
charitable contributions.
• Focus community investments to address global water issues and
education.
• Initiated water projects in Indonesia and in Ethiopia, both supported through
The Starbucks Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund. Completed ?rst of ?ve-year, $5
million commitment to Starbucks China Education Project.
Page 40
Percentage of pre-tax earnings 3.8% 4.0%
Volunteerism
(Make Your Mark)
Number of hours volunteered by partners
and customers in the U.S. and Canada
299,000 383,000
(goal: 375,000)
421,000 • Increase partner volunteerism. • Encouraged partners to leverage their volunteerism through Starbucks Make
Your Mark program.
Page 42
ENVIRONMENT*
Electricity Kilowatt-hours per square foot of retail
space per month
6.40 6.57 Target has not been established. • Purchase renewable energy certi?cates to offset 20% of the energy
used in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
• Quadrupled our renewable energy purchase to equal 20% of the energy used
in our U.S. and Canada company-operated stores.
Page 55
Water Gallons per square foot of retail space
per month
24 26 Target has not been established. • Integrate speci?c environmental practices into our retail operational
standards to help focus on improving store level accountability for
energy and water conservation, recycling and waste reduction.
• Updated a store manager performance tool to emphasize the importance of
managing environmental aspects of store operations and what bottom line
impact – positive or negative – their actions can have.
Page 57
Paper Percentage of post-consumer ?ber (not
including hot cups)
49.5%
(goal: 48%)
66.4%
(goal: 50%)
66.9% • Roll out new hot beverage cups containing 10% post-consumer ?ber
(PCF) in U.S. company-operated and licensed stores.
• Converted all hot beverage cups in Starbucks U.S. and Canada stores to the
10% PCF content version.
Page 56
Percentage of unbleached ?ber (not
including hot cups)
85.9%
(goal: 90%)
86.3%
(goal: 86.5%)
87.1%
WORKPLACE
Partner satisfaction Percentage of satis?ed or
very satis?ed partners
87% 86% We continually strive to strengthen our
workplace practices in ways that make
Starbucks a great place to work.
• Conduct a Partner View Survey approximately every 18-24 months.
Last one took place in October 2004.
• Expanded the reach of latest Partner View Survey, conducted March 2006,
to include partners in company-operated stores globally. Achieved 84%
response rate, our best yet.
Page 64
Partner engagement Percentage of engaged partners 73% 69%
Health and safety Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked –
retail
7.05
1
5.46
(goal: 6.5)
5 • Complete the rollout of anti-slip mats to our North America company-
operated stores.
• Finished replacing mats in more than 3,400 existing stores and all new stores
in North America.
Page 59
DIVERSITY
Women U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 34% 33% While Starbucks values diversity and
inclusion, we do not currently set targets for
representation by race and gender.
• Roll out our diversity and inclusion scorecard to our ceo and senior
leadership team.
• Finalized diversity and inclusion scorecard and delivered it to Starbucks ceo
and his direct reports. It includes data on workforce diversity; individual
leadership performance related to diversity and inclusion; supplier diversity
and customer demographics.
Page 72
U.S. workforce 65% 66%
People of color U.S. executives (vice presidents and above) 14% 15%
U.S. workforce 30% 30%
Suppliers Amount spent with certi?ed minority-
and women-owned businesses in U.S.
$166 million
(goal: $140 million)
$213 million
(goal: $206 million)
$250 million • Expose Starbucks buyers and procurement directors to more
opportunities for doing business with diverse suppliers.
• Increase our level of participation in organizations such as the
National Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
• Engaged with National Association of Minority Contractors; participated in
National Minority Business Council annual opportunity fair and other events;
attended Women’s Business Enterprise National Council annual conference;
took part in supplier diversity training for Institute for Supply Management–
Certi?ed Purchasing Manager credits; and served as board chair for local
Northwest chapter of National Minority Supplier Development Council.
Page 74
KEY: ACHIEVED MAKING PROGRESS DID NOT ACHIEVE
To measure how well we are doing at upholding our commitment to social responsibility and to our Guiding Principles, Starbucks has identi?ed the following key performance indicators
as relevant metrics for our business. Each year, we will report our performance relative to these metrics and any new metrics we may add. We strive to include forward-looking targets
for our performance indicators. However, in some cases the information is not available or the company is unable to provide it for other reasons.
STARBUCKS CORPORATE SOCI AL RESPONSI BI LI TY
Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006
*We have not measured our greenhouse gas emissions since 2003 and therefore this indicator has been removed from this table. For information about our Climate Change Mitigation Strategy, see page 56.
1
Fiscal 2005 information has been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims that were ?led after the ?scal year ended.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 9
STARBUCKS COMPANY PROFILE
Starbucks Corporation is the leading retailer, roaster and
brand of specialty co?ee in the world, with more than 12,000
company-operated and licensed locations in North America,
Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia Paci?c.
Trough various licensing arrangements and foodservice
accounts, Starbucks co?ee and other products are sold in
designated locations within airports, grocery stores, other
prominent retailers, hotels and universities. Starbucks
international licensed retail stores are operated through
licensing arrangements and joint ventures, primarily with
established retailers or restaurant operators.
Our brand portfolio o?ers a wide variety of consumer
products including Tazo
®
teas, Hear Music
®
CDs, bottled
Ethos
™
water and Starbucks
™
Liqueurs. Te Seattle’s Best
Co?ee and Torrefazione Italia co?ee brands enable Starbucks
to appeal to a broader consumer base by o?ering a variety
of co?ee ?avor pro?les. Starbucks also sells co?ee-brewing
equipment and other merchandise.
Starbucks Corporation is incorporated in Washington State,
in the United States. Te company’s common stock is traded
on Te NASDAQ
®
Global Select Market (“NASDAQ”),
under the symbol “SBUX.” As of January 12, 2007, there
were approximately 603,000 registered and bene?cial
shareholders of record.
Company Data
FISCAL YEAR 2004* 2005 2006
Total net revenues $5.3 billion $6.4 billion $7.8 billion
U.S. company-operated retail stores $3.8 billion $4.5 billion $5.5 billion
U.S. specialty (licensing, foodservice and other)** $465 million $558 million $683 million
International company-operated stores $657 million $852 million $1.1 billion
International specialty (licensing, foodservice and other)** $137 million $170 million $215 million
Total Global Consumer Products Group revenues** (licensing) $235 million $249 million $305 million
Net earnings $389 million $494 million $564 million
Earnings per common share – diluted $0.47 $0.61 $0.71
Shareholders’ equity $2.5 billion $2.1 billion $2.2 billion
Total income taxes $232 million $302 million $325 million
Cash paid for income tax expense $173 million $228 million $274 million
U.S. federal and state $163 million $219 million $258 million
International $10 million $9 million $16 million
Effective tax rate 37.3% 37.9% 35.8%
Number of countries where Starbucks stores are located 34 37 37
Total retail stores 8,569 10,241 12,440
U.S. company-operated stores 4,338*** 4,918*** 5,728
International company-operated stores 978*** 1,144*** 1,374
U.S. licensed stores 1,839 2,435 3,168
International licensed stores 1,414*** 1,744*** 2,170
Number of partners (employees) 97,000 115,000 145,800
* Fiscal 2004 included 53 weeks. For further information about our ?nancial performance, please see our 2006 Annual Report to Shareholders, available online at
www.starbucks.com/aboutus/investor.asp.
** Beginning in the ?scal fourth quarter of 2006, the Company increased its reporting segments from two to three to include a Global Consumer Products Group (“CPG”)
segment in addition to the U.S. and International segments. Tis additional operating segment re?ects the culmination of internal management realignments in ?scal
2006, and the successful development and launch of certain branded products in the U.S. and internationally, commencing in ?scal 2005 and continuing throughout
?scal 2006. Additionally, with the 100 percent acquisition of the company’s operations in Hawaii in ?scal 2006 and the shift in internal management of this market to
the U.S., these operations have been moved from the International segment to the U.S.
*** International store information has been adjusted for the ?scal 2006 acquisitions of Hawaii and Puerto Rico and ?scal 2005 acquisitions of Germany, Southern China
and Chile licensed operations by reclassifying historical information from Licensed stores to company-operated stores. U.S. store information was also adjusted to align
with the Hawaii operations segment change by reclassifying historical information from International company-operated stores to the U.S.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 10
INTEGRATING CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY (CSR)
At Starbucks, our commitment to good
governance, ethical conduct and social
responsibility is core to our way of doing
business, and strongly aligned with our drive
to create and increase shareholder value. We are
also committed to maintaining our relationships
with stakeholders and gaining their input and
feedback on issues of mutual importance.
The Business Case
Starbucks de?nes CSR as conducting business in ways that
produce social, environmental and economic bene?ts for
the communities in which we operate and for the company’s
stakeholders, including shareholders. A few of the tangible
bene?ts are:
• Attracting and retaining our partners – We believe
Starbucks commitment to CSR leads to higher than
typical levels of satisfaction and engagement among
our partners.
• Customer loyalty – Studies have revealed that customers
prefer to do business with a company they believe to be
socially responsible, when their other key buying criteria
are met. We believe customer loyalty has been a driving
force behind Starbucks phenomenal growth and long-
term success.
• Reducing operating costs – Many environmental
measures, such as energy-e?cient equipment or lighting,
involve initial investments, but deliver long-term
environmental and cost-saving bene?ts.
• Strengthening our supply chain – To have a sustainable
business, we need a reliable and responsible supplier base
that can keep pace with our growth. Starbucks invests in
measures to ensure our suppliers have the opportunity to
do so.
• License to operate – Having a strong reputation as a
socially responsible company makes it more likely we will
be welcomed into a local community.
Corporate Governance
Starbucks board of directors holds management accountable
to operate and manage the company according to strong
ethical and governance principles. Te board currently has 11
members, eight of whom meet the independence requirements
of NASDAQ.
®
All three committees of the board are
comprised of independent directors and have speci?c charters:
Audit and Compliance; Compensation and Management
Development; and Nominating and Corporate Governance.
Tere are well-de?ned criteria for the selection of new board
members, foremost being a clear demonstration of their own
personal integrity and ethics. Board diversity is sought in
terms of members’ personal and professional backgrounds,
gender, race, ethnicity or other di?erentiating characteristics,
enabling a wider range of opinions and perspectives to be
considered. Of the 11 members of Starbucks board, one is
Latino, two are African American (one of which is female),
and one other female also serves on the board.
In ?scal 2006, one independent member of the board
resigned, stating that increased demands on his time arising
from his new position as president and chief executive o?cer
of a large media company would make it di?cult for him to
continue to serve on the Starbucks board. Te vacancy created
by his resignation has not yet been ?lled.
For stability and continuity, among other reasons,
Starbucks has historically had a classi?ed board. However,
Starbucks has questioned whether a classi?ed board reduces
accountability of directors because of the limits it places on
shareholders’ ability to evaluate and elect the board annually.
Te board requested that the Nominating and Corporate
Governance Committee once again consider the merits of a
declassi?ed board in ?scal 2005. Based on the Nominating
and Corporate Governance Committee’s recommendation,
the board approved an amendment to our Articles of
Incorporation, which provides for the annual election of
all directors, and then recommended to our shareholders
that they approve this change. Starbucks shareholders
approved the change at the company’s 2006 Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting.
Committee charters, our governance principles, our
director nominations policy (including criteria for board
membership) and pro?les on each board member are available
at Starbucks.com. In addition, speci?c information regarding
declassi?cation of the board can be found in Starbucks ?scal
2005 proxy statement, also available at Starbucks.com.
Business Ethics
Upholding our strong ethical corporate culture is paramount
to Starbucks success. Starbucks Business Ethics and
Compliance (BEC) program provides guidelines in the
Standards of Business Conduct to help partners make ethical
business decisions, facilitates legal compliance and ethics
training, and provides mechanisms for partners to voice
concerns. Partners are urged to report any related concerns
through the Business Conduct Helpline. (More information is
available on page 65.) Starbucks also maintains an Auditline
for third parties, such as vendors, investors, and customers, to
report possible accounting and/or auditing irregularities. Te
Auditline is available to Starbucks partners as well. In North
America the program is well established, having been in place
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 11
since 1999. In 2004, program components were launched
internationally and continue to be rolled out in company-
owned markets following a market opening or acquisition.
Managing CSR
Te way in which CSR is managed at Starbucks continues
to evolve to ensure that emerging issues are identi?ed,
prioritized and addressed in a more systematic and integrated
manner throughout the company. While there is a sense of
shared accountability for CSR at Starbucks, the company
relies on a dedicated CSR group, reporting to the senior vice
president of CSR, for the day-to-day management of speci?c
CSR-related initiatives. Tis group also provides the impetus
for and broad oversight of other CSR programs that are
managed and implemented at the business unit, division or
department level.
Beyond the dedicated CSR group, Starbucks has established
three cross-functional teams with speci?c responsibilities
related to the company’s CSR and governance. Tey are the
Emerging Issues Council, the CSR Executive Committee
and the Policy Governance Council, all described below in
more detail.
Our CSR organizational chart is also presented below.
Currently the board does not have a committee dedicated
to CSR.
Emerging Issues Council (EIC)
Established in 2004, the EIC is a cross-functional team of 18
Starbucks executives responsible for proactively identifying,
prioritizing and mapping key external trends and issues
that may impact Starbucks and/or speci?c business units
on a local, regional or global level. As issues are identi?ed,
the EIC may engage external stakeholders to gain input. It
may also involve appropriate business units to explore an
issue further, de?ne feasible options and present follow-up
recommendations at a later date.
For instance, in 2004 the EIC began to assess potential risks
and issues related to cocoa production, and later determined
that the company needed to develop a sustainable approach
to cocoa purchasing. Tis determination was presented as a
formal recommendation to the CSR Executive Committee
for approval.
In 2006, the EIC continued to focus on issues related to the
health and wellness of Starbucks products and completed its
preliminary review of Starbucks human rights policy. Te
EIC will submit its recommendations regarding a human
rights policy to the CSR Executive Committee in ?scal 2007.
CSR Executive Committee
In ?scal 2006, we ful?lled our commitment to create a CSR
Executive Committee, an e?ort we believe will strengthen
the company’s overall governance of CSR. Te Committee
is charged with setting CSR-related strategy and policies;
monitoring progress against CSR objectives; reviewing and
approving major CSR social investment activity; overseeing
global, regional and local CSR organizational structure and
accountabilities; and ensuring CSR integration throughout
the company. Te CSR Executive Committee is comprised
of Starbucks president and ceo, who heads the Committee,
and several of his direct reports, all of whom are senior level
o?cers of the company.
In 2006, as part of our ethical sourcing commitment,
the Committee made the decision to approve the EIC’s
recommendation and implement Starbucks Socially
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing pilot, which allows for a
premium to be paid for processed cocoa when it is produced
and sourced in a socially responsible manner. (See page 30.)
Environmental Affairs
Corporate Giving
Stakeholder and
Partner Engagement
Public Policy and
Government Affairs
Business Practices
(Supply Chain)
International CSR
Civic and Community Affairs
Transparency and
Reporting
Corporate Social
Responsibility Governance
Board of Directors
president and
chief executive of?cer
senior vice president
Corporate Social Responsibility
Emerging Issues Council
The Starbucks Foundation
A separate 501(c)(3) charitable organization
Corporate Social Responsibility
Executive Committee
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 12
Policy Governance Council
Over the years, Starbucks has adopted certain governance
tools, such as policies, standards, guidelines and procedures
to help guide our business conduct in accordance with the
law and Starbucks Mission Statement and Guiding Principles.
Until recently, Starbucks did not have a formal structure or
process for oversight and management of these governance
tools, a reality that left the company’s reputation, brand
and culture at risk in the event these tools were not properly
managed or enforced.
Starbucks formed a Policy Governance Council in ?scal
2006 to oversee and approve our governance tools at the
global enterprise level, and to ensure they are well de?ned,
consistent with each other, current, stored for easy retrieval,
and e?ectively communicated to partners. Te Council
is comprised of company leaders who represent multiple
business units and functions, and is supported by Starbucks
newly created Policy O?ce and sta?.
Stakeholder Engagement
Starbucks stakeholders include partners (employees),
customers, suppliers, shareholders, governments, community
members, environmental groups, activists and many others.
By proactively engaging our stakeholders, including those
who may be directly impacted by our business decisions, we
are able to better understand their concerns and gain their
input on topics of mutual importance.
We hosted several stakeholder meetings in ?scal 2006,
including the following:
• A nutrition roundtable was held in October 2005 to
explore health and wellness issues in the food industry.
Our objectives were to better understand stakeholder
expectations of the company’s responsibilities regarding
speci?c nutrition issues, to learn how our current e?orts
are being perceived and to establish a platform for ongoing
dialogue on the topic. An important outcome of this
engagement was Starbucks decision to form a health and
wellness advisory panel in ?scal 2007.
• Starbucks engaged stakeholders to discuss water-related
issues in November 2005. Te discussion focused on
Starbucks role as both a user of water resources throughout
our supply chain and operations, and as a supporter of
e?orts to improve access to clean water around the world.
Stakeholders recommended that Starbucks conduct a
resource use assessment to clarify the company’s water
footprint as a ?rst step toward developing an overall
corporate water strategy. Participants urged us to use our
retail footprint and brand to raise awareness of the water
crisis facing people in developing countries, in addition to
funding clean water projects in communities.
• To help us improve our transparency, we engaged various
stakeholders in June 2006 and invited them to provide
feedback on Starbucks Fiscal 2005 CSR Report. Teir
input helped in?uence the changes we made to this current
CSR Report, including our decision to print only an
abridged version focused on our most material issues and
publish the full report online.
• In September 2006, Starbucks held a stakeholder
feedback session to gain initial input on the development
of our sustainable purchasing guidelines for Starbucks
cocoa, which will be piloted in ?scal 2007. Participants
who attended the session represented our suppliers,
governmental agencies, nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs), and chocolate manufacturers. It is likely they will
be consulted again on this issue as we move forward.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 13
Transparency and Reporting
Our stakeholders want to know what Starbucks is doing to
be a socially and environmentally responsible company. Since
2001, Starbucks has published a CSR Report as part of our
broader communications e?orts to provide transparency on
our CSR activities and performance. In preparing our ?scal
2006 and previous reports, we have been in?uenced by the
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) 2002 Guidelines, a set of
internationally recognized sustainability reporting standards.
A GRI Index is available on pages 5 and 6.
Starbucks also reviewed the recently released GRI G3
Guidelines in developing this report, which includes
speci?c guidance for reporting against the GRI principles
for de?ning content and quality. Te principles, along with
a brief description of how Starbucks addressed them, are
listed below:
Materiality: To determine what topics and indicators
to include in our report that re?ect the company’s most
signi?cant impacts and issues of greatest importance to
stakeholders, Starbucks conducted a materiality assessment,
described on page 3.
Stakeholder Inclusiveness: We de?ne who our stakeholders
are, describe the measures we took to engage and solicit
their feedback, and throughout this report explain how we
are addressing their concerns. More speci?c information
on our stakeholder engagement e?orts is described on the
previous page.
Sustainability Context: Discussing our CSR-related
measures and performance in the broader sustainability
context is essential. At the beginning of most sections, we
introduce the speci?c topics to be covered and explain how
they support our approach to sustainability.
Completeness: To provide readers with appropriate context
for what is and is not covered in this report, we de?ne the
scope, boundaries and topics contained in this report on
page 4. Since ?rst publishing a CSR report in 2001, we have
worked to make our report more comprehensive each year
and will continue to do so in the future.
Balance: Troughout this report, Starbucks has included
multi-year performance data and provided self assessments
of our performance. We have also included case studies
and external stakeholder comments as a way of providing
more insight and objectivity about some of the challenges
Starbucks faces.
Comparability: In developing the report each year, we
use our previous reports as starting points. We provide
follow-up information regarding any intended plans we
previously stated and include multi-year performance data
when possible. Self assessments about our performance are
also included. Tis enables our stakeholders to compare our
performance over time.
Accuracy: Te content and data included in this report have
been internally reviewed by numerous subject matter experts
and senior leaders at Starbucks, and been subject to a system
of internal controls. As described below, external veri?cation
was conducted by Moss Adams LLP, an independent
accounting and consulting ?rm. See pages 76 and 77 for
more information.
Timeliness: At the end of our ?scal year, which ends on the
Sunday closest to September 30, our goal is to complete and
release Starbucks CSR Report by the date of our Annual
Shareholders’ Meeting. Te date of the meeting varies year to
year, but usually takes place within six months after the ?scal
year closes.
Clarity: Each year we have worked to improve the design
and readability of our report in a format that is concise,
understandable and user-friendly. We have also reduced
the amount of content covered in our printed report and
presented more information online.
Reliability: External veri?cation of the data and statements
made in Starbucks CSR Annual Reports began in 2002,
when the company retained Seattle-based Moss Adams LLP,
the 12
th
largest accounting and consulting ?rm in the U.S.
Te selection of Moss Adams met Starbucks criteria for a
high-quality ?rm that had not worked with the company
previously, and a ?rm that could develop a customized
approach for verifying CSR-related data and content. (See
pages 76 and 77.)
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 14
External Recognition
Socially Responsible Investments (SRI)
Tere are a variety of socially responsible mutual funds
available to investors who choose to invest in companies
that meet speci?c criteria in areas covering various social,
environmental and economic dimensions. Starbucks was
listed on several SRI indices (mentioned below) and included
in some socially responsible mutual funds in ?scal 2006.
• Calvert Social Index
™
• Citizens Index
®
• Domini 400 Social
SM
Index (DS400)
• Dow Jones Sustainability North America Index (DJSI
North America)
• Dow Jones Sustainability United States Index (DJSI
United States)
• Dow Jones Sustainability World Index (DJSI World)
• Ethibel Sustainability Index, Excellence Constituent
• FTSE4Good Global Index
• FTSE4Good U.S. Index
• FTSE4Good US 100 Tradable Index
• KLD Broad Market Social
SM
Index (BMSI)
• KLD Large Cap Social
SM
Index (LCSI)
• KLD Select Social
SM
Index (SSI)
CSR Awards
We are proud of the following CSR-related recognition that
Starbucks received in ?scal 2006. While these honors are
greatly valued and appreciated, we do not view them as end
results but rather as important acknowledgements of our
ongoing commitment to CSR and our e?orts to date.
Multiple-year awards
Starbucks was ranked 17
th
on the list of “100 Best Corporate
Citizens” by Business Ethics magazine in 2006. Starbucks has
made this list every year since 2000.
Starbucks has made Fortune’s list of “Te 100 Best
Companies to Work For” eight times. Starbucks ranked 29
th
on the list in 2006.
Single-year awards
Te U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Green Power
Partnership list of Top 25 Green Power Partners ranked
Starbucks sixth for our signi?cant purchase of Green Power.
Starbucks was recognized as one of 15 employers to
receive the “Secretary of Defense Employer Support
Freedom Award” given by the National Committee for
Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve, a Defense
Department agency.
Starbucks was recognized by DiversityInc in its “Top 50
Companies for Diversity” and “Top 10 Companies
for Latinos.”
Starbucks Calgary received the “Employer of Persons with
Disabilities Award of Distinction” at the Alberta Business
Awards of Distinction Banquet.
Starbucks UK was recognized as one of “UK Top 50 Best
Places to Work” (ranked 34th), awarded by the Great Places
to Work Institute, in partnership with the Financial Times.
Starbucks was ranked 9th by college students as a “Most
Desirable Company to Join,” a listing compiled by Cheers
magazine in Taiwan.
Starbucks was ranked 25th on Newsweek Japan’s “2006
World Corporation Ranking 500” list based on sales,
corporate social responsibility and return on equity.
Starbucks was recognized as “Model Company for
Sustainable Economic Development” by the Luohu
Government in Shenzhen, China.
Starbucks UK was awarded a “Big Tick” by Business in the
Community in recognition of excellence in corporate social
responsibility, for the Partners in Education program.
STARBUCKS AND CORPORATE SOCI AL RE SPONSI BI LI TY 15
United Nations Global Compact
In June 2004, Starbucks joined the UN Global Compact,
a voluntary international network of corporations, UN
agencies, trade unions and nongovernmental organizations
that support 10 universal principles. Tese principles are
based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights; the
International Labour Organisation’s Declaration of the
Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work; and the Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development. We consider
these principles to be a natural extension of Starbucks
Guiding Principles, which de?ne the company’s commitment
to social and environmental responsibility.
Trough our participation in the Global Compact, we
are continually learning how the company can strengthen
existing or develop new internal practices and policies. For
instance, Starbucks advanced e?orts to create an overarching
human rights policy during ?scal 2006, and in 2007 will seek
approval of this policy. Tis is an important step as we further
our expansion to areas of the world where human rights
protections are not consistently upheld.
Te table to the right features the Global Compact’s 10
principles and references to sections in this report that speak
to how our priorities are aligned with each principle. We plan
to report our progress annually.
UN Global Compact “Communications on Progress” Report
PRINCIPLES PAGE
HUMAN RIGHTS
1. Business should support and respect the
protection of internationally proclaimed human
rights.
19, 20, 29, 30, 31, 33,
65, 70, 71
2. Business should ensure that they are not complicit
in human rights abuses.
19, 20, 29, 30, 65
LABOR STANDARDS
3. Business should uphold the freedom of
association and the effective recognition of the
right to collective bargaining.
70
4. Business should support the elimination of all
forms of forced and compulsory labor.
19, 20, 29, 30, 33
5. Business should support the effective abolition of
child labor.
19, 20, 29, 30, 33, 70
6. Business should support the elimination of
discrimination of employment and occupation.
65, 70, 73, 74
ENVIRONMENT
7. Business should support a precautionary
approach to environmental challenges.
19, 54-59
8. Business should undertake initiatives to promote
greater environmental responsibility.
19, 30, 31, 54-62
9. Business should encourage the development and
diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies.
55-57
CORRUPTION
10. Business should work against corruption in all its
forms, including extortion and bribery.
10, 65
16 PRODUCTS 16
OUR WORLD OF PRODUCTS
For 35 years, Starbucks has purchased, roasted
and sold high-quality coffee beans through retail
outlets and commercial wholesale accounts.
While coffee continues to be Starbucks core
product, the company markets, sells and/or
licenses a broader range of products, including
Tazo
®
tea, Hear Music
®
CDs, Ethos
™
water,
Starbucks
™
Liqueurs, various food and dairy
items and an array of brewing equipment and
merchandise.
With every product Starbucks brands, markets and sells,
or uses in our operations, we uphold our commitment to
quality and strive to source our products in a socially and
environmentally responsible manner. Tis is what we refer to
as sustainable trade.
In this section, we explain how we are evolving our approach
to sustainable trade by focusing on quality and the social
and environmental conditions under which our products are
produced. Te following major topics are discussed:
• Sustaining Co?ee Quality
• Sustainable Trade – Purchasing Our Non-Co?ee Products
– Agriculture Products
– Cocoa, Tea, Dairy and Bakery
– Manufactured Goods
– Ethos
™
water
• Quality Assurance and Product Recall
Sustaining Coffee Quality
Whenever a customer walks into a Starbucks, we consider it
an opportunity to share our passion and knowledge of co?ee,
serve the highest-quality beverage, and deliver an experience
so rewarding that this customer becomes our customer – and
our store becomes their Starbucks. We strive to create the
ultimate Starbucks Experience for all of our customers, all of
the time.
At its core, the Starbucks Experience is about great co?ee –
the quality that our customers have come to expect from
Starbucks and for which they are willing to pay a premium.
We know to continually earn our customers’ loyalty, the
quality of our co?ee can never be compromised.
Te farmers, millers, exporters and importers who grow,
process and/or supply co?ee to Starbucks share the same
uncompromising commitment to quality we value. Because of
this, they enable Starbucks to deliver on our promise of high
quality to our customers.
In this section we discuss the steps Starbucks is taking
to ensure the sustainable production and supply of high-
quality co?ee. Te underlying force behind all of this is our
relationships with co?ee farmers and suppliers. Tey are
critical to our business and, we believe, Starbucks is vital
to theirs.
Speci?c topics in this section include:
• Overview of the co?ee industry
• Creating a sustainable approach
• C.A.F.E. Practices:
– An overview of Starbucks co?ee buying guidelines
– Veri?cation system
– Results and achievements
– Findings and next steps
• Economic transparency
• Linking premium prices to premium quality
• Respect for workers’ human rights
• Starbucks and Fair Trade
• Purchasing certi?ed organic and conservation co?ees
• Providing farmers access to credit
– Assisting co?ee farmers in Ethiopia
• Investing in projects in co?ee-growing communities
– Black Apron Exclusives
™
program
– Tropical Storm Stan relief e?orts
17 PRODUCTS 17
The Coffee Industry – An Overview
It is believed that co?ee was ?rst consumed as a hot beverage
in East Africa during the 11th century. Today, co?ee is one
of the most popular beverages, with more than $80 billion
in retail sales worldwide.* Furthermore, the co?ee industry
provides a livelihood for an estimated 25 million co?ee
farmers* in more than 60 co?ee-producing countries.*
Te co?ee market has always been prone to ups and downs,
mostly related to the balance between supply and demand.
Back in 2001, co?ee prices fell to a record low of $0.42 per
pound ($0.91 per kilogram), and ?uctuated near the bottom
for several years. Tese particular market conditions created a
climate of economic instability that had an impact on many
farmers and their communities. Today’s market conditions
are greatly improved, evident by recent prices of co?ee traded
on the New York “C” market (the worldwide reference used
by co?ee traders). In ?scal 2006, world co?ee prices averaged
$1.04 per pound ($2.29 per kilogram).
Tere are two commercially viable species of co?ee – robusta
and arabica. High-quality arabica co?ee is grown on farms
that range from very small family-run parcels to large-scale
estates, located primarily between the Tropics of Cancer and
Capricorn and situated at higher elevations. Tese elevations
provide optimal climatic conditions needed to grow the type
of co?ee that is considered specialty grade.
Te higher-quality and more expensive arabica beans are
sold as specialty co?ee, which accounts for approximately
10 percent** of total worldwide co?ee purchases, including
the co?ee Starbucks buys. Starbucks purchases high-quality
arabica co?ee beans, paying premium prices for premium
quality. Tese co?ees are sold under the Starbucks, Seattle’s
Best Co?ee and Torrefazione Italia brands.
* International Co?ee Organization
** Specialty Co?ee Association of America
Quick Coffee Facts:
Total worldwide co?ee production (Oct. 2005–Sept. 2006):
15 billion pounds (7 billion kilograms)*
Total co?ee purchased by Starbucks (Oct. 2005–Sept.
2006): 294 million pounds (133 million kilograms)
Number of co?ee farmers worldwide: 25 million*
Number of countries where co?ee is grown: About 60*
Number of countries where Starbucks bought co?ee in
?scal 2006: 24
18 PRODUCTS 18
Creating a Sustainable Approach
After years of traveling to co?ee-growing regions around the
world, we have come to deeply appreciate the care that goes
into producing high-quality co?ee. Our co?ee buyers, quality
experts and agronomists spent considerable time in the ?eld
during ?scal 2006, sometimes traveling great distances to
reach a particular co?ee farm.
Tese visits are always worthwhile, especially when we have
been able to engage directly with farmers, observe their
best practices, gain insight about their short- and long-term
challenges and identify ways that Starbucks can contribute
to the longevity of their business. More important, they
have helped to raise our awareness about the need for a more
sustainable approach to co?ee production – one that touches
on every essential aspect of the supply chain – from farming
to processing to exporting.
When we began our journey to create a more sustainable
model, there were several key assumptions we considered and
which we still believe to be relevant today. We assume that:
• A holistic strategy for sustainability must include criteria
for quality, social, environmental and economic aspects.
• Premium prices paid for co?ee are linked to
premium quality.
• Economic transparency is required and necessary to
evaluate whether farmers receive equitable payment for
their crops.
• Our strong relationships and direct engagement with
co?ee farmers and suppliers will keep us in touch with
their progress and issues.
• Co?ee-growing communities will bene?t from the
economic stability of local farmers as well as from targeted
community investments.
• Access to credit and other resources will enable
farmers to make quality improvements and strengthen
their businesses.
• Certi?cation labels, such as Fair Trade Certi?ed™ and
organic, help to advance speci?c aspects of sustainable
co?ee farming.
• By embracing sustainability, Starbucks can lead change
within the co?ee industry.
As our journey progressed over several years, we created and
launched a number of programs and initiatives. Collectively,
they represent the key components of Starbucks sustainable
model for co?ee production, and have been the focus of our
ongoing e?orts. Tey are:
• Co?ee and Farmer Equity (C.A.F.E.) Practices, a set of
co?ee-buying guidelines, was formally introduced in
?scal 2004.
• Starbucks Farmer Support Center, an on-the-ground ?eld
o?ce located in Costa Rica, opened in ?scal 2004 to
provide technical resources and ongoing support to co?ee
farmers throughout the world.
• Funding of co?ee community projects was started in
?scal 1998.
• Starbucks Black Apron Exclusives
™
program launched
in ?scal 2004 to showcase and recognize the production
of rari?ed co?ees of exceptional quality, and reward
the origin farming community with funding for a
local project.
• Loans that enable farmers to access credit began in
?scal 2001.
• An alliance with Conservation International began in
1998 to promote environmentally sound practices aimed at
preserving biodiversity in some co?ee-growing regions in
Latin America.
• Te purchasing of certi?ed co?ees, such as Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ and organic co?ees – both of which promote
aspects of a sustainable farming model – began in
?scal 2000.
• A partnership with the African Wildlife Foundation to
advance sustainable farming practices in East Africa was
initiated in ?scal 2005.
My Starbucks –
I want you - my Starbucks friends – to
appreciate the impact your company is
having on higher prices being paid to
coffee farmers in Papua New Guinea.
The local mill is paying the best price
local farmers have ever been paid.
Everyone here knows Starbucks is buying
this coffee, but only if it’s good quality.
So now farmers are competing with their
quality so they can sell to Starbucks.
It shows me how supply and demand is
contributing to a sustainable solution.
Thank you, Starbucks.
Aarlie Hull
(A coffee supplier to Starbucks)
19 PRODUCTS 19
C.A.F.E. Practices
Te Conservation Principles for Co?ee Production, a set
of multistakeholder criteria launched in 2001, became the
original platform that Starbucks used to evolve and eventually
develop a more holistic set of co?ee-buying guidelines that
is now known as Co?ee and Farmer Equity (C.A.F.E.)
Practices. Tese guidelines were designed to ensure the
sustainable supply of high-quality co?ee; achieve economic
accountability; promote social responsibility within the co?ee
supply chain; and protect the environment.
C.A.F.E. Practices encompasses various sustainability
measures that are de?ned by 28 criteria, extending to both
the farming and processing of co?ee. Te criteria, which serve
as the basis for a comprehensive scorecard, fall under four
focus areas: product quality; economic accountability; social
responsibility; and environmental leadership.
Tousands of participants – from our largest co?ee suppliers
to many small-holder farms and cooperatives – have applied
and been approved as C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers since
2004. When suppliers apply to C.A.F.E. Practices, they
must undergo a third-party evaluation to verify the degree to
which their practices are aligned with the criteria. (For more
information about the veri?cation process, see page 23.)
The Link Between Quality and Price
We believe that with any product there is an inherent link
between quality and price. Trough our close working
relationships with co?ee farmers and suppliers, we have
always emphasized the importance of quality as the best, most
sustainable driver of higher prices paid. We understand that
co?ee farming, like any business, must be pro?table to be
sustainable. Furthermore, we know that when co?ee farmers
do not earn enough to cover their production costs and/or
provide a reasonable income, they may switch to other crops
or perhaps stop growing co?ee altogether.
Starbucks commitment to pay premium prices for premium
quality co?ee has not wavered over the years. It is an
approach that not only serves the short- and long-term
economic interests of co?ee farmers and suppliers; it also
serves Starbucks interests by creating an incentive for farmers
to improve quality and increase production that in turn
contributes to a more sustainable supply of high-quality co?ee
which we depend on to support Starbucks continued growth.
What Determines Price?
Quality is the most important factor in determining the
price we pay for co?ee, but not the only factor. Te cost of
production is also re?ected in the price as well as prevailing
market conditions which vary from country to country and
even from region to region.
What Did Starbucks Pay for Coffee?
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks purchased 294 million pounds
(133 million kilograms) of co?ee and paid an average price of
$1.42 per pound ($3.12 per kilogram).
Respect for Workers’ Human Rights
Starbucks believes every person deserves to be treated with
respect and dignity, and is entitled to a fair, safe and humane
work environment. Tis is a deeply held value at Starbucks
and one of our Guiding Principles. Our commitment to this
value applies as much to our own workforce as it does to the
workers employed by our suppliers.
Child labor is a topic widely reported in the media. Te
coverage has raised awareness about the issue and led to some
reforms. While the concern over child labor remains, it may
not always be well understood. For instance, in many co?ee-
growing communities, it is a natural extension of family life
for children to work alongside their parents. Concerns over
child labor arise when it is considered forced, of a hazardous
nature, inappropriate or prevents a child from attending
school. Tere are international child labor standards that
provide clear guidance on what is and is not acceptable.*
Starbucks is committed to upholding international child
labor standards in our own operations and throughout our
supply chain by making them a stipulation of our supplier
relationships. Like other companies, Starbucks has adopted
policies that require all of our suppliers – from large-scale to
small enterprises – to comply with international or locally
mandated labor standards, whichever is higher.
International labor standards also include principles related
to working conditions, such as the health and safety of
workers; minimum wage requirements; security; and freedom
of association, among others. As part of C.A.F.E. Practices,
Starbucks developed a comprehensive system to verify
our co?ee suppliers’ compliance with international labor
standards, including child and forced labor practices as well
as other socially and environmentally responsible practices.
* International Labor O?ce, 2006
20 PRODUCTS 20
The Four Fundamentals of
C.A.F.E. Practices
C.A.F.E. Practices Criteria – Areas of Focus
Product Quality (prerequisite): All co?ee purchased from
C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers must meet Starbucks standards
of high quality.
Economic Accountability (prerequisite): C.A.F.E. Practices
suppliers are required to submit evidence of payments made at
all levels along our co?ee supply chain, including receipts that
indicate how much was paid to farmers for their co?ee.
Social Responsibility (evaluated components): C.A.F.E.
Practices suppliers – and other entities within their supply
network – must have certain practices in place that ensure
safe, fair and humane working conditions; the protection
of workers’ rights; and adequate living conditions. Te
minimum/living wage requirements and child labor/forced
labor/discrimination criteria are mandatory.
Environmental Leadership (evaluated components): In the
growing and/or processing of co?ee, environmental measures
must be in place to manage waste, protect water quality,
conserve water and energy use, preserve biodiversity and
reduce agrochemical use.
Te C.A.F.E. Practices scorecard of indicators is available at
www.scscerti?ed.com/csrpurchasing/Starbucks.html.
C.A.F.E. Practices – Hitting
Our Targets
Achieving our annual targets for the amount of co?ee
purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices–approved suppliers
has not always been easy. We have worked to increase
participation in C.A.F.E. Practices by expanding to new
regions, motivating thousands of farmers and suppliers to
apply, and guiding them through the application process.
Currently, suppliers from 10 di?erent co?ee-producing
countries have applied and been approved to participate in
C.A.F.E. Practices.
We took the following speci?c steps in ?scal 2006 to get to
this point:
• Laid important groundwork for the expansion of C.A.F.E.
Practices in Africa and Asia Paci?c.
• Trained 30 potential veri?ers in Africa and Asia Paci?c,
and held a “train the trainer” session in Costa Rica,
attended by lead veri?ers from 14 approved veri?cation
organizations. Te additional veri?ers enabled more
suppliers to be evaluated and approved for C.A.F.E.
Practices. Trainings were conducted by Scienti?c
Certi?cation Systems (SCS), an independent evaluation
and certi?cation ?rm.
• Spent more time in the ?eld with C.A.F.E. Practices
participants, soliciting their feedback, o?ering support
about how they can improve co?ee quality and scores,
and conducting training workshops via Farmer Support
Center agronomists.
• Continued to work with and solicit input from various
parties on ways Starbucks can improve elements of
C.A.F.E. Practices, including Conservation International,
a nonpro?t environmental organization; African Wildlife
Foundation, an organization dedicated to conserving the
wildlife and wild lands of Africa; and SCS.
Results and Achievements
Metrics used to measure the growth of C.A.F.E.
Practices include:
• Total pounds of co?ee purchased annually from C.A.F.E.
Practices–approved suppliers.
• Estimated number of hectares (acres) of sustainable land
linked to C.A.F.E. Practices purchases.
• Percentage of C.A.F.E. Practices co?ee purchased from
approved suppliers by status level.
Economic
Accountability
Product
Quality
Environmental
Leadership
Social
Responsibility
Prerequisites Evaluated
Components
C.A.F.E.
Practices
21 PRODUCTS 21
C.A.F.E. Practices Purchases
Starbucks established an aggressive goal to purchase 150
million pounds (68 million kilograms) of green (unroasted)
co?ee from C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers in ?scal 2006,
approximately double the volume purchased the previous
year. We exceeded that goal with purchases of 155 million
pounds (70 million kilograms), representing more than 50
percent of all co?ee purchased in ?scal 2006 by Starbucks.
(See graph for purchases and future targets.) Te 155 million
pounds of co?ee purchased under the program were produced
on farms that represent a total of approximately 200,000
hectares (494,000 acres) of sustainable land.
Percent Purchased by Supplier Group
Tere are three status levels for C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers:
Strategic, Preferred and Veri?ed. Of the 155 million pounds
of co?ee purchased from C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers in ?scal
2006, the percentage from each supplier group is as follows:
• 19 percent purchased from Strategic Suppliers (those with
scores of 80 percent and higher in each of the social and
environmental areas)
• 12 percent purchased from Preferred Suppliers (those with
scores between 60 percent and 79 percent in each of the
social and environmental areas)
• 69 percent purchased from Veri?ed Suppliers (those with
scores of less than 60 percent in each of the social and
environmental areas)
C.A.F.E. Practices – Findings and
Next Steps
When we ?rst introduced C.A.F.E. Practices, we were
inspired and motivated to help create a better future for co?ee
farmers and their communities, based on a shared interest to
sustain the production of high-quality co?ee. Our vision –
and commitment – has not changed, only deepened.
Te amount of time, energy and resources needed to
implement and manage C.A.F.E. Practices across such a
complex, diverse and sprawling supply chain is considerable –
and at times more than we anticipated. We did, however,
expect the process to involve challenges. In fact, there were
a number of obstacles we faced – and overcame – in the last
two years, such as making C.A.F.E. Practices as accessible to
small-scale producers as it has been to larger co?ee producers.
We have encountered some dilemmas that we are continually
working to address. Given our optimistic mindset at
Starbucks, we choose to view these as opportunities
for improvement. We outline a few of these ongoing
opportunities below.
Continued Emphasis on Relationships, Communication
and Training
As our demand for co?ee grows and our already complex
supplier network expands, we understand the importance
of staying in touch with and training our suppliers so they
understand how to complete the application forms for
C.A.F.E. Practices, manage the required veri?cation process,
and adapt their practices to improve their scores. We must
also seek e?ciencies on our end that enable us to respond
more quickly to the needs of our suppliers.
Veri?ers and Improved Systems Needed
Our plan to buy more sustainable co?ee in the future
can only be realized if our network of approved suppliers
participating in C.A.F.E. Practices grows. Te process of
approving more suppliers will involve conducting a great
number of inspections by third-party veri?ers.
At the end of ?scal 2006, we had 143 trained and approved
veri?ers in the ?eld, which was 43 more than the previous
year. Going forward, we expect that more veri?ers will
be needed to keep pace with the increasing number of
veri?cations that will be required.
We see the need for more trained veri?ers as an opportunity,
and we are encouraged by the interest farmers have shown in
becoming approved C.A.F.E. Practices suppliers. And because
of this, veri?ers will need to be responsive to the increasing
demand of more inspections.
13
(6)
Coffee Purchased From C.A.F.E. Practices Suppliers
Fiscal year
Millions of
pounds
(kilograms)
C.A.F.E. Practices Goal C.A.F.E. Practices Actual
2003*** 2004*** 2005 2006 2007
43
(20)
77*
(35)
155**
(70)
225
(102)
150
(68)
75
(34)
30
(14)
* Represents 25% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases for ?scal 2005.
** Represents 53% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases for ?scal 2006.
*** Co?ee purchased under Starbucks Preferred Supplier Program guidelines.
22 PRODUCTS 22
Our priorities are to increase the number of trained
veri?ers and make the veri?cation process more e?cient and
user-friendly. Some adjustments were made in ?scal 2006,
and others are in the works.
Te process improvements we are making are necessary to
ensure that Starbucks co?ee buying guidelines are supported
by a highly e?cient and credible veri?cation system with the
capacity to serve the growing number of suppliers wanting to
participate in C.A.F.E. Practices.
Extending C.A.F.E. Practices to Africa and Asia Paci?c
In 2004, Starbucks opened a Farmer Support Center in Costa
Rica, which has allowed us to work more closely with farmers
and suppliers on their sustainability measures and co?ee
quality. Shortly thereafter, suppliers in that region began
applying and gaining approval for C.A.F.E. Practices, and the
number has kept growing ever since.
Increasing our focus on C.A.F.E. Practices in Africa and
Asia Paci?c has proven to be di?cult, as expected. In Kenya,
Starbucks has been collaborating with the African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF) on various sustainability initiatives as a
?rst step toward advancing C.A.F.E. Practices in Africa.
In both Africa and Asia Paci?c, Starbucks has been working
to introduce C.A.F.E. Practices to co?ee farmers, processors
and suppliers. Progress has been slowed by realities of local
co?ee industries, lack of ?nancial transparency, minimal
understanding of C.A.F.E. Practices among local suppliers,
and too few trained veri?ers. Some headway was made in
?scal 2006 to improve suppliers’ understanding of C.A.F.E.
Practices and train more veri?ers, partly because of e?orts
made by SCS, Starbucks co?ee buyers, agronomists and
business partners to organize training sessions.
We realize there may be a need to consider regional guidance
for C.A.F.E. Practices to make the criteria more relevant to
unique conditions in Africa and Asia Paci?c. Also, the need
for more locally based support through regional Farmer
Support Centers has been con?rmed.
My Starbucks –
In a letter to Starbucks
president and ceo, Jim Donald,
Estuardo Porras wrote:
Since Tropical Storm Stan passed,
I have been spending 24 hours a day
assessing the damage on the El Faro
and Las Delicias coffee farms in
Guatemala. Now I am glad to inform
you that C.A.F.E. Practices has
been by far our best investment.
Both farms are virtually intact in
regards to any disease or soil erosion
issues. I strongly believe that the
implementation of C.A.F.E. Practices on
both farms has greatly contributed to
our ability to withstand any potential
adversities caused by this storm.
Your friend,
Estuardo Porras, Owner
El Faro and Las Delicias farms,
Guatemala
F UT URE G OA L S
Going forward, our efforts will focus on:
• Introducing a revised version of the guidelines to allow
for streamlined, ef?cient and objective scoring.
• Updating our guidelines to account for regional
differences, including clari?cation of minimum
performance levels and compliance with local labor
laws and wages for permanent, temporary and seasonal
workers.
• Implementing a new IT system for online veri?er
reporting and score calculation.
F UT URE G OA L
In ?scal 2007, we plan to hire additional agronomists
who will focus on helping coffee farmers worldwide
implement C.A.F.E. Practices.
23 PRODUCTS 23
C.A.F.E. Practices – The Veri?cation
Process
When suppliers apply to C.A.F.E. Practices, they must
undergo an independent third-party evaluation to verify
the degree to which their practices are aligned with the 28
criteria. Upon completion of each evaluation, the veri?er
submits a report along with a scorecard to the applicant
and to Starbucks for review. Te scores given by the veri?er
determine the supplier’s approval status in C.A.F.E. Practices.
Evaluations involve ?eld inspections, face-to-face interviews
with workers, document reviews and desk audits. Te
conditions of a supplier’s status dictate the terms of
reveri?cation. Reveri?cation is periodically required in order
to measure continuity and sustainability improvements.
Since launching C.A.F.E. Practices in 2004, Starbucks has
retained Scienti?c Certi?cation Systems (SCS), a third-party
evaluation and certi?cation ?rm, to help develop and oversee
the veri?cation system and conduct ongoing veri?er trainings.
By the end of ?scal 2006, SCS had trained 30 additional
individual veri?ers on how to evaluate and score suppliers
against C.A.F.E. Practices’ comprehensive set of criteria.
Independent veri?ers for C.A.F.E. Practices are a?liated
with 25 di?erent organizations conducting veri?cations in
19 countries.
Economic Transparency
To help assure that the farmer receives an equitable share
of the price paid by Starbucks, a requirement for economic
transparency is included in our co?ee contracts, including
all of our contracts with suppliers participating in C.A.F.E.
Practices. Tis provision stipulates that our suppliers must
provide credible evidence of payments, usually in the form
of receipts indicating payments made at all levels along the
co?ee supply chain, including prices paid to farmers. In
?scal 2006, 98 percent of our co?ee contracts included an
economic transparency clause requesting documentation of
payments made to various participants in the supply chain.
In 95 percent of these contracts, economic transparency was
required to the producer level.
Requiring co?ee suppliers to provide evidence of payments
was almost inconceivable several years ago, especially given
the di?used and complex nature of the co?ee supply chain
and the historical lack of record keeping. However, since
Starbucks instituted this requirement, a notable change has
started to take place in the specialty co?ee industry, with
more serious attention now being focused on assuring that
farmers receive an equitable share of the purchase price. We
believe this ultimately bene?ts co?ee farmers and other key
suppliers who add value along the supply chain.
While we are encouraged by the progress to date,
institutionalizing this new requirement has come with certain
challenges. In particular, the co?ee industry does not have a
standardized mechanism in place that allows all parties across
the co?ee supply chain to easily submit evidence of payment
in a consistent, uniform manner. At Starbucks, we receive
di?erent forms of documentation – from a simple receipt
for the co?ee cherries that the farmer delivered to the mill
to full purchase agreements that include more levels along
the co?ee supply chain. Tese documents not only di?er in
quality, they re?ect variations in currency, industry standards
and laws, units of measure and are prepared in many
di?erent languages.
Despite these realities and the unique circumstances of each
producing country, Starbucks will continue to work toward
verifying the submitted evidence in order to assure that
farmers received an equitable portion of the purchase price.
Starbucks and Fair Trade
Starbucks and the Fair Trade movement share common
goals: to help ensure that farmers receive a fair price for their
co?ee and have improved access to international markets.
C.A.F.E. Practices and the Fair Trade system both focus
on cultivating long-term, stable relationships with farmers;
providing supplemental funding for community projects;
and providing farmers with access to a?ordable credit. A
point of di?erentiation is that the Fair Trade co?ee model
focuses on smallholder farmers belonging to cooperatives
and associations, while Starbucks purchases from co?ee
cooperatives, farms and supply networks of all sizes and scale.
Starbucks ?rst relationship with a Fair Trade certi?cation
and licensing organization began in April 2000, when we
established an agreement with TransFair USA that allowed
Starbucks to purchase, roast and sell Fair Trade Certi?ed™
co?ee. We are still actively engaged with TransFair USA, as
well as with Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International
(FLO) and nine of the 20 other national initiatives around
the world that oversee and coordinate Fair Trade licensing
and sales promotion in 24 of our international markets.
Each Fair Trade national initiative is unique and has its own
requirements, trademarks and protocols, a reality that has
constrained our ability to o?er Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee
internationally. Starbucks is committed to working together
with FLO and the national initiatives on a streamlined
solution that will make it easier for multinational companies,
like Starbucks, to distribute and sell Fair Trade Certi?ed™
products in other countries.
24 PRODUCTS 24
WHAT IS FAIR TRADE CERTIFIED
™
?
The Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
labels are owned by the Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International and Fair Trade national initiatives
around the world. Starbucks pays licensing fees to the national initiatives in order to af?x the Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
trademark on our
packaging. According to the national initiatives, a majority of the fees support various Fair Trade activities to help market the product,
and the remaining fees are used to fund the certi?cation process, the development of standards and support for producers.
Fair Trade products appeal to socially minded consumers who place a high value on the Fair Trade certi?cation seal. Fairtrade Labelling
Organizations International certi?es to consumers through the seal that a minimum price* of $1.24 - $1.26 per pound ($1.39 - $1.41
per pound for organic) was paid to the farmer cooperative that produced the coffee. However, factors such as market recognition of Fair
Trade coffee quality, higher commodity prices, and supply and demand may work in combination to raise the Fair Trade price.
Fair Trade certi?cation includes criteria to be met by coffee cooperatives, such as fair labor conditions, freedom of association and
certain environmental standards. To be certi?ed as Fair Trade, the coffee is to be produced only by farmers who belong to farmer-
owned, democratically run coffee cooperatives and associations listed on the Fair Trade registry. An estimated four percent of global
coffee production is Fair Trade Certi?ed.
™
* Tese established prices are set by Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International for the purpose of covering the costs of sustainable production and living.
Te pricing components include $1.19-$1.21 for the co?ee (depending on the region), $0.05 for a social premium and an additional $0.15 premium for
organic. When “C” market prices rise above the Fair Trade minimum price, Fair Trade prices are adjusted accordingly to be at least $0.05 above the “C” price.
Starbucks will continue to work with various Fair Trade
national initiatives to promote and market our Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee products in our stores around the world.
We believe these e?orts will help to further increase customer
demand and sales of Starbucks Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ees.
Purchasing enough Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee to meet the
demand will be essential.
Previously, we set arbitrary targets for the amount of Fair
Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee we planned to purchase annually, an
approach that is no longer practical. Instead, we will begin
linking our purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee to
sales forecasts.
Trough our purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee in
?scal 2006, we:
• Provided more than $900,000 in Fair Trade social
premiums through the price we paid for Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee. FLO certi?es that these funds were
redistributed back to the Fair Trade cooperatives we
purchased from to support local community improvement
projects decided upon by the general assembly of
the members.
• Paid approximately $8 million more to Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
cooperatives than they would have received if
they sold their co?ee at “C” market prices. Tis is similar
to the premiums that Starbucks typically pays above the
commodity price for other high-quality co?ees. According
to TransFair USA, the average price of Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee during ?scal 2006 was $1.48 per pound,
including the social premiums. Approximately 80 percent
of the price paid to the Fair Trade registered cooperatives
goes to co?ee farmers, and the remaining 20 percent covers
co-op overhead, export costs and social investments.
• Paid a total of $1.6 million in licensing fees to various
Fair Trade organizations, with the majority paid to
TransFair USA.
Our Purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Co?ee
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks global purchases totaled more
than 18 million pounds (8 million kilograms) of Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ co?ee, representing approximately 14 percent of
global Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee imports, and about 30
percent imported into the United States.
Starbucks remains the largest purchaser, roaster and
distributor of Fair Trade Certi?ed™ co?ee in North America.
At the beginning of ?scal 2006, Starbucks set a 12 million
pound (5 million kilogram) purchasing target for Fair Trade
Certi?ed
™
co?ee, which we exceeded by more than 6 million
pounds (3 million kilograms) because we extended our line-
up and broadened distribution of our Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
product o?erings. In addition to o?ering Café Estima Blend
™
in Starbucks stores, strong sales were achieved through the
rollout of a new Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee product under
the Kirkland Signature brand in Costco stores in the U.S.
and Canada.
*Represents 6% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Coffee
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Pounds
(kilograms)
5 million
(2 million)
11 million
(5 million)
18 million*
(8 million)
25 PRODUCTS 25
Going Forward
Starbucks is committed to purchasing Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee as a way of supporting the network of Fair Trade
registered co?ee cooperatives. Speci?cally, Starbucks plans to:
• Link global purchases of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee
to customer demand in ?scal 2007. Using ?scal 2006
demand as a barometer, we expect that Fair Trade
Certi?ed™ co?ees could represent approximately ?ve
percent of our total co?ee purchases in a given year.
• Work with the Fair Trade national initiatives to promote
and increase customer demand and sales of our Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ees while also collaborating on a
streamlined approach to the global distribution of this
product.
• O?er Kirkland Signature Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee to
Costco for stores located in the UK, Japan, Taiwan and
Korea beginning in ?scal 2007.
• Support and promote the sale of Café Estima Blend
™
co?ee in Starbucks company-operated stores, foodservice
channels and other points of distribution.
• Continue to work with Fair Trade organizations to
communicate key ?ndings and challenges, provide
transparency to the farmer level, augment the business
capacity of participating Fair Trade cooperatives, and
support a multipronged approach to ethical, sustainable
co?ee purchasing.
Purchasing Certi?ed Organic and
Conservation Coffees
Starbucks purchases certi?ed organic and conservation
(shade grown) co?ees. Tese purchases support the
company’s larger e?ort to preserve the natural environment
and/or promote economic stability. (See graphs at right for
amounts purchased.)
As consumer demand for certi?ed organic co?ee continues
to grow, Starbucks purchases of this co?ee has also increased.
Some of the certi?ed organic co?ee Starbucks buys is
produced by farmers participating in the Fair Trade system,
in which case this co?ee is included in our total purchases
of both Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
and certi?ed organic. In
other instances, certi?ed organic co?ee is purchased from
farmers participating in Conservation International’s (CI)
Conservation Co?ee
SM
program, and therefore accounted as
purchases of conservation, organic and possibly even Fair
Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ees.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks o?ered two speci?cally labeled
types of certi?ed organic co?ee, and Seattle’s Best Co?ee sold
eight varieties.
Over the years Starbucks has purchased millions of pounds
of conservation co?ees grown by farmers participating in CI’s
Conservation Co?ee
SM
program. Tis particular source of our
supply stems from the alliance Starbucks and CI formed in
1998 to encourage farmers to use ecologically sound growing
practices that help protect biodiversity in environmentally
sensitive areas and to stimulate the production and sale of
high-quality co?ee grown under the canopy of bird-friendly
shade trees.
Today, much of the conservation co?ee grown by
participating farmers is also certi?ed organic or “in-
transition” co?ee, the term used when an agricultural product
is grown under organic conditions but has yet to be certi?ed.
Beginning in ?scal 2007, the co?ee Starbucks purchases from
farmers participating in the Conservation Co?ee
SM
program
will no longer be tracked as conservation co?ee. Instead we
will track only certi?ed organic co?ee purchases rather than
specifying both organic and conservation purchases, which
in many cases is the same co?ee. Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
co?ee
that is also certi?ed organic will continue to be tracked in
both ways.
Note: Co?ees may be certi?ed in more than one category.
*Represents 4% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Pounds
(kilograms)
Certi?ed Organic Coffee
6 million
(3 million)
9 million
(4 million)
12 million*
(5 million)
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
*Represents 1% of Starbucks total co?ee purchases.
Conservation (Shade Grown) Coffee
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
2 million*
(1 million)
2 million
(1 million)
2 million
(1 million)
Pounds
(kilograms)
26 PRODUCTS 26
Access to Credit
During the growing and harvest cycles, co?ee farmers rely on
their modest reserves to pay their expenses. It isn’t until their
crops are ?nally shipped that payment is received, which may
take months. It’s common for farmers to experience a cash
shortage, which can lead them to sell their crops early to local
buyers, be charged high interest rates and receive lower prices.
Tis inevitably cuts into farmers’ pro?ts and sets up a similar
scenario for the next year.
Starbucks works with several social investment organizations
to make loans available to co?ee growers, which makes it
possible for farmers to postpone selling their crops until the
price is favorable and to invest in capital improvements. In
?scal 2006, we increased our loan commitment to EcoLogic
Finance by $1 million, bringing the total commitment to
$6 million. EcoLogic uses Starbucks capital to make loans
to both co?ee and cocoa farmers. We also continued our $1
million loan commitment to Calvert Foundation and $2.5
million loan commitment to Verde Ventures, a loan program
managed by Conservation International. (See chart on next
page.)
Assisting Co?ee Farmers in Ethiopia
When the Sidama Co?ee Farmers Cooperative Union in
Ethiopia (SCFCU) was established in 2000, it set bold
objectives: to increase farmers’ share of the Free on Board*
(FOB) price of co?ee, stabilize the local co?ee market,
export directly to foreign buyers, protect co-ops and family
farmers from illegal domestic market actors, take advantage
of economies of scale, and promote and reward production of
high-quality co?ee.
SCFCU is a farmer-owned and managed cooperative union
comprised of 42 primary societies, representing nearly 87,000
local co?ee growers practicing shade-managed and organic
farming techniques in the forests of southcentral Ethiopia. It
is also part of the Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
market system.
In October 2005, SCFCU received a $400,000 loan from
EcoLogic Finance. Te loan is enabling the cooperative
to provide services to its members, including marketing
assistance in developing producer/buyer linkages; direct
export of members’ specialty co?ee; coordination of
warehousing services, processing and transport; promotion
of high-quality co?ee production; ?eld-based training and
education programs; and access to savings and credit services.
Starbucks provided the capital funds that EcoLogic used to
?nance the loan.
As one of the cooperative’s principal foreign buyers, Starbucks
respects SCFCU for its organizational integrity, and values its
premium product. Indeed, the unique ?avor characteristics
of local co?ee beans grown by one primary society belonging
to SCFCU were so distinctive and of such exceptional quality
that this co?ee – “Shirkina Sun-Dried Sidamo” – was chosen
as one of Starbucks Black Apron Exclusives
™
** co?ees in
?scal 2006. As a result, the farming community where this
co?ee was produced was awarded a $15,000 prize from
Starbucks. Tese funds, combined with the funds they
receive through Fair Trade social premiums, are being used
to construct an o?ce space where community meetings and
trainings can be held.
Starbucks and the Ethiopian government have been engaged
in discussions regarding the protection and use of the
intellectual property rights of Ethiopia’s geographic co?ee
names. We are committed to working together in pursuit of a
solution that bene?ts Ethiopian co?ee farmers. For the most
current information on this topic, please visit Starbucks.com.
* Free on Board is a trade term requiring the seller to deliver goods on board a
vessel designated by the buyer. Te seller ful?lls its obligations to deliver when
goods have passed over the ship’s rail. Te word “ free” means the seller has an
obligation to deliver goods to a named place for transfer to a carrier.
** Te Black Apron Exclusives
™
co?ees are a select line of rare, exotic and cherished
co?ees. Te Black Apron name refers to the color of apron worn by Starbucks
most knowledgeable buyers, roasters, tasters and Co?ee Masters while in the
tasting rooms and in Starbucks co?eehouses.
27 PRODUCTS 27
FARMER LOAN PROGRAMS
Name of
Organization
Amount of
Starbucks loans
to Fund
Total number
and value of
loans made by
Starbucks in
?scal 2006
Average loan size
(per borrower)
made from
Starbucks capital
in ?scal 2006
Purposes of
loans made from
Starbucks capital
# of farmers
participating
Countries where
borrowers of
loans made by
Starbucks capital
live
Calvert Foundation $1 million loaned in
?scal 2004
6 loans valued at
$2.25 million*
$371,000 Pre?nancing of Fair
Trade and organic
coffee contracts
24,000 Mexico, Nicaragua,
Peru
Verde Ventures,
managed by
Conservation
International
$2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2004
8 loans using
Starbucks capital
valued at $2.12
million
$265,000 Pre?nancing of
C.A.F.E. Practices
or conservation
coffee farms;
working capital for
the above coffee
farmers
6,000 smallholder
farmers
participating in
CI’s Conservation
Coffee Program
sites, and
applicants to
C.A.F.E. Practices
Mexico,
El Salvador,
Guatemala,
Indonesia, Peru
EcoLogic Finance $2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2004
$2.5 million loaned
in ?scal 2005
$1 million loaned in
?scal 2006
63 loans using
Starbucks capital
valued at $11
million*
$175,000 Pre?nancing of
Fair Trade, organic
and specialty
coffee and cocoa
contracts; capital
investments for
infrastructure
44,000 farmers
from 58 various
coffee and
cocoa farming
organizations
Bolivia, Honduras,
Colombia,
Indonesia, Costa
Rica, Mexico,
Nicaragua, East
Timor, Peru,
Ecuador, Rwanda,
El Salvador,
Tanzania, Ethiopia,
Uganda, Guatemala
*Total exceeds amount of Starbucks loan because money is loaned, repaid and loaned again.
• Financial awards given to farming communities that
produce a speci?c co?ee selected as part of Starbucks
Black Apron Exclusives
™
program. For each Black Apron
Exclusives
™
winner, Starbucks awards $15,000 to use for a
targeted project. In ?scal 2006, four co?ees were selected
as Black Apron Exclusives
™
o?erings, three from Africa
and one from Indonesia.
Te combined total of Starbucks investments in co?ee-
growing communities was $2.7 million in ?scal 2006,
which included $1 million towards Tropical Storm Stan
relief e?orts. (See next page.) Te funds were used to
pay for 103 projects located in 11 countries, bene?ting
an estimated 545,000 local farmers, their families and
community residents.
Investments in Coffee Communities
Te majority of high-quality co?ee is grown in remote
communities of developing countries. Tese areas have
historically faced a devastating range of social, environmental
and economic challenges. At times, they have also been left in
ruins by severe natural disasters.
Over the years, Starbucks has worked with co?ee farmers,
cooperatives, mills, exporters and local communities on
various community improvements, which have included
building schools, health clinics and other projects that
strengthen the local infrastructure and bene?t nearby
residents. Tese investments are not only made through our
philanthropic contributions, they are also funded in two
other ways:
• Trough premiums that we add to our co?ee contracts,
which provide additional funds for community projects.
28 PRODUCTS 28
Tropical Storm Stan Relief E?orts
In October 2005, Tropical Storm Stan struck parts of
Mexico, Guatemala and El Salvador, including areas where
co?ee is grown. Te storm caused ?ash ?oods, mudslides,
damage to crops, and it claimed the lives of thousands. We
responded to the immediate needs for humanitarian relief
and longer-term rebuilding e?orts. Within the ?rst week
following the storm, Starbucks co?ee buyers and agronomists
visited some of the a?ected areas where we buy co?ee to make
a human connection with local farmers and gain a better
sense of long-term rebuilding needs. Starbucks was able to
respond rapidly with $1 million toward relief and rebuilding
e?orts in Mexico and Guatemala, which helped to fund 59
local projects and bene?t an estimated 415,000 people.
To assist a?ected communities in El Salvador and Guatemala,
Starbucks earmarked $23,000 of the emergency funds we
had contributed to CARE International earlier, and we also
provided an additional $250,000 via Mercy Corp for relief
e?orts in areas of Guatemala that were especially hard-hit.
My Starbucks –
The ?rst two weeks following Tropical
Storm Stan were very dif?cult for
us. The Chanjul coffee farm was
completely inaccessible after the storm’s
torrential rains had washed away the
road. Now it has been ?xed, thanks to
Starbucks. Along with our neighbors,
we are once again able to transport
our coffee crops to the processing
facility. While the monetary support you
gave was of great help, we are more
uplifted by the solidarity we experienced
with Starbucks coffee buyers.
Marco Lucas
Farm General Manager
Chiapas, Mexico
AFRICAN HEARTLANDS COFFEE PROJECT
The ?rst phase of the African Heartlands Coffee Project, a
collaboration between Starbucks and the African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF), was launched in Kenya in January 2005.
The three-year project is focused on helping farmers improve
the quality and quantity of Kenya coffee, introducing
sustainable growing and processing best practices as well as
supporting wildlife and biodiversity conservation.
The three-year venture is being funded with a $600,000
commitment from Starbucks, which included a contribution
of $187,000 to AWF in ?scal 2006. We believe the positive
developments taking place in the two Kenyan coffee
cooperatives participating in phase one of this project
clearly re?ect the hard work and dedication of coffee
growers to embrace sustainable growing practices and higher
quality standards.
Additional support for AWF’s work in Kenya came from
Starbucks UK. In ?scal 2006, Starbucks UK contributed
approximately $90,000 to AWF to help to fund the
construction of an earth dam, revitalize a reforestation
program and rehabilitate the Kihuyo Wildlife Fence. To
engage partners in this effort, Starbucks UK created an
Africa-themed photo contest, from which 10 UK Starbucks
partners were selected to travel to Kenya in October 2006
and meet with local coffee farmers who are bene?ting from
the project.
29 PRODUCTS 29
Sustainable Trade: Purchasing Our
Non-Coffee Products
In 2003, we introduced Starbucks Supplier Code of Conduct,
a values-based framework that guides our global purchasing
decisions and supplier relationships. Te Code of Conduct
and supporting guidelines set forth our standards for human
rights, social conditions and environmental responsibility. Te
Code applies to agriculture products (such as co?ee, cocoa
and tea) and manufactured goods and services. Trough
adherence to this Code, Starbucks and our suppliers seek
to demonstrate our commitment to the welfare, economic
improvement and sustainability of the people and places that
produce our products and services.
In the remaining pages of this section, we discuss our
approach to sustainable trade and product quality. Speci?c
topics include:
• Procurement Practices for Sustainable Agriculture
– Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program
– Tazo Tea Sustainability Practices
– Dairy and Bakery Products
• Starbucks Social Responsibility Standards for
Manufactured Goods
• Ethos
™
water
• Quality Assurance and Product Recall
Starbucks Approach to Sustainable Trade
Our products are grown, produced
and/or manufactured by a multitude
of suppliers around the world. As our
global supply chain operations expand
and become increasingly complex, we
recognize the importance of instituting
an overarching framework that ensures
ethical trading practices, increases
transparency and continues to build
a sustainable network of suppliers.
Starbucks is working on many levels to
implement such an approach.
Starbucks Supplier Code of Conduct
articulates our core values and the
expectations we have of our suppliers.
The Code includes social responsibility
standards for both agricultural products
and for manufactured goods.
CODE OF CONDUCT
Social Responsibility Standards:
Agriculture Products
Social Responsibility Standards:
Manufactured Goods and Services
Coffee:
C.A.F.E. Practices
Other Agriculture Products:
(Cocoa, Tea, Dairy
and Bakery)
Supplier Social
Responsibility Program
30 PRODUCTS 30
Procurement Practices for Sustainable
Agriculture
In addition to C.A.F.E. Practices, our co?ee buying
guidelines, Starbucks is working to develop sustainable
purchasing guidelines for cocoa and may also develop
guidelines for other products such as tea, paper and dairy.
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program
Cocoa continues to be an important ingredient in many of
the beverages and products we sell in our stores, including
co?ee beverages, bakery items and chocolate bars. We seek to
ensure that the cocoa we buy has been produced and traded
in an ethical, transparent and sustainable manner, and we are
taking signi?cant steps to ensure our supply chain is in line
with our company’s values.
Worldwide cocoa production for the 2005/2006 crop year
was 7.7 billion pounds (3.5 billion kilograms), of which
approximately 70 percent was produced in West Africa. In
?scal 2006, Starbucks purchased just over 15 million pounds
(6.8 million kilograms) of processed cocoa from our suppliers,
sourced primarily from the Ivory Coast.
In ?scal 2006 we launched Starbucks Socially Responsible
Cocoa Sourcing (SSRC) Pilot Program in the Ivory Coast,
with two established cocoa suppliers that included nine
farmer cooperatives and hundreds of farmers. An initial set
of general guidelines for transparency, working conditions
and price premiums for cocoa farmers were developed for this
pilot program.
During the ?rst year of the pilot, Starbucks sourced 11
million pounds (5 million kilograms) of cocoa beans, in
which we expect to have full price transparency throughout
the supply chain – from the cocoa farm to Starbucks. Tis
transparency data will be audited and validated by an
independent third party to ensure farmers are receiving an
equitable share of the sustainability premiums we pay.
Cocoa Practices Sourcing Guidelines
Building upon the initial Socially Responsible Cocoa
Sourcing Pilot, in September 2006 we completed a new
draft of our Cocoa Practices Sourcing Guidelines (Cocoa
Practices). Similar to C.A.F.E. Practices for co?ee, Cocoa
Practices provide guidelines for the cultivation and processing
of cocoa in a manner that is environmentally sustainable,
socially responsible, and promotes equitable relationships with
farmers, workers and communities. We plan to launch Cocoa
Practices in ?scal 2007 as a two-year pilot program, and move
toward our longer-term plan to utilize the guidelines for all of
our cocoa purchases.
Access to Credit & Social Development Projects
In ?scal 2006, EcoLogic Finance provided $400,000 in loans
to three cocoa farming cooperatives. Starbucks provided the
capital funds used for the loans. To further support cocoa
growing communities in the future, Starbucks has authorized
EcoLogic Finance to provide up to $500,000 in a?ordable
loans to cocoa farmers, drawing o? the $6 million in loan
capital Starbucks already provided. We also amended our loan
agreement with Conservation International’s Verde Ventures,
which will now allow up to 25 percent of the $2.5 million in
capital we provided to be loaned to cocoa farmers.
Stakeholder Engagement
In September 2006 we hosted a stakeholder engagement
session with suppliers, government agencies, non-
governmental organizations (NGOs) and chocolate
manufacturers to review the initial draft of the guidelines
and obtain feedback. Tis feedback will be incorporated into
Cocoa Practices prior to the pilot launch in 2007, and we will
continue to consult with stakeholders as we move forward.
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Purchasing 22 million pounds (10 million kilograms)
of cocoa beans from the Starbucks Socially
Responsible Cocoa Sourcing Program.
• Completing independent audits and sharing results
of the ?scal 2006 pilot.
• Rolling out Cocoa Practices Guidelines for use in the
next crop year (2007-08)
• Delivering quarterly updates to cocoa stakeholders.
• Providing ?nancial support for social development
projects in cocoa growing communities in the
Ivory Coast.
31 PRODUCTS 31
Tazo
®
Tea – Sustainability Practices
Tazo Tea is one of several brands within Starbucks portfolio,
and is sold in Starbucks stores, grocery stores and other
retail outlets.
Global tea production in 2006 was 7.6 billion pounds (3.5
billion kilograms). In ?scal 2006, Tazo purchased 5.7 million
pounds (2.6 million kilograms) of tea and botanicals from
25 countries.
In previous years we focused our sustainability reporting for
Tazo on purchases of organic ingredients. Tazo has moved
away from this singular focus on organic purchasing in order
to pursue a more comprehensive sustainability strategy for our
tea sourcing.
As part of this strategy, Tazo joined the Ethical Tea
Partnership (ETP) to ensure the teas we purchase are
produced in a socially responsible way. ETP is a unique, long-
term ethical sourcing initiative, set up to work in partnership
with producers to independently monitor living and working
conditions in tea gardens. Te organization also works to
improve the working conditions in the tea industry.
Additionally, in ?scal 2006 we began purchasing some tea
from smallholder tea growers in order to develop closer ties
with tea-growing communities and help support smallholder
farmers in and around the Himalayan foothills of Darjeeling,
India. We worked in partnership with the Darjeeling
Earth Group (DEG), a nonpro?t organization focused on
environmental and social issues, to collaborate with tea
growers on better tea production and green leaf handling
techniques.
Similar to Starbucks holistic approach to responsible co?ee
sourcing, Tazo combines its commitment to purchase
responsibly grown tea with a social development strategy.
At the center of Tazo’s social development strategy is our
Community Health and Advancement Initiative (CHAI),
which we launched in conjunction with Mercy Corps in
2002, and which remains our way of giving back to the
regions that produce Tazo
®
tea ingredients. Funding for
CHAI comes from Tazo, its tea suppliers and Starbucks. Since
2003, nearly $1.4 million has been contributed to the CHAI
Project, including donations in ?scal 2006 of $301,000 from
Tazo and its suppliers, and $100,000 from Starbucks.
Today CHAI is a partnership between Tazo, Mercy Corps,
DEG, and the Assam Branch of the India Tea Association
and is aimed at improving the lives of community members
living in tea estates and neighboring communities. Working
with local Community Action Groups, CHAI works to
democratically identify and address common problems
through a community mobilization process to improve the
quality of life through health, economic development and
youth initiatives.
During ?scal 2006, the CHAI Project expanded a pilot
that originally began in 2005 in four cardamom-producing
communities in Guatemala, and now encompasses nine
communities. As a result of expanding the project, an
additional 1,000 people have bene?ted.
In ?scal 2006 we laid the groundwork to expand the CHAI
Project into the Assam region of India, an area where Tazo
purchases tea. Next year, we plan to develop programs
focused on income generation and education programs that
help to improve economic opportunities for farmers and
families living on tea estates in the region.
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Completing development of a long-term strategy for
Tazo’s sustainable tea sourcing initiative.
• Developing a three-year strategic plan for the CHAI
Project.
• Launching the CHAI Assam Project in four tea
estates, and expand CHAI Guatemala to two
additional villages.
32 PRODUCTS 32
Dairy and Bakery Products
Dairy and bakery products comprise a signi?cant part of our
store operations. For all of our products, Starbucks upholds
our high standards for quality and ensures our products are
safe for consumption.
In response to some stakeholders’ concerns about our
dairy products and our own interest in developing a more
sustainable approach to our dairy purchases, we recently
evaluated the feasibility and implications of converting all
core dairy products – ?uid milk, half-and-half, whipping
cream, and eggnog – to rBGH-free and changing our default
milk standard for our beverages to 2% milk from whole milk.
(rBGH is a synthetic growth hormone given to dairy cows to
increase milk production.)
In ?scal 2006, we surveyed our current dairy suppliers to
understand their cost structure and ability to deliver su?cient
supplies of the highest quality certi?ed organic and/or rBGH-
free milk needed for Starbucks operations. We also met with
stakeholders and dairy suppliers to discuss and learn more
about rBGH and options for new products. As a result of
these e?orts, we are able to ensure that 37 percent of the core
dairy products in our U.S. company-operated stores were
rBGH-free as of January 2007.
Starbucks has also been investigating options for using
organic ingredients in some of our bakery products. Our
e?orts during ?scal 2006 included test marketing two 100
percent organic bakery items in more than 100 company-
operated Starbucks stores in North America stores, and
exploring opportunities to incorporate the use of sustainable
wheat into our portfolio of bakery products.
Stakeholder Engagement
In April 2006, Starbucks hosted stakeholders for a two-day
“Dairy Summit.” Our goals in hosting this session were to:
• Deepen Starbucks understanding of supply chain costs and
performance related to rBGH-free milk.
• Discuss dairy industry innovations and supplier/industry
capabilities as well as the health and nutrition impacts
associated with dairy products.
• Build stronger connections to our dairy suppliers.
Attendees of this summit included Starbucks partners,
representatives from Oregon Physicians for Social
Responsibility, and several of Starbucks dairy suppliers. In
addition, we met with the National Dairy Council in ?scal
2006 to discuss Starbucks existing sustainability programs,
including C.A.F.E. Practices, as a ?rst step to introduce
and explore how sustainability applies to dairy, as well as
consumer health and wellness. We are in the process of
evaluating and/or rolling out new products as a result of this
dialogue, and intend to continue consulting with many of
these stakeholders going forward.
For more information on Starbucks health and wellness
initiatives, please see the Health and Wellness section of this
report beginning on page 49.
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007 we plan to:
• Require all core dairy products used in our
handcrafted beverages to be rBGH-free. This
requirement initially will take place in our U.S.
company-operated stores.
• Conduct a market test in our U.S. company-operated
stores and a small group of stores in Canada to
assess the feasibility of making 2% milk the default
for our beverages.
33 PRODUCTS 33
Starbucks Social Responsibility
Standards – Manufactured Goods
Starbucks purchases an increasing number of manufactured
products that are sold in our stores or used in our business
operations. With the aim to ensure these products are
produced without harm to workers or the environment,
in ?scal 2006 we created a new internal organization –
Sustainable Procurement Practices (SPP) – focused on
socially responsible procurement practices, the Supplier Social
Responsibility Program and Supplier Diversity.
Initially launched in 2005, the Supplier Social Responsibility
Program aims to integrate responsible procurement
practices throughout Starbucks global supply chain for
manufactured goods by June 2010. Tis will help ensure
supply chain transparency, encourage a shared responsibility
between Starbucks buyers and suppliers, and support sound
purchasing decisions through a system of standards, tools and
factory assessments.
In ?scal 2006, we advanced our work in responsible sourcing
for manufactured goods by developing an enhanced set
of factory standards, creating tools for monitoring and
compliance, and initiating a pilot test of 10 factories in
China. Our Supplier Social Responsibility Standards
(SSR) for factories include requirements for worker health
and safety, worker treatment and rights, worker hours and
compensation, transparency and environmental protection.
Rather than seek short-term remedies for issues that may
arise, Starbucks stresses the importance of continuous,
measurable improvement among our suppliers.
Additional progress made this year includes:
• Development of new Zero Tolerance Standards to
designate critical non-negotiable behaviors for suppliers
of manufactured goods, including lack of transparency,
denied access, child labor, forced labor, nonpayment of
wages and physical/sexual abuse.
• Development of and testing of processes and tools to
implement the SSR Standards. Tese include factory
assessment forms, an SSR Standards Manual and other
resources.
• Training of our internal buyers on the SSR guidelines,
standards and tools.
KEY SUPPLIER SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
PROGRAM POLICIES
1. Code of Conduct – overarching business standards
and practices
2. Standards for Manufactured Goods & Services –
speci?c guidelines that incorporate applicable laws,
codes and regulations
3. Zero Tolerance Standards – non-negotiable standards
for being a Starbucks supplier
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Selecting factory monitoring ?rms to conduct
independent assessments.
• Rolling out the Supplier Social Responsibility (SSR)
Standards.
• Assessing all new factories and systematically
assessing existing factories.
• Conducting three factory training sessions for an
estimated 60 factories.
• Verifying and reporting on our factory base/supply
chain for manufactured products.
34 PRODUCTS 34
Ethos
™
Water
Starbucks acquired the Ethos Water brand in April 2005 and
began selling Ethos
™
bottled water in our U.S. company-
operated stores that same year. As part of this acquisition,
we began exploring the range of issues associated with
bottled water.
In November 2005 Starbucks hosted a Water Stakeholders’
Summit, moderated by Business for Social Responsibility
(BSR), in order to learn more about stakeholder concerns
related to Starbucks use of water resources throughout
our business, sourcing and packaging for Ethos
™
water,
Te Starbucks Foundation’s investments in humanitarian
water projects resulting from the sale of Ethos
™
water, and
other water-related issues and topics. For information on
Starbucks and Te Starbucks Foundation’s commitment to
providing clean water for children, please see pages 41 and 47,
respectively.
Encouraged by this stakeholder discussion, in 2006 we
focused our e?orts on developing a set of responsible sourcing
protocols for Ethos
™
water. Quickly recognizing that, to
date, there is no one single standard for responsible sourcing
of spring water, we consulted with a number of industry and
environmental experts to further understand the issues, and
to develop a strategy to guide our current and future water
sourcing plans.*
Te result of this work is a responsible water sourcing protocol
designed to ensure that we purchase the highest quality
bottled water product, sourced in an environmentally and
socially responsible manner. Te protocol includes provisions
for a variety of crucial sourcing concerns and speci?c legal
issues, such as the appropriate de?nitions of spring water;
transportation impacts; sustainable yield assessment to
better understand existing water uses (by animals, plants
and communities); bottling issues; and community impacts
and engagement.
Following initial development, we reviewed and re?ned the
protocol with our stakeholders and utilized it to audit our
existing water sources. Moving forward, we intend to use this
protocol as a tool to monitor our existing sites and to qualify
additional sources for Ethos
™
water. Starbucks will also
continue to engage in dialogue with our stakeholders.
* Ethos
™
water is currently sourced from two natural spring sources – Baxter
Springs in the Sierra Nevada Range in Northern California, and Tomhicken
Springs in the Pocono Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania.
Ethos
™
Water Voluntary Product Withdrawal
Starbucks is deeply committed to the health and safety of
our customers and partners, and to delivering high-quality
products. If a concern arises regarding the safety or quality
of one of our products, Starbucks is committed to taking
appropriate measures and immediate action. One recent
example of Starbucks swift response related to an issue that
involved Ethos
™
water.
In December 2005, it was discovered that one of the
suppliers that Starbucks was using at the time to bottle
Ethos
™
water was out of regulatory compliance for levels
of bromate. Bromate is formed from bromide – naturally
occurring minerals found in some spring waters – during the
puri?cation process.
Upon learning of this issue, Starbucks contacted the FDA and
initiated a voluntary product withdrawal for Ethos
™
water
sold in 14 Western states. Supplies of Ethos
™
water on the
East Coast of the U.S. were not a?ected because we utilize a
di?erent supplier for this region.
As a result of the recall, West Coast production of Ethos
™
water was immediately halted, and the impacted inventory in
our stores, warehouses and other retail outlets was destroyed.
Starbucks temporarily supplied our Western U.S. stores with
Ethos
™
water from our East Coast bottler while we located a
new source for the West Coast. Using our new water sourcing
protocol as a guide, we have quali?ed a new supplier that
we believe can consistently meet our quality standards and
sustainable sourcing criteria.
35 PRODUCTS 35
Quality Assurance and Product
Recalls
Starbucks places the highest priority on the safety and
well-being of our customers and our partners. Our quality
assurance (QA) process is extremely rigorous and extends
throughout our entire supply chain – from co?ee, dairy and
other agricultural products to manufactured goods, such as
brewers, mugs and gift items.
Our commitment to product safety means that we not only
comply with government regulations and operate with full
transparency in our QA processes, but ultimately, we seek
to do the right thing – for customers, partners and the
environment – going above and beyond basic regulations
whenever possible and appropriate.
Several years ago we formed an internal “Product Incident
Team,” comprised of representatives from QA, Legal,
Operations and Communications in order to provide
additional monitoring of product quality. Te team is tasked
with weekly review of product performance information,
customer and partner feedback, and other product usage
information in order to proactively assess any potential issues.
Should a product quality, failure or safety issue arise, an
extensive response system, including communications and
operational components, is rapidly implemented.
Despite having extensive QA controls, certain unforeseen
situations can arise, making a product recall necessary in
order to bring a product into government compliance and/or
to ensure the health and safety of partners and customers.
In Starbucks 35-year history, we’ve had only a handful
of incidents that warranted a product recall, and in each
situation we took a proactive and universal approach to
rectifying the situation and maintaining customer trust and
loyalty. In ?scal 2006 we conducted a rapid and voluntary
withdrawal of Ethos
™
water as a result of quality issues,
explained in more detail on the previous page.
36 SOCI ETY
STARBUCKS GROWTH AND
COMMUNITY IMPACTS
In an era of increasing globalization, when
communities around the world are striving to
preserve their cultural uniqueness, one might
assume that a large, global coffee company
is out of touch with the needs of individual
communities or its individual customers.
This assumption runs contrary to what we
believe at Starbucks. We do, however, recognize
that Starbucks continued success depends
greatly on our ability to operate our individual
stores much like a small, local business does – by
building lasting, personal relationships with our
customers and neighbors. It also means honoring
the intent of Starbucks Guiding Principles by
contributing positively to our communities.
Troughout this section, we discuss Starbucks role in our
society and the relationships we have with our communities
and customers. Speci?cally, we address:
• Starbucks growth
• Starbucks community investments
• Investing in communities around the world
• Te Starbucks Foundation
• Starbucks commitment to health and wellness
• Being responsive to our customers
• Public policy and government a?airs
Starbucks Growth
To realize our ambitions for Starbucks long-term growth, we
work to gain the support of local communities to open new
stores and operate our business. Tis comes down to how well
Starbucks is regarded as an enterprise that adds value to local
communities. When Starbucks is viewed as stimulating local
economic development, providing an inviting gathering place
for residents, and supporting neighborhood interests, we are
almost always welcomed in.
Occasionally, Starbucks entry into some areas raises concerns
among local residents. Our approach is to engage openly
and directly in the hope of resolving concerns before or as
they arise.
Over the next few pages, we examine some of the speci?c
issues related to Starbucks growth, explain our perspective,
and share what Starbucks is doing to be a responsible
neighbor. Some of the topics discussed below are:
• Continuing marketplace evolution
• Operating in the global community
• Being respectful of community concerns
• Being locally relevant
• Supporting local communities and economic development
Store Growth
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks opened 2,199 new stores, bringing
the worldwide total to 12,440 locations. We expect to add as
many as 2,400 new locations next year.
In October 2006, Starbucks announced plans to increase
the company’s long-term store target from 30,000 to 40,000
locations worldwide, more than tripling the company’s
current store base. We envision having approximately 20,000
locations in the U.S., and another 20,000 locations outside
the U.S. someday.
37 SOCI ETY
Continuing Marketplace Evolution
Over the past several decades, the marketplace has become
increasingly more competitive and global in nature. Large
retail companies entering the market o?er the most visible
signs of this trend through the replication of their successful
store concepts within and beyond their national borders. Tis
is also true for Starbucks.
A common misperception is that large global brand retailers
and small, independent retailers cannot coexist. Te co?ee
retailer market o?ers an example of such coexistence.
Coinciding with Starbucks growth has been a steady growth
of small, independent co?ee shops throughout the U.S. Tis
would suggest continuing synergy between the growth of
Starbucks and that of smaller co?ee retailers. Starbucks has
long believed that co?ee consumers have a wide variety of
needs and preferences, and, in turn, their demands support a
very diverse range of co?ee retailers.
From the beginning, Starbucks has played an integral part in
creating an industry for gourmet co?ee. Tis growth of the
specialty co?ee industry has, in turn, created opportunities
for competing co?ee businesses that similarly cater to the
increasingly sophisticated consumer palate for specialty
co?ees. As Starbucks has grown, so has the industry, all of
which has bene?ted co?ee consumers.
Operating in the Global Community
In our e?orts to extend Starbucks presence to markets beyond
the U.S., we have been introduced to a multitude of new
places, each one uniquely characterized by its history, culture,
sense of community and natural environment. We have also
been introduced to and welcomed by millions of enthusiastic
customers. Overall, our experience of doing business
throughout the world has been overwhelmingly positive.
Tere are, however, times when doing business on the global
landscape presents some challenges, including dealing with
the wide spectrum of perceptions people have of America.
In some parts of the world, there has been a rise in anti-
American sentiment, much of it attributed to the war in Iraq.
As a global company with an American heritage, we strive to
be respectful of other perspectives and responsive when we
encounter misconceptions that may a?ect our relationships
with our customers, neighbors and/or business partners.
Being Respectful of Community
Concerns
Te growing presence of global brand retailers has heightened
awareness about the level of homogeneity in the marketplace.
Some local citizens are opposed to national retailers entering
their communities, suspicious that these retailers will force
out small independents by driving up commercial rents or
a?ecting the unique complexion of their neighborhoods. On
occasion Starbucks has encountered community opposition,
although it is far more typical for us to receive a warm and
enthusiastic welcome when opening in a new area.
We make every e?ort to understand the underlying issues
related to these situations and work collaboratively and
respectfully with local citizen groups. Looking for ways
to leverage Starbucks economic impact – jobs, support for
community-based organizations, use of local vendors and
suppliers – is one approach we take. Another is to determine
how Starbucks can contribute to the local character of an area
and minimize any undesirable impacts.
Many factors are weighed when considering a speci?c location
to site a new Starbucks, focusing the end goal on being able
to serve our loyal customers in a welcoming environment.
However, if after thoughtful review we determine that
Starbucks is not a good ?t for a particular locale, we may
choose to respectfully withdraw our plans to open a new
store. Tere have been several instances in the past when we
have elected to do this.
On the next page we report on three experiences we recently
had in California, New York City and London.
38 SOCI ETY
Local Community Case Studies
La Mesa, California
When some members of the community learned of our
plans to open a new store in the heart of La Mesa Village,
they expressed concern that Starbucks arrival might erode
competition and change the unique character of this area.
La Mesa Village, the city’s oldest, most established shopping
district, is surrounded by many historic buildings that date
back to 1912, the year this city was incorporated in San Diego
County.
Some residents welcomed Starbucks presence, while others
who were more apprehensive registered their concerns with
local civic leaders and the mayor’s o?ce.
We believe a situation such as this can only be resolved when
a climate of mutual respect and trust exists. We took this
to heart in La Mesa and reached out to the mayor, a?liated
with the local merchant association and looked for other
ways to become immersed and invested in the overall success
of La Mesa Village. Starbucks also identi?ed opportunities
to support important events that helped to strengthen our
connection to the local community, which we had been a part
of since opening our ?rst store in the area in 1995.
As a result of these e?orts, tensions softened and there was
a notable turn in acceptance. To celebrate the opening of
Starbucks new store, we held an event that was attended by
representatives from the City of La Mesa, members of the La
Mesa Merchants Association and many local neighbors.
New York City – Astor Place
When Starbucks began planning to make some much needed
repairs and improvements to the atrium area of the historic
Astor Place building, local residents wanted assurance that
Starbucks would be respectful of this 160-year-old landmark
structure as well as the distinctive character of the surrounding
community. Te atrium o?ers ample seating space, which
many customers of Starbucks Astor Place store enjoy.
Many longstanding structures, such as Astor Place, are
architectural treasures that connect residents to their local
history and add charm and character to their neighborhoods.
In the case of Astor Place, we wanted local residents to
understand Starbucks commitment to their neighborhood
and our intent to preserve this mixed-use building that holds
a commanding view of the immediate area.
Due to our delay in renewing our local business license,
and the community’s overall concerns about the needed
repairs to the atrium, our permit to use the atrium space was
threatened. We resolved this matter in a positive manner by
working with a local council member, area residents, city
employees and the Landmark Preservation Commission to
?nd a suitable process that would ensure the preservation of
this beloved site.
Trough our engagement with the community, we were
able to dispel some misinformation that had previously been
reported, and share our desire to work together on a common
goal. Because Starbucks had been operating in this location
for some time, this process also helped to strengthen our
existing relationships in the community and set the course for
ongoing engagement.
London – Bloomsbury District
Te occasional opposition to Starbucks has not only been
isolated to speci?c communities in the U.S. In 2006 we
experienced an incident in London when some local citizens
signed petitions in an e?ort to keep Starbucks from opening
a store on Lamb’s Conduit Street in the Bloomsbury district.
Te resulting media coverage focused largely on the in?uence
certain celebrities had in galvanizing the community’s
opposition to this new Starbucks.
Since opening in August 2006, our store partners have sought
to establish relationships with neighboring businesses and
community organizations, and looked for opportunities to
support local causes. While some community members have
chosen not to frequent this new Starbucks store, others have
become our customers. Starbucks is committed to building
strong ties to this community and continually looking
for ways we can contribute to the thriving life on Lamb’s
Conduit Street.
My Starbucks –
Through its work with local preservationists,
Starbucks demonstrates how a national
retailer can be a good neighbor by helping to
preserve community character instead of
destroying it.
-Richard Moe, president, National
Trust for Historic Preservation
39 SOCI ETY
Being Locally Relevant
Providing a consistent experience for our customers is
one of Starbucks greatest strengths. At the same time, we
are respectful of our local communities throughout the
world and, when possible, modify our store environment
and customer experience in various ways. For instance, we
have adapted our menu at times to include special food
items in Asia, Europe and elsewhere; adjusted the days and
hours of our store operations depending on local customs;
incorporated architectural elements in our store design
to re?ect the uniqueness of a neighborhood; and created
di?erent types of store environments that are culturally
attuned to and meet our customers’ needs.
In the UK, Starbucks has an initiative aimed at incorporating
features that make our stores relevant to the local
communities. For example, in Manchester, England, we have
purchased several items for our local stores from Benchmark
Furniture Design, a local maker of wood furnishings with a
social mission.
Some of our stores in the U.S. are also adapted with a
local ?air. For instance, instead of building a new store in
Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood, Starbucks refurbished
an existing limestone building and preserved many of the
original features, including a distinctive ?replace mantel
which we designed to be a focal point of our new store.
Supporting Local Communities and
Economic Development
Whether it’s an existing location or we are entering a
neighborhood for the ?rst time, an important way we ensure
strong ties to the community is through our support of local
programs and causes. Tis takes a variety of paths, including
our ongoing support for community-based organizations;
encouraging our partners to actively volunteer; establishing
alliances with nonpro?t organizations; and other local
engagement activities.
In addition to this type of support, Starbucks has been
a catalyst for local economic development. Since 1998,
Starbucks has had a joint venture with Johnson Development
Corporation, a company owned by Earvin “Magic” Johnson,
through Urban Co?ee Opportunities, LLC (UCO). Te
goal of UCO is to bring Starbucks stores to diverse local
communities in the U.S. At the end of ?scal 2006, there were
102 UCO stores in operation.
As the name suggests, UCO focuses on creating opportunities
for communities that may have been overlooked by other
prominent retailers, despite their long-term potential for
economic vitality. At times, Starbucks has been the ?rst
premium brand retailer to site a store in a certain area, a
presence that has helped to serve as an economic stimulus
with the creation of new jobs, use of local suppliers, and by
attracting other major retailers to the neighborhood. (For
more information on UCO, please see page 75)
Building Civic Alliances
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks worked closely with civic
organizations that helped us better understand the
opportunities, concerns and challenges faced by our local
communities, including the U.S. Conference of Mayors
and the National Trust for Historic Preservation – Main
Street Center.
Tese relationships have been mutually bene?cial. Not
only have we forged closer connections to our communities
through these civic relationships, we have also been able
to educate the public about Starbucks brand and the value
we bring to local municipalities, and gain a broader range
of insights and feedback at the civic level. We believe these
organizations have bene?ted from Starbucks support of issues
that are important to their constituents. Historic preservation,
the environment, infrastructure, jobs and urban revitalization
are just a few of the issues we collectively address through
these alliances.
In the following pages, we explain how Starbucks is
investing in our local communities in the U.S. and our
international markets.
40 SOCI ETY
Starbucks Community Investments
Starbucks seeks opportunities to contribute positively
wherever we have a presence. At any given time, we may
be funding a water puri?cation system in Indonesia;
contributing to the rebuilding of a library damaged by a
natural disaster; or helping to establish a new high school in a
rural co?ee-growing village.
Te speci?c topics we discuss include:
• Our overall approach to community investments
• Investing in local communities
– Promoting the need for clean water
– Rebuilding communities struck by natural disaster
– Starbucks partners – supporting their communities
– Localized initiatives
• Investing in communities around the world
– Investing in co?ee- and tea-growing communities
• Te Starbucks Foundation
Our approach to community investments has been shaped by
our increasingly global presence. After thoughtful discourse –
internally and with external stakeholders – Starbucks decided
in ?scal 2006 to begin focusing a signi?cant portion of our
community investments on two universally important issues:
education and access to clean water. Tese two complex yet
critical issues complement Starbucks core values and our
strategic direction. We also believe that by focusing and
aligning the giving priorities of Starbucks Co?ee Company
and Te Starbucks Foundation, Starbucks contributions will
have greater impact and provide more bene?t to communities
around the world.
Given the complex nature of the issues we address, our giving
is done in a number of ways and through various channels.
Tese include:
• Cash contributions made at the corporate, regional and
local level
• In-kind donations of Starbucks products and resources
• Partner (employee) volunteer and gift-matching programs
• Contributing funds to Te Starbucks Foundation for its
grant-making e?orts
• Adding premiums to some of our co?ee contracts to fund
community projects
• Encouraging customer charitable donations
We recognize that our focused approach to community
investments needs to remain ?exible so we can be responsive
to emergent needs in the areas where we have a local presence.
Tis was certainly the direction we took in ?scal 2006, by
targeting our giving in the following ways:
• Launched a campaign to call attention to the global
water crisis and provided funds to address critical water,
sanitation and hygiene programs in regions of Ethiopia
and Indonesia.
• Provided ongoing assistance for rebuilding e?orts in U.S.
Gulf Coast communities a?ected by Hurricane Katrina.
• Supported locally relevant education programs in
communities where we do business.
• Contributed to the local nonpro?ts that our partners
personally support with their contributions of time
and money.
• Invested in projects that bene?t co?ee- and tea-growing
communities.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks cash and in-kind contributions were
valued at $36.1 million, or four percent of the company’s
earnings before income tax. (See pie chart below.)
* Tis chart represents grants and product donations paid by Starbucks Co?ee
Company during ?scal 2006. Tese numbers di?er from grant expenses
recorded in our consolidated ?nancial statements, which are shown on an
accrual basis as required by generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in
the U.S.
** Represents the total amount Starbucks paid through some co?ee contracts to
fund various projects to improve co?ee-growing communities.
Total: $36.1 million
Starbucks Donations Paid in Fiscal 2006*
Starbucks
contribution to
The Starbucks
Foundation
$15.9 million
Projects in coffee
communities
$2.7 million**
Product and
in-kind donations
$7.7 million
Corporate giving
$9.8 million
* Tis chart represents grants and product donations paid by Starbucks Co?ee Company during ?scal
2006. Tese numbers di?er from grant expenses recorded in our consolidated ?nancial statements,
which are shown on an accrual basis as required by generally accepted accounting principles
(GAAP) in the United States.
** Represents the total amount Starbucks paid through some co?ee contracts to fund various projects to
improve co?ee-growing communities.
41 SOCI ETY
Investing in Local Communities
Starbucks long tradition of supporting important and locally
relevant causes got its start in the U.S., although today our
giving extends to communities around the world – especially
in places where we have a strong and growing presence.
Below we provide several tangible examples of community
investments Starbucks made in ?scal 2006, beginning with
descriptions of our U.S. initiatives and our support for
disaster relief; followed by a section highlighting our local
community e?orts in some of our international markets.
Promoting the Need for Clean Water
In recognition of World Water Day, a UN day of observance,
on March 22, 2006, Starbucks launched a multiyear e?ort
to call attention to one of the most signi?cant public issues
in the world. More than one billion people globally lack
access to clean, safe drinking water. Te public health
e?ects associated with this global water crisis are enormous,
including the death of an estimated 1.8 million children each
year from preventable waterborne illnesses.*
Solving the problem will take a concerted global e?ort and
resources from many di?erent sources. Our goal is to leverage
Starbucks unique culture and global presence to make a
di?erence. Raising awareness with our partners and customers
about the world water crisis – and what we all can do to
address it – is a ?rst step. In ?scal 2006, we:
• Sponsored World Water Day walks in eleven U.S. cities to
symbolize the di?cult average three-mile daily walk that
women and children in developing countries often make
to get drinking water for their families.
• Launched a World Water Day website,
www.worldwaterday2006.org, to inform and mobilize the
public about the issue.
• Encouraged nearly 4,000 partners and individuals
representing NGOs to participate in World Water Day
Walks for Water in cities around the country and on a
“Virtual Walk for Water” online.
For information about Te Starbucks Foundation’s
international initiatives to bring reliable and clean water to
communities in Ethiopia and Indonesia, see page 47.
* Human Development Report 2006 from the United Nations Development
Programme
Rebuilding Communities Struck by Natural Disasters
Starbucks has been quick to respond to and provide assistance
to local communities devastated by natural disasters in
several regions around the world. Tis includes our relief
e?orts for communities along the U.S. Gulf Coast, and areas
a?ected by the tsunami in South Asia and the earthquake in
Indonesia. Starbucks also provided support to co?ee-growing
communities in Central America a?ected by Tropical Storm
Stan. Our response to Tropical Storm Stan is described on
page 28.
Hurricane Katrina
In September 2005, following Hurricane Katrina, Starbucks
made a $5 million commitment, funded by both Starbucks
and Te Starbucks Foundation, to support the region. Tis
commitment included an immediate $1 million donation that
Starbucks made to the American Red Cross for emergency
relief services.
Te remaining funds will be used for the ongoing rebuilding
of local Gulf Coast communities that are still recovering from
the overwhelming damage caused by this hurricane.
As part of our initial $5 million commitment, Starbucks
pledged a portion of revenues generated by the CD I Believe to
My Soul for the rebuilding e?orts. Ten dollars of the purchase
price of every copy sold in Starbucks company-operated stores
in the U.S. and Canada is donated to aid in the Gulf Coast’s
recovery. Donations are made to the American Red Cross and
the Canadian Red Cross and will continue for the lifetime
of the CD. To date, more than $315,000 has been raised
through the sale of I Believe to My Soul.
To learn how Te Starbucks Foundation is addressing the
restoration of communities in the U.S. Gulf Coast, please see
page 46.
42 SOCI ETY
South Asia Tsunami Communities
As part of our ongoing work with CARE International, a
leading humanitarian organization ?ghting global poverty,
Starbucks provided $50,000 to CARE in ?scal 2006 to
support the restoration of areas in South Asia where the needs
are greatest. With Starbucks support, CARE has been able to:
• Develop innovative and local technology to improve water
and sanitation devices in CARE-constructed houses.
• Organize trainings and provide materials that have helped
16,000 people ?nd a range of ways to earn an income,
including: tailoring, carpentry, cooking, ?shing and
small shops.
• Conduct three-day trainings on maternal and child health
issues for 245 health workers. Each month, approximately
2,500 women are screened for malnutrition and provided
with supplements.
For a complete picture of CARE and its work in South Asia,
see www.care.org.
Indonesia Earthquake
Starbucks Asia Paci?c business established Te Starbucks
Indonesia Earthquake Fund as part of a fundraising e?ort
aimed at helping our partners and others in need who
were recovering from this natural disaster. Starbucks Japan
contributed to the earthquake relief e?orts by initiating a
donation program in conjunction with Starbucks Co?ee
International and Starbucks Co?ee Asia Paci?c. Funds
raised through the sales of Indonesian whole bean co?ee
during June 2006, approximately $17,800 (¥2,100,149), were
contributed to Japan’s chapter of CARE International.
Starbucks Partners – Supporting Their Local
Communities
Our partners have repeatedly demonstrated a strong desire
to engage in their communities, and Starbucks is proud
to encourage and support their e?orts. Te following two
programs are unique to the U.S. and Canada, although our
international partners are involved in their communities in
many similar forms.
Make Your Mark Volunteer Program
Starbucks volunteer program – Make Your Mark (MYM) –
was introduced six years ago in the U.S. and Canada as a way
to encourage and support our partners’ (employees) volunteer
e?orts. Trough MYM, Starbucks matches our partners’
volunteer e?orts by donating $10 for every hour volunteered
to the designated nonpro?t organization, up to $1,000
per project.
If our partners enlist the help of customers, Starbucks
matches their volunteer hours, too. Since its inception, MYM
has inspired our U.S. and Canadian partners and customers
to volunteer more than one million hours for thousands of
local community organizations. Tat’s equivalent to about
480 people working full-time for one year. (See graphs below.)
To learn about Te Starbucks Foundation’s special Make Your
Mark program to support partners’ exceptional community
e?orts in the U.S. Gulf Coast region, see page 46.
Starbucks Make Your Mark Grants
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
$801,000
$1,487,000
$1,559,000
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Make Your Mark Volunteer Hours
214,000
299,000
383,000
43 SOCI ETY
Choose to Give! Gift Matching Program
Starbucks also encourages our U.S. and Canadian partners
to make their own charitable gifts with support from
the company’s gift-matching program, Choose to Give!
Starbucks matches our partners’ charitable gifts, dollar-for-
dollar, up to $1,000 annually. In ?scal 2006, 3,800 of our
partners’ charitable contributions were matched by Starbucks
with $677,000.
Localized Initiatives
In addition to our national community initiatives in the
U.S., Starbucks looks for opportunities to contribute at the
local level in meaningful ways. Based on our belief that
communities greatly bene?t when grants are combined
with volunteerism, we often direct our local community
investments to the organizations where our partners are
actively involved. In other cases, Starbucks supports causes
that are locally relevant and contribute in a meaningful way
to enhancing community life.
Examples of our localized initiatives include the Starbucks
California Giving Program (www.starbuckscalgiving.com),
which awards grants annually to eligible community-based
nonpro?t programs that allow children an opportunity to
grow and ?ourish. Te other is Starbucks Neighborhood
Parks Program (www.starbuckslovesparks.com), an initiative
designed to help improve local area parks in the Greater
Seattle area, Starbucks hometown. With our localized
initiatives, our partners’ involvement is a key component, and
strongly encouraged.
NAACP STRATEGIC ALLIANCE
In May 2006, Starbucks announced a ?ve-year, $2.5
million commitment of both cash and in-kind donations
to the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP), the oldest and largest civil
rights organization in the U.S. This strategic alliance will
enable Starbucks and the NAACP to support programs and
activities re?ecting our shared commitment to social and
economic equality. The NAACP and Starbucks will work
together on an annual basis to identify programs that will
receive funding through Starbucks donations.
44 SOCI ETY
Investing in Communities Around
the World
In our international markets, there are countless examples
of how Starbucks supports local communities through
philanthropy, partner engagement and by opening our doors
for community events. While our international community
e?orts support many causes and often follow the lead of our
partners’ interests, we are beginning to focus more of our
e?orts on support of educational and water-related initiatives
that improve the lives of children. Below are some examples
that represent our activities in ?scal 2006:
Greater China
• Mainland China – Since the opening of our ?rst store
in Beijing in 1999, partners have been involved in
community initiatives, from volunteering in local schools
to assisting other educational nonpro?t organizations.
• Hong Kong/Macau – We facilitated a customer toy
and book drive for Operation Santa Claus, an annual
fundraising e?ort held every December in support of small
charities in urgent need of support.
• Taiwan – Starbucks Taiwan continued its long-term
support of aboriginal children through World Vision
Taiwan, in addition to sponsoring an environmental
awareness campaign and a community cleanup.
Asia Paci?c
• Tailand – On Earth Day, Starbucks Tailand held a
“Green Up” workshop at a central park in Bangkok for
customers and partners. Workshop participants learned
how to minimize their environmental footprint and
planted new trees in Rot Fai Park.
• Japan – Starbucks Japan, in collaboration with Major
League Baseball, donated $248,500 (¥28.7 million) to
four agencies that enhance the lives of children in Japan,
Ethiopia and Indonesia. Revenues for the donations
were raised through sales of a Starbucks Card featuring
Ichiro, a famous Japanese baseball player who plays for
the Seattle Mariners. Te Cards were sold in all Starbucks
Japan stores.
Europe/Middle East/Africa (EMEA)
• Te UK – Starbucks partners have worked with the
National Literacy Trust for six years to develop All Books
for Children, a program that introduces preschool children
and their families to the bene?ts of libraries and reading.
Hundreds of Starbucks partners have been involved with
the program since its inception. For the second year in
a row, UK partners were honored for their outstanding
e?orts in support of literacy with a prestigious award from
Business in the Community, a movement that encourages
positive civic engagement by businesses.
UK partners also supported an African Wildlife
Foundation (AWF) program in Kenya. AWF is working to
improve the accessibility and reliability of water and bring
other basic improvements to a Kenyan co?ee-growing
community. Ten UK partners traveled to Kenya in
October 2006 to meet with local co?ee farmers who have
bene?ted from the project and learn about the other work
of AWF.
• Germany – Literacy was the focus of our partners in
Germany who participated in a nationwide Read-Out
Day in November 2005 in cooperation with the German
Literacy Trust Organization and Die Zeit, a nationwide
weekly newspaper. Twenty-four Starbucks stores hosted
reading sessions for children.
• Greece – Our partners in Greece have continued to
support SOS Children’s Villages and prioritize children’s
health and welfare in their community e?orts. In ?scal
2006, partners lent their support to several programs
for orphaned children. Tey also helped create libraries
and playrooms for children hospitalized in four state-run
organizations.
• Spain – Our partners organized an in-store children’s book
drive during the holiday season in ?scal 2006. Many of
our customers donated books, bringing the total to 1,475
books collected. Te books were then donated to several
di?erent Children’s Hospitals.
• Turkey – Our partners in Turkey identi?ed education as
an important issue in their communities, due to the young
age of the Turkish population (65 percent are below 18
years of age). Working with the Ministry of Education,
each new Starbucks location identi?es a local school to
work with. Partners commit personal time to support
events such as parties, fund raising and gift giving as well
as organizing day trips for the children to theatres and
museums. Tey have found that the trips can be a once-in-
a-lifetime experience for some of the children, and this fact
alone has a positive e?ect on the satisfaction our partners
feel from being involved. As of May 2006, there were 40
schools involved in the program, with an average of 1,000
students each, including two schools that serve students
who are deaf.
45 SOCI ETY
Canada
Starbucks Co?ee Canada is dedicated to supporting family
literacy by working with a variety of national and local literacy
organizations. In ?scal 2006, we partnered with the ABC
Canada Literacy Foundation to launch Gift of Words (GOW),
a national program to address funding shortages in schools,
libraries and literacy organizations. GOW will provide children
with access to books and one-on-one reading opportunities to
encourage their development as lifelong readers and learners.
In its ?rst year GOW delivered thousands of books to children
across Canada, and more than 69,800 children gained access to
new or improved reading circles.
Starbucks Canada donated $264,000 (CAD$305,000), which
represented the full proceeds of latte sales in all Canadian
Starbucks stores on January 19, 2006, to Gift of Words and
Frontier College, another national literacy organization.
Latin America
• Mexico – Until recently, there was no high school
in the rural province of Nuevo Paraiso in Chiapas,
Mexico, an area that is home to many co?ee farming
families. Attending high school – or taking any class
beyond primary school – meant leaving the province
and relocating miles away. When the co?ee cooperative
Comon Yaj Nop Tic looked into building a regional high
school, Tecnológico de Monterrey, a private college, o?ered
to install a virtual education program, transmitted via
satellite to a central location in the province.
After six months of combined e?ort by the cooperative,
Starbucks and many community members, as well
as $10,000 in ?nancial support from Starbucks, a
Community Learning Center was built and opened in
June 2006. Te Center, which now serves 150 co?ee
farming families and others from ?ve neighboring
communities, provides access to a virtual high school and
post-graduate programs, as well as family development and
health programs. Permanent instructors sta? the Learning
Center under the supervision of Instituto Tecnológico y de
Estudios Superiores de Monterrey. More than 50 students
have registered for the 2006-2008 high school program.
Other courses are being developed, including training on
sustainable co?ee production.
• Chile – Starbucks partners in Chile are dedicating
their e?orts to help children with serious medical issues
participate in a special form of movement therapy known
as hipotherapy. Starbucks partners worked twice a week
with these children as they engaged in hipotherapy as
a means to improve their balance and coordination.
Starbucks Chile funded a scholarship to allow one child
to receive the treatment in ?scal 2006, and will continue
supporting the program in ?scal 2007 with an additional
scholarship and partner support.
Investing in Coffee- and Tea-Growing
Communities
Starbucks recognizes the positive impact our trading
relationships and our commitment to education and health
issues can have on co?ee- and tea-growing communities.
Starbucks often works with nongovernmental organizations
(NGOs) with required knowledge and expertise to ensure our
e?orts are e?ective.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks continued to support the
work of Conservation International, African Wildlife
Foundation, CARE International, and Co?ee Kids in the
areas of biodiversity preservation, wildlife conservation,
poverty alleviation and microlending, respectively. We
also maintained our collaboration with Save the Children
in Guatemala and our work with Mercy Corps in tea-
growing communities.
For information about our investments in co?ee- and tea-
growing communities, see pages 27 and 31 respectively.
SAVE THE CHILDREN
In 2005, Starbucks committed $1.5 million over four years
to bring bilingual education to 20 Mayan communities
in the rural highlands of Guatemala, $426,000 of which
was contributed in ?scal 2006. Starbucks selected Save
the Children USA, an international relief and development
organization, to lead our Guatemala Education Initiative.
Save the Children then successfully leveraged Starbucks
support by securing $600,000 in matching funds from the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
to bring additional educational bene?ts to rural Guatemala.
The Guatemala Education Initiative aims to provide quality
preschool, primary and secondary education to rural
indigenous children, with special emphasis on girls. Save
the Children has developed bilingual programs sensitive to
local social and cultural factors, with input from parents,
education of?cials and community leaders.
In the ?rst year of operation, Save the Children worked in 14
schools in 12 communities and established 14 preprimary
centers. More than 50 teachers were trained and as many
as 1,700 children are now participating in the new bilingual
active learning programs. More information is available on
the Save the Children website: www.savethechildren.org/
corporate/partners/starbucks.html
Starbucks partners have supported the Guatemala Education
Initiative enthusiastically. In ?scal 2006, partner support
of the Guatemala Education Initiative provided funding
to furnish two rural Guatemala schools with backpacks
containing school supplies; school playgrounds; and other
valuable supplemental support for the children.
46 SOCI ETY
The Starbucks Foundation
Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz established Te
Starbucks Foundation in 1997 with a mission to create hope,
discovery and opportunity in communities where Starbucks
retail stores are located. Since that time, Te Foundation
has provided more than $18 million in funding initially
to literacy and youth education programs in underserved
communities in the U.S. and Canada. More recently, Te
Foundation has broadened its approach to grant making.
Te Starbucks Foundation, a 501(c)(3) charitable
organization, receives the majority of its funding from
Starbucks Corporation as well as some private donations. Te
Foundation, a separate entity from Starbucks Corporation, is
governed by a board of directors comprised of 11 Starbucks
senior executives and is chaired by Orin Smith, retired
Starbucks president and chief executive o?cer.
In ?scal 2006, Te Foundation made more than 200 grants
to nonpro?t organizations, totaling $7 million.
Te Starbucks Foundation is increasingly focusing more of
its resources on education and addressing issues related to
water. Te Foundation seeks to align its giving with its core
values and mission, and be responsive to emergent needs in
communities where Starbucks has a presence. In ?scal 2006,
Te Foundation supported a variety of initiatives around the
world, including:
• Rebuilding e?orts in areas impacted by two signi?cant
natural disasters
• Projects aimed at improving access to water, sanitation and
hygiene education
• Youth development programs in education, the arts and
environmental education
• Continued support of key nonpro?t partners that promote
literacy
• Funding to establish Te Starbucks China Education
Project at Give2Asia
Hurricane Katrina Rebuilding Efforts
In September 2005, following Hurricane Katrina, Starbucks
made a $5 million commitment, funded by both Starbucks
and Te Starbucks Foundation, to support the region. Te
Starbucks Foundation donated $200,000 to immediate relief
e?orts following Katrina, including $150,000 to Habitat for
Humanity and $50,000 to Jumpstart of New Orleans. Te
Jumpstart funds will be used to rebuild libraries and replace
books, and the donation to Habitat for Humanity supported
a musicians village project. Te Starbucks Foundation has
taken an innovative, community-based approach to helping
the region recover from the hurricane disaster, including:
• Making grants of $50,000 each to four community
foundations to be used where the need was greatest.
• Setting up Donor Advised Funds totaling $700,000 at
three community foundations to take recommendations
from partners (employees) for gifts of up to $10,000 to
grass-roots, neighborhood nonpro?ts.
• Instituting a Gulf Coast version of Make Your Mark to
support our partners’ extraordinary volunteerism in their
communities. Te Foundation donates $25 for every
hour that our partners volunteer their time to nonpro?t
organizations working to restore homes, lives and
communities destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. To date,
nearly $17,000 has been granted to eight projects through
Starbucks match of the volunteer hours of 86 individuals.
Te Foundation will monitor rebuilding e?orts in the region
and work with community leaders to identify the areas of
greatest need and determine how the reserved funds can best
serve local communities.
My Starbucks –
Jerry Moran, store manager, and his
fellow New Orleans partners have been
instrumental in saving ?ood-damaged
homes from the bulldozer. The City
of New Orleans placed a deadline for
homeowners to salvage and treat their
sodden and often mold-infested homes.
The cost was prohibitive for many
families in lower income neighborhoods.
So Jerry and his co-workers, along
with others throughout the Gulf Coast
region, teamed up with ACORN (The
Association of Community Organizations
for Reform Now) to help recover
these homes through a combined 670-
hour volunteer effort. The volunteers
restored 11 homes in ?scal 2006, while
raising an additional $17,000 to support
ACORN through donations from a special
Gulf Coast version of Make Your Mark.
F UT URE G OA L
The Starbucks Foundation will mark its 10-year
anniversary in 2007. Both The Foundation and
Starbucks Coffee Company will announce a global
philanthropic framework focused on supporting
educational initiatives in Starbucks retail markets
around the world.
47 SOCI ETY
Ethos Water Fund and World Water Initiatives
Trough the acquisition of the Ethos Water brand in April
2005, Starbucks embarked on an e?ort to raise awareness of
the world water crisis and support clean water initiatives. For
each bottle of Ethos
™
water sold, ?ve cents is donated toward
Starbucks goal of contributing at least $10 million by 2010 to
help alleviate the world water crisis.
Te Ethos Water Fund is housed within and directed
by Te Starbucks Foundation to support nonpro?t and
nongovernmental organizations working to bring clean water
to those in need around the world. Funding priority is given
to integrated and sustainable water projects that positively
impact the lives of children and their communities.
On World Water Day 2006 Te Starbucks Foundation
announced two new multiyear initiatives to help communities
in Indonesia and Ethiopia gain access to improved water,
sanitation and hygiene education.
Mercy Corps in Sumatra, Indonesia
Te Starbucks Foundation committed $1 million over two
years to support Mercy Corps’ Sumatra Healthy Schools
Program on Sumatra Island, Indonesia. In this region, the
lack of potable water has helped fuel an anemia epidemic
in young people, among other serious nutritional and
health problems.
Mercy Corps has identi?ed four interrelated program
components to improve children’s health by addressing
the problem through 960 schools in four provinces. Te
Foundation’s Ethos Water Fund is providing needed funds to
address the water and sanitation components of the program
in 760 schools.
For more information about the Sumatra Healthy Schools
Program, see www.ethoswater.com and http://indonesia.
mercycorps.org
WaterAid in Ethiopia
Menge Woreda is located in northwestern Ethiopia near the
Sudan border. Surrounded by mountains, it is a remote and
marginalized region of one of the poorest countries in the
world.
Over a period of three years, beginning in 2005, WaterAid
plans to provide all 22 villages in Menge Woreda with
access to safe water, e?ective sanitation, and the hygiene
education necessary to make the best use of these facilities.
Te Starbucks Foundation has committed $1.13 million
over three years to support this potentially life-changing
project for the 38,000 residents of Menge Woreda. For more
information about this project, see www.ethoswater.com,
or see www.wateraid.org for more about WaterAid’s work
in Ethiopia.
My Starbucks –
Sandy Nelson has been engaged in
the world water crisis for the last ?ve
years. She and her husband, Chris, are
actively involved with a Seattle-based
international water organization and
have seen ?rsthand how severe the
water-access issues are in countries
like Honduras, Ethiopia, Bangladesh
and India. “To actually see children
who are sick because their drinking
water is contaminated changes one’s
values tremendously,” Sandy says.
Sandy is a senior designer in the
Starbucks Creative Group, so when
Starbucks acquired Ethos Water in
2005 she was eager to bring her
personal experience to help build the
Ethos Water brand. The passion Sandy
has for bringing safe water to those
in desperate need is now helping to
inform the design and communication
of the Ethos Water mission.
48 SOCI ETY
Supporting Youth: Arts and Literacy, Environmental
Literacy
Trough the Giving Voice grant program, Te Starbucks
Foundation promotes literacy for the 21st century. Te
regional grant program supports programming for youth ages
6-18. Priority is given to programs that integrate literacy skills
with personal and civic action, and that empower youth to
become local champions for a sustainable environment. In
?scal 2006, Te Foundation awarded more than $2 million
in Giving Voice grants, ranging from $5,000–$20,000, to
community-based organizations in the U.S. and Canada.
City at Peace Award
In May 2006, City at Peace, an after-school program for
teens in Los Angeles, honored Te Starbucks Foundation and
Starbucks partners for their support over the last three years.
City at Peace was a ?edgling organization in 2003 when,
with the support of local Starbucks partners, the organization
applied for a grant from Te Starbucks Foundation. Today
City at Peace is a dynamic youth development program that
uses the performing arts to bring together teenagers from
vastly diverse backgrounds to create personal and social
change. Te program supports, guides, instructs and nurtures
youth leaders, corresponding perfectly with the goals of Te
Starbucks Foundation’s Giving Voice grants.
Key Partnerships
In ?scal 2006, Te Foundation continued support of several
national youth organizations in the U.S. and Canada –
America SCORES and Jumpstart – and Earth Day Network,
an environmental education organization.
Jumpstart’s Read for the Record
During August 2006, Starbucks supported Jumpstart’s Read
for the Record campaign to promote awareness of early
learning and school readiness. Te campaign raised national
awareness of Jumpstart’s successful approach to preparing
young children to succeed in school, and achieved the
following goals as well:
• An o?cial Guinness World Record was set when adults
across the U.S. read Te Little Engine Tat Could to more
than 150,000 children on August 24, 2006.
• In partnership with Jumpstart’s corporate partners,
Starbucks was the exclusive retailer and sold nearly 53,000
copies of a special edition of Te Little Engine Tat Could
in four weeks and donated the sales price of the books,
totaling more than $500,000 to Jumpstart.
• Starbucks stores hosted more than 330 reading events
across the U.S., engaging thousands of partners and
customers in Jumpstart’s mission.
• Renewed interest in the classic children’s book pushed it to
?rst place on the New York Times Bestselling Children’s
Book list.
Earth Day Network – National Civic Education Project
Te Starbucks Foundation contributed $75,000 in ?scal
2006 to launch Earth Day Network’s new National Civic
Education Project (NCEP). Te Project recruits teachers and
their students from diverse urban neighborhoods to combine
civic and environmental education through a community
environmental project of their choosing.
In its ?rst year, the NCEP worked with three schools in
Cincinnati and one in Washington, D.C. Te project was
particularly e?ective in Cincinnati where the teachers
focused on greening schools and contributed greatly to the
Board of Education’s decision to adopt greener building
practices. Student projects ranged from building a green
roof on a school to raising awareness of the economic,
educational and environmental bene?ts of green schools. Te
students presented their ?ndings to the Board of Education,
including such bene?ts as higher attendance and greater
academic performance.
More information about Te Starbucks Foundation is available
online at www.starbucks.com/foundation.
THE STARBUCKS CHINA EDUCATION PROJECT
Starbucks ?rst store in China opened in 1999 and ever since
we have been working to simultaneously expand our store
and community presence. At the heart of Starbucks social
responsibility endeavors in China is the China Education Project.
This project was created to support the emphasis that both China
and Starbucks place on the importance of education. In 2005,
The Starbucks Foundation pledged $5 million over ?ve years to
establish the Starbucks China Education Project at Give2Asia, an
organization dedicated to promoting philanthropy in Asia.
The Starbucks China Education Project is also overseen by
a local steering committee in China, comprised of education
experts, foundation and community representatives, and
Starbucks executives. Working with this committee of local
stakeholders helps ensure that Starbucks efforts are locally
relevant and address the areas of greatest need in the rural
communities targeted for assistance. Since the project
was launched in 2005, the steering committee has been
instrumental in shaping the overall direction and structure of
the project.
The committee identi?ed the need for quality teacher training
as one of the top priorities to improve education. In China,
many teachers in rural villages have little or no formal training.
Almost always, they are the only teacher in their village so they
must teach to all grade levels.
To help address this challenge, the Starbucks China Education
Project is supporting the China Soong Ching Ling Foundation
in an effort to provide training for teachers to improve their
skills and offer ?nancial assistance to ?nancially disadvantaged
students pursuing teaching careers in 15 universities in China.
At the ?rst teacher training session held in July 2006, teachers
were trained in the latest techniques and received materials
to continue their education in their home villages. Other
components of the program will offer:
• Training for school administrators
• Books, supplies and teaching tools
By 2010, the teacher-training program is expected to reach
an estimated 3,000 teachers from nearly 1,000 primary and
middle schools located in ?ve western provinces.
49 SOCI ETY
STARBUCKS COMMITMENT TO
HEALTH AND WELLNESS
In 2004 the World Health Organization (WHO)
introduced a major plan, calling attention to
the growing worldwide epidemic of diseases
attributed to poor diet, lack of exercise and
obesity. Among them: heart disease, diabetes,
cancer, osteoporosis and tooth decay – all of
which have an impact on healthcare systems
worldwide and overall quality of life. According
to the WHO, obesity is not only a formidable
problem in some Western countries, it is now
becoming an issue in the developing world.
As concern over this public health issue mounts, Starbucks
has already implemented a number of health and wellness
measures to o?er more choices to our customers. Tese
include:
• Expanding our menu o?erings to include an array of
options, and encouraging customization
• Providing nutrition information on our beverages and food
products
• Reducing trans fats in our products
• Adopting a long-term and holistic approach to promote
health and wellness
Expanded and Customized Menu Offerings
Starbucks actively listens to what our customers tell us and
continually adapts in response to their demands. In recent
years our customers have requested a wider range of menu
options from which to choose and customize. Tey have also
asked for more nutrition information about Starbucks food
and beverage products. Tis feedback, as well as feedback
from nutrition experts, helped inform speci?c actions we
took in ?scal 2006, including the formation of an internal
team to focus on health and wellness initiatives. For
example, this team is looking at nutritional criteria for future
product development.
In addition, Starbucks will drive e?orts aimed at providing
a broader selection of product choices to our customers, on
both a companywide and a regional basis. We will build on
options currently o?ered, such as nonfat, organic and soy
milk; sugar-free syrups used in some of Starbucks handcrafted
beverages; reduced-fat and lowfat baked items; and lower fat
and reduced calorie Frappuccino® blended beverages.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks introduced several beverage and
food items as part of our commitment to health and wellness.
Here are some examples:
• Yogurt parfaits and fresh fruit salads were added to the
menu in various stores.
• Prepackaged nut and dried fruit blends began
being o?ered.
• Pomegranate and Tangerine Frappuccino® Juice
Blends, which contain real fruit juice and are naturally
fat-free, cholesterol-free, and completely non-dairy,
were introduced. Tese lighter beverages can be
customized with any Tazo® tea ?avor, including ca?eine-
free options.
We encourage our customers to customize and create their
favorite beverages exactly as they like – from lighter versions
to indulgent splurges. In ?scal 2006, nearly 40 percent of the
beverages consumed by our U.S. customers were ordered with
fewer calories and less fat, such as co?ee and tea.
50 SOCI ETY
Nutrition Information on Starbucks Beverages and
Fresh Food
We are committed to helping our customers make well-
informed choices about Starbucks food and beverages
by making nutrition information readily available. Our
U.S., Canadian and UK customers can access nutrition
information on Starbucks beverages via an in-store brochure.
Te information is also available on Starbucks.com.
In ?scal 2006, we enhanced our website to include nutrition
information on all fresh food items o?ered at Starbucks stores
in the U.S., the majority of which are regional o?erings.
Customers visiting the nutrition page on Starbucks website
are prompted to enter their local zip code and then access
nutrition information on speci?c fresh food items o?ered at
their local Starbucks store.
Over the past three years, more than six million customers,
nearly half of those in ?scal 2006, visited Starbucks.com for
nutrition information. Tis indicates to us that Starbucks
customers are taking personal responsibility to make their
own well-informed choices.
Addressing the Issue of Trans Fat
Starbucks has taken measures to reformulate our beverage
ingredients in order to reduce trans fat content while still
maintaining the taste and quality our customers enjoy. We are
also working closely with our regional bakeries on e?orts to
reduce or eliminate trans fat content in our pastry items.
Some of our accomplishments in ?scal 2006 are listed below:
• Complied with the new labeling requirements for trans
fats. Tis includes the labeling of our prepackaged foods
and posting information about trans fat content in our
non-packaged foods and beverages online. Since dairy
ingredients contain small amounts of naturally occurring
trans fats, there will always be traces of these fats reported
for our beverages made with dairy products.
• Reformulated our Frappuccino® blended crème base,
bringing all of Starbucks beverages to less than 0.5 grams
of arti?cial trans fat.
• Reduced trans fats to 0 grams (per the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration’s nutrition labeling rounding rule) in
all of Starbucks national promotional pastry items o?ered
in the U.S., including our pumpkin cream cheese mu?ns
and gingerbread loafs.
Our Long-term Approach to Health and Wellness
Our commitment to health and wellness is a deeply
embedded tenet of Starbucks history and culture. It’s re?ected
in the way we care for our partners and in the relationships
we have with our customers. In recent years, Starbucks has
become an advocate for healthcare reform in the U.S.
We believe in being proactive when it comes to addressing
the shared concerns of our customers and the public at large.
In early ?scal 2006, Starbucks held a roundtable discussion
with nutrition experts. We asked for feedback regarding our
health and nutrition e?orts, and we listened to their advice.
Starbucks valued this dialogue greatly and is now moving
forward on plans for continued engagement.
My Starbucks —
Providing nutrition information enables
our customers to make well-informed
decisions, and customize their orders.
Customization can help people cut calories,
fat and sugar without sacri?cing taste
and quality. Customers can tailor their
order by asking for less syrup or
substitute sugar-free syrup; request
a “light” version of their favorite
Frappuccino
®
blended beverage; opt for
nonfat milk; or ask to “hold the whip.”
For instance, my favorite beverage - a
Double Tall Sugar Free Vanilla Nonfat
Caramel Macchiato - contains about 100
calories, 1 gram of fat, 3 grams of added
sugar and provides 20 percent of my
daily calcium and 8 grams of protein.
These types of simple adjustments
can easily save 100 calories, which
day after day and over the course
of a year, can translate to a loss
of 10 pounds of body weight.
Katie Thomson, RD
Starbucks nutritionist
F UT URE G OA L
In ?scal 2007, work with our regional bakeries to
eliminate trans fats from all of our food offerings in
our U.S. company-operated stores.
F UT URE G OA L
Establish a Health and Wellness Advisory Panel to
meet on an ongoing basis, and include experts from
the medical and nutrition communities who will
provide insight and advice to Starbucks on health and
wellness issues; societal expectations of Starbucks
with respect to health and wellness; and our future
initiatives and strategies globally.
51 SOCI ETY
Being Responsive to Our Customers
Starbucks customers expect an outstanding co?ee
experience – at their local store and in every Starbucks
around the world – each time they visit. In the spirit
of our fourth Guiding Principle, which inspires us to
“develop enthusiastically satis?ed customers all of the
time,” we are constantly looking for ways to meet or exceed
their expectations.
At the end of ?scal 2006, we were serving customers around
the world more than 40 million times per week. To ensure
their Starbucks Experience is consistently excellent wherever
they are, it’s essential that we stay in touch. We strive to
respond to every customer comment appropriately and in
a timely manner. We use our customers’ feedback to make
improvements that enhance their experience and earn their
loyalty and respect.
Listening to Our Customers
Several channels are available for customers to provide their
feedback. Tey can call Starbucks customer relations at a
toll-free number, ?ll out in-store comment cards, or submit
comments online at Starbucks.com. We welcome the valuable
comments we receive from our customers, which we share
with store partners, management and others as appropriate.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks received more than 890,000
customer contacts. Te majority of customer contacts
concerned the use of a Starbucks Card or the service in a
Starbucks store. Less than two percent of the total volume of
customer contacts related to Starbucks social responsibility.
Consistent with prior years, the areas of social responsibility
that customers asked about most often pertained to Starbucks
recycling policies and our ethical sourcing of co?ee.
Starbucks is devoted to acting responsibly in all areas of
our business practices and we appreciate that our customers
share our concerns. To learn more about Starbucks ongoing
environmental e?orts or the way we source and purchase
co?ee, please see pages 54 and 16 respectively.
Customer Feedback
Trough various channels, customers also expressed their
interest in other CSR-related issues in ?scal 2006, including:
our support of the U.S. military; our policy on supporting
rodeos; the presence of rBGH in our dairy products; the
ca?eine content in our co?ee; and our marketing practices
related to youth and Starbucks liqueur products. A summary
of Starbucks policies on each of these issues is provided in
this section.
Starbucks Support of the U.S. Military
More than three years ago a single e-mail erroneously
accused Starbucks of not supporting U.S. military personnel.
Te private e-mail began to circulate widely online. In a
subsequent e-mail, the author apologized for the earlier
misstatement and retracted it. Despite this, the original,
inaccurate e-mail has continued to circulate, and customers
frequently ask about it. We assure them that this online
rumor is absolutely false.
Starbucks and our partners have consistently demonstrated
support of U.S. military personnel in a number of ways. We
were honored to receive a 2006 Freedom Award from the
Department of Defense. For speci?c information about the
Freedom Award and our ongoing e?orts with the American
Red Cross to support U.S. military personnel, please visit
Starbucks.com.
rBGH-free Dairy
We are actively working with our suppliers to secure an
adequate milk supply that is rBGH-free. rBGH is a synthetic
growth hormone given to dairy cows to stimulate milk
production. See page 32 for more information about our
e?orts to require our core dairy products to be rBGH-free.
Starbucks A?liation with Rodeos
As a member of the communities we serve, and as a way
to share the joy of co?ee, Starbucks often supports local
activities or events. We frequently donate co?ee or host co?ee
seminars, free of charge, with no expected recognition in
return. Tese community e?orts are not a sponsorship nor
an endorsement of any event or activity. Tey are simply a
way for Starbucks to lend a helping hand and support the
community. It is in this way that Starbucks has been a?liated
with rodeo events in Texas, Wyoming and Calgary, Canada.
We have never sponsored a rodeo event. Our goal is always to
support, not o?end, our community of neighbors.
Ca?eine Content in Starbucks Co?ee
We select the ?nest quality arabica co?ees from around the
world and roast them to our signature Starbucks Roast.
®
No
matter how carefully or precisely we roast our co?ee, not
every cup of Starbucks co?ee will contain exactly the same
amount of ca?eine. Many variables contribute to ca?eine
content from cup to cup, including where the beans were
grown and roasted, the brewing method, grind, and type of
co?ee beverage purchased. We recognize that some people are
sensitive to ca?eine. For customers concerned about ca?eine
content, we o?er several deca?einated co?ees, teas and
other beverages, including Frappuccino
®
blended beverages,
in most markets. Information about the health e?ects of
ca?eine is available online at www.co?eescience.org or
www.ico.org/ca?eine.asp.
52 SOCI ETY
Marketing to Youth
Starbucks customers include people of every ethnicity,
income, and age group with varying tastes and interests. In
addition to our beverages and food items, Starbucks o?ers
products meant to educate and entertain all age groups. We
also seek out philanthropic opportunities, including event
sponsorships, to support the activities and programs that are
important to the communities in which we operate.
Some of our product o?erings and community activities
may appeal to young people. We are extremely mindful of
connecting with youth in a responsible manner.
Responsible Marketing of Liqueurs
Starbucks and Jim Beam are committed to the responsible
marketing of Starbucks
™
Cream Liqueur and Starbucks
™
Co?ee Liqueur. Te pricing, branding, packaging and
marketing are speci?cally designed to target mature
consumers. Additionally, Starbucks partners who manage our
liqueur brands are trained on the Distilled Spirits Council of
the United States (DISCUS) Code of Responsible Practices
for Beverage Alcohol Advertising and Marketing.
Both products are available only in locations licensed to sell
distilled spirits and are not sold in Starbucks retail locations.
Customer Surveys
Customer surveys o?er another mechanism to obtain
feedback about the quality of our customers’ experience.
We recently altered our research methods, moving beyond
surveying for satisfaction and focusing instead on identifying
factors that in?uence our customers’ experience and their
connection to the Starbucks brand.
In ?scal 2006 Starbucks launched a new survey tool to gather
ongoing input from co?ee consumers and our customers,
including those who had visited Starbucks within 30 days of
the time of the survey.
When customers were surveyed between May and August
2006 and asked whether they would recommend Starbucks
to a friend or family, 87 percent responded that they were
extremely or very likely to recommend Starbucks.
Our recent surveys also have found that the majority of
respondents are unaware of the company’s socially responsible
initiatives, including Starbucks support for community
activities such as local education programs and clean water
projects. Awareness among our customers was greater than
among the general population, with 38 percent associating
Starbucks with good corporate citizenship, although we
strive to do a better job informing customers about our
e?orts to be socially responsible in all aspects of our global
business operations.
To gauge customer acceptance of Starbucks in their
neighborhoods, we recently asked survey respondents,
speci?cally those who presently live near a Starbucks, what
their overall feeling was about having a Starbucks co?ee
shop near their home. We found that 66 percent had positive
feelings about having a Starbucks store in their neighborhood,
while ?ve percent indicated negative feelings. When we asked
other respondents, those who do not currently live near a
Starbucks, how they would feel about having a Starbucks
co?ee shop open near their home, 53 percent indicated
positive feelings and 10 percent indicated negative feelings.
(See pie charts.)
Te level of positive consumer acceptance that already exists
for Starbucks is encouraging, particularly given our plans
for future growth. We believe Starbucks demonstrated
commitment to social and environmental responsibility
matters to consumers and, if we are successful in increasing
awareness, will help us continue to gain acceptance in local
communities and among our neighbors.
Respondents who presently have a Starbucks near home.
Q: What is your overall feeling about having a Starbucks coffee shop near your home?
Very positive
25.8%
Extremely positive
23.8%
Extremely negative
1.3%
Very negative
0.9%
Somewhat negative
2.9%
Somewhat positive
16%
Neutral/neither positive
or negative
29.3%
Respondents who do not presently have a Starbucks located near home.
Q: How would you feel about a Starbucks coffee shop opening near your home?
Very positive
17.9%
Extremely positive
22.4%
Extremely negative
4.9%
Very negative
1.7%
Somewhat negative
3.6%
Somewhat positive
12.7%
Neutral/neither positive
or negative
36.9%
53 SOCI ETY
Public Policy and Government Affairs
As a growing and increasingly more complex global business,
Starbucks participates in the public policy arena, which
includes direct and indirect lobbying at the local, state and
federal level in the U.S. In all of our e?orts, we strive to
comply with all applicable laws and regulations, and work
fairly and honestly with government o?cials and others
in our communities. Starbucks policy forbids partners
from o?ering or making payments or gifts on behalf of the
company in order to in?uence a government o?cial, or from
representing their personal views as those of the company.
Presently, Starbucks does not have a Political Action
Committee established for our partners to make political
contributions, nor did the company make any corporate
political contributions in ?scal 2006.
Public Policy Focus Areas
Starbucks has a responsibility to maximize and protect the
company’s value for our partners and shareholders. Our
e?orts are focused on the following:
• Tax Policy – Sound tax policy will continue to play a
key role in the competitiveness of U.S.-based companies.
Starbucks closely monitors tax policy developments and
has advocated for a tax structure that maintains incentives
for increased productivity.
• Trade Policy – Starbucks supports bilateral and
multilateral trade agreements that help to create
opportunities for investment in emerging markets. We
provide input to U.S. and foreign governments on speci?c
trade agreements that help to reduce barriers to U.S.
exports, provide safeguards for intellectual property and
trademarks and promote transparency on both sides of the
trading relationship. In ?scal 2006, our advocacy e?orts
related to Peru and Colombia Free Trade Agreements as
well as general market access issues.
• Healthcare – Providing healthcare bene?ts to our eligible
full- and part-time partners is a commitment Starbucks
stands by. However, we are greatly concerned about the
impact rising healthcare costs will have on our long-term
ability to sustain these bene?ts. In ?scal 2006, we focused
on identifying and prioritizing the macro issues that we
believe will help to solve Starbucks current healthcare
challenges, which we are using to inform our objectives
and action items for ?scal 2007.
54 ENVI RONMENT
OUR COMMITMENT TO
ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP
Starbucks commitment to contribute positively
to the environment is a Guiding Principle of our
company. Ever since 1992, when we established
Starbucks Environmental Mission Statement,
we have been expanding our de?nition of what
environmental responsibility means within the
context of our growing and increasingly more
complex business.
In this section we describe the initiatives we have undertaken
to be good environmental stewards, and report on our
performance in this area. Speci?c topics covered include:
• Starbucks climate change mitigation strategy
– Purchasing renewable energy
– Saving energy
– Joining together with others to raise awareness of
climate change
• Reducing the environmental impacts of our cups
• Understanding and improving our environmental
footprint
– Greening the store through design
– Greening store operations
– Waste and recycling
• Looking to our supply chain: sustainable packaging
• Portrait of a typical Starbucks store
– Energy and water use
Addressing Climate Change
Te potentially disruptive changes in the earth’s climate due
to an increase in greenhouse gases (GHG) in the atmosphere
is a major concern for our company, our customers, our
business partners and other stakeholders. We agree with the
consensus of the scienti?c community that climate change
could pose an enormous threat to the future of our planet.
Starbucks core business is high-quality co?ee, an agricultural
product that ?ourishes in tropical microclimates around the
globe. Climatic conditions in?uence the yield and quality
of co?ee crops. We are concerned that climate change could
threaten the production of high-quality co?ee crops and
ultimately impact our business.
Starbucks believes that governments, organizations and
individuals have a responsibility to take meaningful action
to reduce GHG emissions, regardless of the scale of their
contribution to the issue. We have been working to better
understand the risks of climate change for our business, and
identify measures we can take to mitigate those risks.
Since 1992, Starbucks has been evolving and implementing
an environmental strategy focused in part on the stewardship
of key co?ee-growing regions. We revamped our co?ee-
buying practices several years ago to include speci?c criteria
for environmental preservation of these areas. We believe
this approach will help to support and encourage ecological
stability and resilience in co?ee-growing areas across the globe.
To address other aspects of our business operations, Starbucks
established a three-year climate change mitigation strategy
focused on:
1. Purchasing renewable energy
2. Focusing on energy conservation
3. Advocating the need for collaborative action
We selected these areas by analyzing our greenhouse gas
footprint and identifying the points of greatest leverage in our
own operations and in the global community. We are now in
the second year of implementing the strategy. Our progress is
described throughout this section.
Starbucks Greenhouse Gas Emissions
In 2004, we conducted an inventory of our 2003 GHG
emissions as part of a broader e?ort to better understand and
quantify our environmental footprint. We used the World
Resources Institute Greenhouse Gas Protocol to conduct the
inventory of major emissions from our company-operated
retail stores, co?ee roasting, administrative operations and
distribution network. We did not include our international
retail operations or other businesses. Te inventory found
that 81 percent of our GHG emissions are attributable to
electricity purchased for use in our stores, while 18 percent
comes from co?ee roasting. We have used the inventory to
guide development of our climate change strategy. Our focus
is on emission sources under our direct control, primarily
electricity used in our stores and co?ee roasting (Scope 1 and
2 in the WRI Protocol).
Purchased
electricity
81%
Coffee roasting and
natural gas
18%
Company-owned
vehicles and
aircraft
1%
2003 Baseline Greenhouse Gas Emissions – Scope 1 and 2
55 ENVI RONMENT
Powered by Wind
During ?scal 2006, we quadrupled our renewable energy
purchase to equal 20 percent of the energy used in our
U.S. and Canada company-operated stores. According
to Starbucks GHG inventory more than 80 percent of
the emissions within our direct control result from these
store operations.
An energy resource is considered renewable if it can be
naturally replenished. For our renewable energy purchases,
we worked through the World Resources Institute’s Green
Power Market Development Group to buy 100 percent wind
renewable energy certi?cates*, o?setting 124 million pounds
(56,000 metric tons) of CO
2
. Pooling our purchasing power
with other companies has helped us obtain favorable rates for
our renewable energy – less than a two percent premium over
our average rate for conventional electricity.
Starbucks is also a member of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency’s (EPA) Green Power Partnership. Te
size of our renewable energy purchase in ?scal 2006 ranked
Starbucks sixth overall among other participating companies,
and second in the retail sector. On October 24, 2005,
Starbucks was recognized by the EPA with a 2005 Green
Power Leadership Award.
Our plan is to begin o?ering Starbucks suppliers the
opportunity to purchase renewable energy certi?cates through
our contract, at a “Starbucks preferred pricing” rate. In 2007,
we will extend this o?er initially to 388 of our major suppliers
in the U.S.
* A Renewable Energy Certi?cate represents one megawatt-hour (MWh) of
renewable electricity generated and delivered somewhere on the power grid. Each
MWh of clean renewable electricity results in one less MWh of power coming
from a CO
2
emitting process. Terefore a Renewable Energy Certi?cate also
represents the environmental bene?ts of replacing this type of power with clean
power. (Source: 3 Phases Energy Services)
My Starbucks –
Our reliance on fossil fuel sources for
energy is contributing to the rapid
acceleration of global climate change.
It’s imperative that we transition
to cleaner and renewable forms of
energy to help contain environmental
damage. Working with community-based
groups involved with renewable energy
projects, I’ve seen how dif?cult it can
be to convince businesses to invest in
environmentally sound forms of energy.
The fact that some companies – such
as Starbucks - are willing to step
forward and support renewable energy
development is notable – and extremely
important to the future of our planet.
Jeff Paulson, principal
Jeff Paulson & Associates, a law
?rm specializing in community-
based renewable energy projects
56 ENVI RONMENT
Energy Consumption
Saving energy is often the cheapest, cleanest and most
e?ective way to cut GHG emissions. During ?scal 2006,
we continued to upgrade store equipment to more energy-
e?cient versions, and installed more e?cient technology at
our co?ee roasting plants.
We also updated a performance tool geared for store managers
to emphasize the importance of managing the environmental
aspects of store operations, and highlighted both the positive
and negative impacts their actions can have on the bottom
line and the environment.
Joining Forces
Climate change is believed to be the greatest environmental
threat of our generation. We believe Starbucks can play a key
role by helping to increase awareness of climate change, and
encouraging collective action among multiple parties. Some
of the steps we took in ?scal 2006 included:
• Placing six full-page advertisements in Te New York Times
that highlighted the need for collective action on this issue.
Te advertisements discussed the problem; highlighted
Starbucks emission reductions activities; provided simple,
high-impact actions readers could take to contribute to
solutions; and informed readers of our partnership with
Global Green USA, a nonpro?t organization founded
by former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev
(www.globalgreen.org).
• Continuing to educate partners about the issue through
Starbucks internal communications.
• Supporting and participating in organizations that
are taking e?ective action on the issue, including
the World Resources Institute’s Green Power Market
Development Group (www.wri.org); Te Climate Group,
an international organization dedicated to advancing
business and government leadership on climate change
(www.theclimategroup.org); and Global Green USA.
• Acting as a local leader. In Seattle, Washington, the
home of Starbucks global headquarters, Starbucks
former ceo Orin Smith co-chaired Mayor Greg Nickles’
Green Ribbon Commission, which resulted in the
company serving as a founding member of the Seattle
Climate Partnership. Company sta? also chaired the
Seattle Chamber of Commerce Business Sustainability
Committee.
Greening the Cup
As the country’s leading specialty co?ee retailer, Starbucks
goes through a lot of cups – purchasing 2.3 billion in ?scal
2006. Te Environmental Defense paper calculator tool
estimates that Starbucks move in 2006 to use new hot cups
with 10 percent post-consumer recycled ?ber will achieve the
following environmental improvements in the ?rst year alone:
Resource savings Equivalency
11,300 fewer tons of wood
consumed
about 78,000 trees
58 billion BTUs of energy saved enough to supply 640 homes for
a year
47 million gallons (178 million
liters) of wastewater avoided
enough to ?ll 71 Olympic-sized
swimming pools
3 million pounds (1 million
kilograms) of solid waste prevented
equivalent to 109 fully loaded
garbage trucks
Source: Environmental Defense (www.environmentaldefense.org), calculation by
www.papercalculator.org.
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, Starbucks will launch three interrelated
initiatives designed to improve the energy and
environmental performance in our stores. These
include:
• Our work with the U.S. Green Building Council
to develop LEED (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) standards for the retail
sector. These standards set out best practices for
environmentally sound design of new stores, and
provide a basis for third-party certi?cation to ensure
the standards are met. In 2007, we will complete
our participation in the pilot of these standards.
• We will use a representative sample of stores as
a “test bed” to monitor energy and water usage
as part of a comprehensive audit. This audit will
provide us with baseline information on how and
when our stores use energy and water in order to
determine conservation opportunities.
• A complementary program is also being planned
to provide approximately 350 store managers in
six regions with “resource report cards” that give
feedback on store energy and water use, as well
as trend data and comparisons to benchmark
operations. The goal of this program is to help
partners identify ways to use water and energy more
ef?ciently and reduce costs. Based on experience
with the ?rst group of stores, the program will then
be rolled out to all U.S. and Canada company-
operated stores on a voluntary basis.
57 ENVI RONMENT
Paper Hot Beverage Cups
Paper cups provide a convenient way to serve Starbucks
hot beverages, but they also result in some environmental
impacts.
Paper cups account for nearly nine percent of typical in-store
waste by volume, although most cups are disposed of outside
the store after their use. Our e?orts to reduce environmental
impacts of our disposable cups began in the mid-1990s. Over
the last decade, we have taken several actions, including:
• Eliminating most double-cupping by utilizing corrugated
hot beverage sleeves made of 60 percent post-consumer
recycled ?ber.
• O?ering customers a $0.10 discount when they use their
own reusable cups. Customers in the U.S. and Canada
took advantage of this o?er more than 17 million times in
?scal 2006, keeping 674,000 pounds (306,000 kilograms)
of paper from going to the land?ll.
• Introducing hot beverage paper cups made with 10 percent
post-consumer recycled content. Tese cups, which are
the ?rst direct contact food packaging containing post-
consumer recycled content to receive a favorable safety
review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
were introduced in our U.S. and Canada stores in 2006.
Starbucks paper cups, used for hot beverages, are made of
paper ?ber with a lining of low-density polyethylene plastic.
Te paper provides the rigidity for the cup, while the plastic
layer keeps the paper layer intact by protecting it from the hot
beverage. Tis plastic layer also makes the hot beverage cups
unrecyclable in most paper recycling systems.
Understanding and Improving our
Environmental Footprint
When a customer comes into a Starbucks store, we look at it
as an opportunity to exceed their expectations. Te customer
may come for a cup of co?ee, but we know they also take
an interest in our how we run our business, including our
environmental performance.
We continually strive to understand our environmental
footprint and reduce our impacts. We are launching
initiatives in ?scal 2007 that we believe will help us achieve
a consistent, high level of environmental performance across
our operations and the life cycle of our products.
Greening the Store
Both the design and the operation of our stores a?ect their
environmental performance (See “Portrait of a Starbucks
Store” on page 62). For several years, we have led a group
of retailers and worked collaboratively with the U.S. Green
Business Council (USGBC) to explore green building
opportunities in our sector. Te USGBC has developed
a widely used and highly regarded set of standards called
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED).
Buildings that meet the standards receive LEED certi?cation,
signifying that their buildings use environmentally superior
materials and incorporate energy- and water-e?cient systems.
Because we have many stores that generally use similar
materials and building strategies, the process of certifying
each individual store separately would be costly, repetitive
and time-consuming. During ?scal 2006, we registered our
prototype Single Tenant Building
1
with the USGBC LEED
Retail Pilot. Tis represents a new certi?cation model for the
USGBC and has the potential to multiply the impact of green
building throughout the retail sector globally.
Our focus is not just on validating the store building
process through certi?cation, but also on a comprehensive
approach to reduce our environmental impacts. For several
years, we have incorporated sustainable building materials,
furnishings, and energy- and water-e?cient ?xtures to our
stores. For example, we require that the wood used to make
our hardwood furniture is certi?ed by the Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC), a nonpro?t organization that ensures the
wood is produced in a sustainable manner. We also convened
a meeting between our major furniture suppliers and the FSC
to explore ways to expand the use of FSC-certi?ed wood in
products we buy. In addition, the cabinets in our stores use a
core made of 100% post-industrial content.
Greening Operations
To gain a deeper understanding of how energy and water is
used in our stores, it is our intention in ?scal 2007 to conduct
an energy and water audit that will help us implement
strategies to use both more e?ciently.
We also plan to provide stores in six regions (approximately
350 stores) with “resource report cards” that give feedback
on each store’s energy and water usage, as well as trend data
and comparisons to benchmark operations. Te goal of this
program is to help store operators identify ways to use water
and energy more e?ciently and reduce costs. Depending on
the results of the ?rst group of stores, the program will be
rolled out to all U.S. and Canada company-operated stores on
a voluntary basis.
1
A Single Tenant Building is a free-standing building (co?ee house) built from the ground up.
58 ENVI RONMENT
Tese e?orts build on ongoing initiatives to install more
energy- and water-e?cient equipment at our stores globally.
For example, Starbucks Japan stores began using electric
signs that require less energy to operate and last longer.
Our team in Japan also installed water-saving faucets and
began recycling the water used to cool ice cube dispensers as
wash water.
In the UK, severe droughts showed that environmental trade-
o?s are sometimes needed. Stores in the worst-a?ected areas
o?ered customers paper cups rather than ceramic mugs to
reduce the water used for dishwashing. While the use of paper
cups increased the volume of waste generated, the practice
helped to address the immediate threat of a water shortage.
We also have initiatives to address transportation energy use.
We collaborated on Business for Social Responsibility’s Clean
Cargo Working Group and used the Group’s Environmental
Performance Survey to assess the performance of our
ocean transporters.
At our Starbucks Support Center (SSC) in Seattle, our
worldwide headquarters, we encourage partners to use a
variety of transportation options to cut solo commuting.
In ?scal 2006, 34 percent of our partners at the SSC took
advantage of these options.
Closing the Loop – Recycling and Waste Reduction
Starbucks policy for company-operated stores is that where
both space and recycling services are available, stores are
expected to recycle. During ?scal 2006, 79 percent of
stores in the U.S. and Canada recycled where Starbucks
controls waste and recycling of one or more items, including
cardboard, paper, milk jugs, and organic wastes.
New Life for Old Grounds
At a typical Starbucks store, co?ee grounds make up more
than a third of the waste stream by weight (see “Portrait of
a Starbucks Store” on page 62). Tat’s why we introduced
the Grounds for Your Garden program, which o?ers
complimentary ?ve-pound (2.27-kilogram) bags of used
co?ee grounds to customers to add to their soil. Te program
has spread to a variety of locations including Chile, Greece,
Australia, Hong Kong, Canada, the UK and Korea.
Since 2004, Starbucks Taiwan has encouraged all of its stores
to implement the program. In ?scal 2006, customers and the
general public were welcome to pick up co?ee grounds from
their most convenient store.
Some locations in China o?ered the program in ?scal 2006,
and it will be promoted throughout Starbucks Greater China
region in ?scal 2007.
In Winnipeg, Canada, partners took the Grounds for Your
Garden approach a step farther, and are sending their organic
waste, including Starbucks paper cups, to the Wriggler
Wranch, a local worm composting facility.
Percentage
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
28
29
34
Partners Participating in Transportation Options Program
Percentage
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Store Recycling
70
77
79
59 ENVI RONMENT
Other Waste Reduction and Recycling Initiatives
Te waste our stores generate varies by location. So do the
ingenious solutions our partners devise to handle the waste.
Examples of this include:
• Starbucks Chile donated 30,000 milk boxes to Un Techo
para Chile, an organization in Chile that builds small
houses for homeless people. Te organization used the
boxes to cover the ?oors of the houses.
• More than 100 Starbucks UK stores participated in waste
segregation programs for cardboard and plastics, recycling
an average of 35 percent of their general waste.
• Starbucks Hong Kong ran a “Mooncake box” recycling
program, where the company o?ered beverage coupons
to customers who returned their used Mooncake boxes.
Te program resulted in the return of approximately
5,000 boxes.
• Starbucks Japan is working with suppliers to recycle 20
percent of store food waste by March 2007 in response to
the Law for the Promotion of the Utilization of Recyclable
Food Resources.
New Life for Old Mats
Te work areas behind the counters of our stores are equipped
with rubber mats designed to help partners work more
comfortably and safely. Since 2005, all new stores in the
U.S. have been equipped with upgraded mats that have been
shown to reduce slip-type accidents. During ?scal 2006, we
also replaced the mats in more than 3,400 existing stores.
Te easiest course of action would have been to throw away
the old mats. But with an estimated 315,000 pounds (143,000
kilograms) of usable material involved, we decided to recycle
them instead. Tis required setting up a system for our
delivery drivers to pick up the mats from the stores, collect
them at consolidation points and ship them to a recycler
for shredding. Te recycled rubber was used for gaskets and
expansion joints in concrete, among other things, extending
the life of the material and reducing waste.
Involving Our Customers
Our customers share our interest in reducing waste. To help
them help us, we o?er a discount of 10 cents in the U.S. and
Canada to encourage customers to use their own “commuter”
mugs for their beverages. Customers can also request that
their beverage be served in a ceramic mug if it’s a “for-here”
order. Te discount is also o?ered in Japan (¥20), the UK
(10P), several business units in Mainland China (2 RMB) and
Hong Kong (HK$1).
On Earth Day 2006, Starbucks Canada promoted the
commuter mug program by inviting customers to enjoy a
complimentary cup of Fair Trade Certi?ed
™
Café Estima
Blend
™
co?ee when they used their own mug. Nearly 9,000
customers took advantage of the o?er, increasing commuter
mug usage by 14 percent compared to the same day the
previous year. Te promotion also increased the sales of
commuter mugs.
During ?scal 2006, customers in the U.S. and Canada
used commuter mugs for their beverages 17 million times.
Although this represents a signi?cant achievement, on a
percentage basis, commuter mug usage actually decreased
slightly from 2005. We will continue to evaluate additional
ways to encourage customers to use commuter mugs.
Commuter Mug Usage
Percentage
1.4
1.3
1.2
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
60 ENVI RONMENT
Looking to Our Supply Chain
Beyond our own stores and operations, we have the
opportunity to positively in?uence the environmental
practices of our suppliers. In other sections of this report,
we discuss our work with co?ee suppliers to encourage
environmental stewardship (page 16), our sustainable
sourcing policies (page 29), our approach to water sourcing
(page 34) and our standards for purchasing manufactured
goods (page 33). Trough our membership in the Sustainable
Packaging Coalition, we are exploring more sustainable
alternatives to conventional packaging and also methods
for analyzing material choices. Our e?orts to “green the
cup” described earlier in this section are an example of
this approach.
We also consider environmental impacts when purchasing
paper and have tracked the recycled ?ber and unbleached
?ber content of our paper purchase for six years (see charts).
Starbucks recognizes that the environmental footprint of
paper goes beyond post-consumer recycled and unbleached
?ber. To that end, we have been active participants in the
Paper Working Group, a group of diverse companies led by
the nonpro?t organization Metafore. Te Paper Working
Group developed the Environmental Paper Assessment Tool
(EPAT), designed to help paper buyers consider all major
environmental impacts over the life cycle of paper. Te group
de?nes environmentally preferable paper in terms of a set of
seven interconnected desired outcomes. Tey include:
• E?cient use and conservation of raw materials
• Minimization of waste
• Conservation of natural systems
• Clean production
• Community and human well-being
• Credible reporting and veri?cation
• Economic viability
Key environmental indicators for these outcomes are
measurable and within the normal range of attributes
monitored by the pulp and paper industry.
In 2007, we will test the tool with our top two suppliers of
paper products. We will review the results of the pilot and
determine how to best incorporate the tool into our paper
procurement decision processes.
Starbucks tracks the percentage of unbleached paper ?ber and post-consumer ?ber
contained in our annual paper purchases.
Paper: Unbleached Paper Fiber
Fiscal year
Percentage
With Hot Cups Without Hot Cups
2004 2005 2006
48.1
86.3
47.1
85.9
47.8
86.3
Paper: Post-Consumer Fiber
Fiscal year
Percentage
With Hot Cups Without Hot Cups
2004 2005 2006
26.0
46.5
27.1
49.5
38.8
66.4
61 ENVI RONMENT
Earthwatch Expeditions
Making Connections in the Rain Forest
In the Costa Rican rain forest, Starbucks customer Arlene
Gutterman worked side by side with scientists, Starbucks
partners and other customer volunteers to replant areas where
farming had devastated the native forest. Te experience was
transforming. “I cherish what I saw,” Arlene said. “It opened
me up.”
Te reforestation project is taking place in southern Costa
Rica in the region of La Amistad Biosphere Reserve,
established to protect the rich biodiversity of the area.
Sixteen sites, most owned by Costa Rican farmers, are part
of a long-term research project to ?nd ways to accelerate
the reforestation of formerly farmed lands. Te project
area, once completely forested, is now less than 10 percent
forested. Tis has impoverished the soil and reduced habitat
for the abundance of wildlife that thrives in rainforests.
Deforestation poses a particular challenge because, once
cleared, it is di?cult to re-establish natural rain forest.
Te project seeks not only to research the dynamics of
reforestation but also to establish a model of sustainable use
of tropical forests. One aspect of this is supporting the local
co?ee cooperative in its e?orts to use sustainable farming
practices and to set up a co?ee mill that will allow it to
capture more of the value of co?ee production locally.
A diverse group of people participate in the project, including
academic researchers, students, farmers of co?ee and other
crops, community members and volunteers provided by the
Earthwatch Institute (www.earthwatch.org), a nonpro?t
organization that places volunteers with environmental
research and restoration projects around that world.
Starbucks has worked with Earthwatch since 2000. In
that time, Starbucks has sent partners on a variety of
environmental expeditions around the globe. Our partners
have come back from these expeditions with a new
understanding of the world around them as well as Starbucks
commitment to the environment.
In 2006, Starbucks enabled 19 customers and 11 partners to
participate in the Costa Rica expedition. Te customers and
eight of the partners were winners of a sweepstakes and an
essay contest, respectively, while the other three partners went
as escorts. Te volunteers planted, measured and analyzed
trees, and woke before dawn to capture, count and identify
birds. Several volunteers from the 2006 trip, along with some
volunteers from previous years, became so interested in the
co?ee cooperative’s mill project that they have continued to
support it in various ways, including documenting it on a
website: www.unatazacompartida.org.
Te scientists running the project have found the volunteers’
help invaluable in extending their research resources. Te
volunteers have also been a?ected. Arlene Gutterman, for
example, has started composting, recycling more, driving less
and seeking out locally produced foods. “It’s never too late,”
Arlene said. “Be positive. Plant a tree.”
In 2006, Starbucks also sponsored volunteers for an
Earthwatch Expedition to Brazil through the Urban Co?ee
Opportunities program, a joint venture between Starbucks
and Johnson Development Corporation (JDC). Five college
scholars, a Starbucks partner and a JDC representative
participated in an expedition to the Pantanal, the world’s
largest wetland, researching and analyzing amphibians and
bat habitat.
In 2007 Starbucks will be working with Earthwatch on
a project that takes place where Starbucks is purchasing
co?ee. Tis will deepen our relationship with Earthwatch
because the research will directly a?ect Earthwatch scientists,
Starbucks and the co?ee-buying world. Our partners and
customers will have the opportunity to work on co?ee farms
that have been veri?ed as using C.A.F.E. Practices and learn
how this has improved their growing practices.
My Starbucks –
On June 10 I left for the 17-hour
journey to San Jose, Costa Rica, and
met up with seven other partners
from North America. We continued our
journey to the little town of Agua Buena
in the southern rain forest bordering
Panama, where we got to know our
fantastic hosts, the Corderos, a family
of coffee farmers. They would get many
opportunities to laugh at our Spanish!
Over the next two weeks we worked
with Dr. Karen Holl and her team
at Earthwatch, planting trees and
gathering scienti?c data on rain forest
regeneration in afforested areas. For
the farmers it’s a win/win situation.
They lease the land they don’t use to
others so that in potentially ?ve years
they can let the coffee grow back
within the new forest – thus growing
premium organic shade grown coffee.
When you see trees that have grown
almost 30 feet tall after three years,
you begin to see how easy it can be
with dedication and commitment.
That is what Starbucks is willing to
do, and the eight of us were glad to
be a part of this crucial project.
Rain Weigel, Starbucks store manager
Maida Vale (#12436), London
62 ENVI RONMENT
Portrait of a Starbucks Store
At the end of ?scal 2006, there were 12,440 Starbucks
stores in 37 countries. Tough there are local variations, the
stores operate similarly around the world. A look at a typical
Starbucks store provides a better understanding of Starbucks
environmental pro?le and challenges.
Tough the store may be located on a busy street or in a
bustling mall, it is appointed with furnishings and artwork
in a style that lets someone know instantly they are in a
Starbucks. Less obvious are some of the environmental
features of materials we use in our new stores, and include
as stores are updated: high-e?ciency lighting, ?ooring
containing recycled material, and furniture made from wood
certi?ed as sustainably harvested by the Forest Stewardship
Council, for example.
Out of sight is an area where materials are delivered to
the store. Tese include food (co?ee and other beverages,
pastries, sandwiches, salads, etc.), packaging (cups and other
containers), disposable items (napkins and co?ee stirrers),
and merchandise for sale (co?ee mugs and brewers, CDs,
etc.) Tis is the area where many of our stores have containers
for recycling.
Te store gets its electricity, water and other utilities from
local service providers. On average, it uses about:
• 6.57 kilowatt-hours of electricity per square foot per
month to light and cool the store and operate equipment.
• .059 therms of natural gas per square foot per month to
heat water and warm the store.
• 26 gallons of water per square foot per month to make our
beverages and clean up.
As we continue to integrate sustainable practices into
our store design, development and operations, we will
work to drive these numbers lower, reducing our overall
environmental footprint per store.
As a result of all of these activities, waste is created. Tis
includes:
By Volume By Weight
• 32% cardboard
• 15% milk jugs
• 9% paper cups
• 8% pastry boxes
• 7% other dairy cartons
• 29% other waste
• 37% coffee grounds
• 12% cardboard
• 7% newspaper
• 6% food waste
• 38% other waste
Source: Starbucks 2002 Waste Audit
* Based on data from 4,900 stores.
Electricity
Kilowatt-hours
per square foot
per month
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
6.21
6.40
6.57*
** Based on data from 2,305 stores.
Gas
Therms per square
foot per month
2004 2005 2006
0.061
0.060
0.059**
Fiscal year
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
Water
Gallons (liters)
per square foot
per month
23
(89)
24
(92)
26†
(100)
†Based on data from 2,052 stores.
63 WORKPL ACE
Providing a Great Work Environment
When our customers enter a Starbucks store, they expect and
deserve a great cup of co?ee. But their Starbucks Experience
goes beyond the co?ee – it is also based on the connection
they have with their barista at their local Starbucks. Earning
and maintaining the trust and respect of our more than
145,000 employees – whom we call partners – means
improving our customers’ experience and our success as well.
Our goal is to create the best possible workplace environment
for our partners, one that attracts and retains the most
talented individuals and is regarded by them as a great place
to work.
In this section we describe what we are doing to:
• Gather ongoing feedback from our partners
• Partner View Surveys
• Mission Review
• Business Ethics and Compliance Program
• O?er comprehensive and competitive bene?ts
• Partner bene?ts in the U.S. and Canada
• Partner bene?ts internationally
• Support our partners’ health and well being
• Outreach to newly covered partners
• Trive Wellness Initiative
• Advocating for healthcare reform
• Recognize our partners’ e?orts
• Maintain a CUP (Caring Unites Partners) Fund
• Provide training and career development opportunities
• Uphold our workplace policies and respect for
partners’ rights
• Ensure a safe and healthy work environment
Starbucks Employment Pro?le – Fiscal 2006
Number of partners globally 145,800
U.S. partners – retail 116,100
U.S. partners – nonretail 7,500
International partners – retail 21,200
International partners – nonretail 1,000
Net jobs created (Starbucks partners) in
?scal 2006
31,000
Total wages and bene?ts paid to U.S. and
Canada partners*
$2.5 billion
*Includes salaries, bonuses, vacation, payroll taxes, healthcare
bene?ts, workers’ compensation and 401(k) match
STARBUCKS HONORED AS A GREAT
PLACE TO WORK IN 2006
FORTUNE 100 BEST COMPANIES TO WORK
FOR IN AMERICA
Starbucks was named one of the “100 Best Companies
to Work For” in 2006 by Fortune magazine. This
marks the eighth time Starbucks has received this
prestigious recognition.
FINANCIAL TIMES 50 BEST WORKPLACES
IN UK
Starbucks UK was recognized in the Financial Times as one
of the 50 Best Workplaces in the UK. The award, sponsored
by the Great Place to Work
®
Institute UK, is based on
employee surveys of the level of trust and the quality of
relationships that exist within the company.
CHEERS MOST SOUGHT AFTER
ENTERPRISE – TAIWAN
In 2006, Starbucks earned ninth place in a study of the
most “sought after enterprise” in Taiwan among 100
private enterprises and 50 state-owned enterprises. Cheers
magazine sponsored the competition.
64 WORKPL ACE
Listening to Our Partners
Our workplace culture is ?rmly rooted in our ?rst Guiding
Principle: “Provide a great work environment and treat each
other with respect and dignity.” Tis is a deeply held value
that has inspired and driven our workplace practices for
nearly two decades. Tis is the basis of our belief that our
partners’ opinions should be heard and valued. We act on our
belief by inviting partners to give us their feedback through
a variety of channels. We then use partner input to shape our
actions and enhance the partner experience. One method we
use to get feedback is by conducting Partner View Surveys.
Partner View Surveys
Starbucks conducts a Partner View Survey approximately
every 18-24 months to solicit anonymous feedback from
partners around the globe. Te survey touches on many
facets of the partner experience, including development,
communication, senior leadership, co?ee knowledge and
work/life e?ectiveness. By participating in the survey,
partners point out what Starbucks is doing well, and they
identify issues at all levels of the company that need closer
attention. We use this feedback to make adjustments and
improvements in order to increase our partners’ satisfaction
and engagement – the connection our partners have to
their store or work group and to our company. Trough
this process, our partners are given a voice in shaping and
enhancing their own workplace experience.
Te most recent survey was conducted in March 2006. All
partners who work in company-operated stores, support
o?ces and roasting plants or warehouses in the following
countries were invited to participate: Australia, Canada,
Costa Rica (Farmer Support Center), Germany, Hong Kong,
Ireland, the Netherlands, Singapore, Switzerland, Tailand,
United Kingdom and the United States. Tis was a signi?cant
expansion over past Partner View Surveys in both its global
reach and response – 101,800 partners participated, an 84
percent response rate.
Partner View Survey Results – Fiscal 2006
Partners’ overall satisfaction rate and level of engagement
remained high – see chart at right. Te survey called out
speci?c areas where Starbucks is succeeding in creating a
great work environment, including training and development
opportunities and the focus on promoting co?ee knowledge.
Partners identi?ed several areas that called for attention by
the company:
• Pay and bene?ts
• Communication within and between groups
• Future job opportunities
Starbucks began to address these issues in ?scal 2006.
Speci?cally, we:
• Increased wages for the majority of hourly store partners in
all U.S. markets
• Are working to improve our online tools, and consolidate
publications where appropriate
• Are designing a global “Look Internal First” sourcing
strategy for ?lling all jobs
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, additional steps will be taken to
respond to the survey results. We will:
• Complete a study of pay for international store
partners.
• Share the success of the company, consistent with
our philosophy, through additional incentive and
bene?ts programs.
• Look at new ways to communicate pay and bene?ts
information to our partners, including a new online
training module for store partners.
• Develop tools to enable internal talent sourcing and
improve career opportunity access and preparation
for partners.
% of engaged partners % of satis?ed partners
* We did not conduct a survey in ?scal 2004.
Partner View Survey Results
Fiscal year
Percentage
2003
73
82
2005
73
87
2006
69
86
65 WORKPL ACE
Other Channels for Partner Feedback
In addition to the Partner View Survey, several other
resources o?er partners the opportunity to communicate
concerns, provide input about our business practices, and
report matters that appear inconsistent with the company’s
Mission Statement and Guiding Principles and/or legal
and ethical objectives. Tese include Mission Review and
the Business Conduct Helpline, as well as frequently held
Open Forums.
Mission Review
Mission Review allows partners a way to voice concerns when
they believe company polices or practices are inconsistent
with Starbucks Mission Statement and Guiding Principles,
and to o?er suggestions on how the company can do better.
Mission Review comments have helped shape and continue
to in?uence a variety of programs: Tuition Reimbursement,
Recognition, Risk Management’s Shoes for Work and
the Barista-Level Training Program are a few examples.
Currently, the Mission Review team handles between
350 and 500 comments each month. In ?scal 2006, our
Mission Review team recorded more than 4,600 contacts
from partners.
Each partner submission receives a personal and timely
follow-up, either by someone knowledgeable about the
issue or topic raised or a member of the Mission Review
team. Executives receive a monthly summary of the volume
and types of issues raised through Mission Review, so that
emerging issues can be identi?ed and addressed.
We are working to improve partner access to Mission
Review. Electronic submissions through Starbucks website
were successfully tested in selected stores in ?scal 2006.
Our goal is to make this capability available to all North
American company-operated stores in ?scal 2007. Some of
our international markets also have embraced this concept
and provide similar feedback forums to their partners.
E?orts are currently underway to connect and coordinate
these programs.
Business Ethics and Compliance
Starbucks Business Ethics and Compliance (BEC) program
develops and distributes Starbucks Standards of Business
Conduct, facilitates legal compliance and ethics training,
investigates sensitive issues including potential con?icts
of interest, and provides mechanisms for partners to
voice concerns.
Te following channels are available for partners to raise any
questions or concerns, including potentially sensitive matters
they are uncomfortable reporting elsewhere:
• Business Conduct Helpline, a toll-free phone number that
partners may call anonymously, and which is answered
24 hours a day, seven days a week by an independent
call center
• Email via [email protected]
• Direct contact with BEC team members
• Auditline, a toll-free phone number for third parties, such
as vendors, investors, and customers, to report possible
accounting or auditing irregularities
• Referrals from other departments and programs, such as
Mission Review
Te majority of reports received by the BEC program
involve employee relations issues, a trend which is consistent
with other companies – retail or otherwise – that provide
alternative reporting mechanisms as part of a comprehensive
ethics and compliance program. Starbucks does not limit
the types of issues or concerns that partners may report to
the BEC program through these communication methods.
We welcome any and all concerns that partners are not
comfortable reporting to others or do not know how to report
to others. By providing these means of reporting, the program
helps to ensure that Starbucks continues to provide a great
work environment for partners and to remain an employer
of choice.
Our comprehensive e?orts to ensure an ethical workplace are
detailed in Starbucks Standards of Business Conduct, which
can be reviewed in the “About Us” section of Starbucks.com.
Categories of Partner Concerns Reported to
Starbucks Business Ethics and Compliance Program
Employee Relations
Pay, bene?ts,
disciplinary action,
and other categories
that impact
day-to-day work
83%
Customer Relations
Comments or questions
that involve customers –
reported by partners, or in
rare circumstances by
customers who obtained
the Business Conduct
Helpline number in error
2%
Business Practices
Corporate policy questions
and concerns (e.g., con?icts
of interest, privacy and
?nancial reporting)
3%
Safety & Security
Categories involving
partner and customer
safety, facility conditions
and allegations of theft
12%
66 WORKPL ACE
Providing Bene?ts to Our Partners
Starbucks Total Pay package is the cornerstone of our pledge
to treat partners with respect and dignity. Te Total Pay
package varies by country to make sure it is locally relevant.
Te components may include competitive base pay, bonuses,
comprehensive health coverage, income protection, vacation,
stock options, a savings program, adoption bene?ts, tuition
reimbursement and partner perks, including a discount on
merchandise in our stores.
Pay at Starbucks re?ects the knowledge, skills and experience
required for a speci?c job. We regularly consult industry
salary surveys to determine competitive rates, and pay
accordingly. Partners are also eligible for merit pay increases
based on performance.
Te chart below summarizes the core bene?ts that our eligible
part- and full-time partners receive.
Starbucks Bene?ts
PARTNER BENEFITS PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS
AND COVERAGE
ELIGIBILITY
Comprehensive healthcare bene?ts
(U.S. and Canada)
Bene?ts include medical, dental, vision,
prescription drugs and alternative health coverage.
In the U.S., Starbucks paid 77 percent of health
coverage costs for partners and 60 percent for
dependents. In Canada, 73 percent of costs were
paid for partners and 45 percent for dependents.
Once initially eligible, full- and part-time partners who
are paid a minimum of 240 hours per calendar quarter
and their eligible dependents, including spouses,
domestic partners and children. In ?scal 2006, 65
percent of U.S. partners and 61 percent of Canadian
partners were eligible for these bene?ts.*
Bean Stock – Starbucks stock
option plan (eligible partners in
the U.S., Canada, UK, Hong Kong,
Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany,
Australia, Costa Rica, China,
Thailand, Singapore, Chile, Republic
of Ireland and Puerto Rico)
The board of directors determines annual stock
option grants based on company performance up
to 14 percent of our partners’ eligible base wages.
Every partner through the director level receives
the same percentage of his or her ?scal-year
wages. For ?scal 2006 performance, the basis for
stock option grants was 14 percent.
Full- and part-time partners up through director level
who have been employed by Starbucks since April
1 and have been paid for at least 500 hours from
the ?rst of the ?scal year through March 31 or from
April 1 through the end of the ?scal year. (Eligibility
requirements may vary slightly by country.) More than
70,000 partners quali?ed for Bean Stock for ?scal
2006 performance.
S.I.P. – Stock Investment Plan (U.S.
and Canada), Share Incentive Plan
(UK)
Partners can purchase company stock at a
discounted price on a quarterly basis (U.S. and
Canada) or a semiannual basis (UK).
Partners who have worked as a regular Starbucks
partner for at least 90 days and have been paid for an
average of 20 hours a week during the three months
preceding the offering. No hours requirement in the
UK. In ?scal 2006, 32 percent of eligible U.S. and
Canadian partners participated in S.I.P.
Future Roast – Starbucks 401(k)
Plan (U.S.), RRSP – Registered
Retirement Savings Plan (Canada)
Starbucks matches from 25 percent to 150 percent
(based on the length of service from the partner’s
most recent date of hire) on the ?rst four percent
of pay that partners contribute to the U.S. 401(k)
Plan. Eligible Canadian partners receive a 25
percent match on the ?rst four percent of pay that
they contribute to the RRSP.
U.S. partners age 18 or older may participate after the
completion of 90 days of service. Canadian partners
are eligible after one year of service. In ?scal 2006,
21 percent of eligible U.S. partners participated in
Future Roast. Sixteen percent of eligible partners in
Canada participated in the RRSP.
*With approximately four company-operated stores opening daily in the U.S. and Canada, we have a large number of partners in their eligibility waiting period,
typically three months.
Partner Bene?ts – Internationally
While speci?c bene?ts di?er between regions and countries,
all of our international business partners share Starbucks
Total Pay philosophy. Below are several representative
examples of bene?ts received by Starbucks partners outside
North America.
• Japan: All partners who work 30 hours per month or
more are eligible for health insurance including annual
medical checkup. Stock and annual leave (vacation) are
also o?ered.
• Chile: All partners are eligible for health insurance, paid
vacation and sick leave, among other bene?ts.
• Greece: All partners are eligible for health insurance, paid
vacation and sick leave, among other bene?ts.
• China: All eligible partners receive health insurance, sick
leave and maternity leave.
• Australia: Bean Stock, paid vacation, sick leave and career
training are among the bene?ts o?ered.
67 WORKPL ACE
My Starbucks —
When I joined Starbucks in 1994 I
began acquiring Starbucks stock
through Bean Stock and S.I.P., and
invested in my future through Future
Roast - Starbucks 401k plan. A couple
years ago, I sold my Starbucks stock
to buy a car and a house in Mexico
for my parents. Today I am a new
mom and am buying my ?rst home.
When my sister joined Starbucks in 1996,
I encouraged her to take full advantage
of these bene?ts. She told me this
advice is the best gift a sister could give.
-Noemi Guevara, Starbucks store
manager in Missouri City, TX
68 WORKPL ACE
Focusing on Healthcare and Wellness
Starbucks remains committed to providing healthcare
bene?ts to eligible full- and part-time partners, despite rapidly
rising costs. Starbucks U.S. and Canada healthcare plans are
self-insured, which means healthcare providers are paid with
Starbucks funds, as well as the money our partners personally
contribute toward their coverage. In ?scal 2006, we did
not increase healthcare premiums to partners. Starbucks is
working in a variety of ways to ensure the continuation of our
health coverage plan, and assist our partners in their e?orts to
reach and maintain their optimal health.
Outreach to Newly Covered Partners
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks began testing a novel outreach
e?ort to newly enrolled partners. Partners receive a welcome
call from our health plan administrator who can answer
questions about their health coverage – from how to select
a physician to how to ?nd weekend or after-hours care. Tis
approach is being tested in 10 locations in the U.S. We hope
to ?nd that through a simple welcome call we can improve
partners’ health, and encourage e?ciencies in the use of
healthcare resources.
Trive Wellness Initiative
Starbucks commitment to the health and wellness of our
partners – and our customers – is evident in many of our
programs and policies. One very direct e?ort to care for
our partners’ health is the Trive Wellness Initiative, which
combines education, communication and participation to
help our partners live healthy lives. Over 15,000 partners have
registered on the Trive website since its inception. Below are
some of the components of the program.
• A web-based health risk assessment that creates a personal
“health map” for each partner.
• Online programs for ?tness, smoking cessation and
improvement of eating habits.
• Health club discounts at contracted ?tness facilities.
• Partner Connection subsidies for up to 50 percent of
fees for clubs or sports teams that include three or more
active partners.
• Anti-slip work shoes at a discounted price online to help
reduce the risk of slip and fall injuries.
Kinetix, the newest bene?t in the Trive Wellness Initiative,
was piloted in ?scal 2006 and launched in October 2006
at no cost to partners in our support o?ces in Seattle,
Washington, the location of Starbucks global headquarters.
Kinetix is a comprehensive wellness program that teaches
proper nutrition and exercise through an interactive website,
classes and workshops, an eight-week session with a personal
trainer and phone and e-mail support to keep partners on
track to reach their personal ?tness goals.
Advocating for Healthcare Reform
Rising healthcare costs and other challenges of providing
healthcare bene?ts have led Starbucks to advocate for a more
a?ordable and e?cient U.S. healthcare system. For the past
several years, we have focused our e?orts on building public
awareness about the seriousness of escalating healthcare costs,
and seeking reform of the healthcare system generally.
In ?scal 2006, we worked to become more strategic in
our e?orts. First, we analyzed the greatest challenges that
Starbucks faces in delivering a?ordable, accessible healthcare.
We then identi?ed the following areas where we will focus
e?orts: access, technology, innovation, quality and lifetime
solutions. In ?scal 2007, we will highlight speci?c initiatives
in these key areas. Trough our e?orts, we hope to alleviate
healthcare challenges for Starbucks and our partners, and
all other U.S. companies and employees whose healthcare
bene?ts are threatened.
My Starbucks –
Sean Couture, a Starbucks store
manager in Williston, Vermont, saw
golf as a great team-building activity
for fellow partners and managers
in his region, but wondered whether
the expensive golf fees could be put
to better use. When Sean learned
about Starbucks Partner Connection
program, he found a way to combine
his passion for golf with his desire to
bring together a group of partners
for camaraderie and a good cause.
Sean formed a Starbucks Partner
Connection Golf Team and put out a
call to the three stores in his region,
asking partners if they’d like to join. For
their ?rst outing, the team participated
in a Muscular Dystrophy Cornerstone
Cup Tournament that raised a total of
$12,000 for the Muscular Dystrophy
Association (MDA). In addition to
contributing half of the team’s entry
fees, Starbucks also donated cups and
coffee to the event. The team has teed
up for other good causes including the
local Chamber of Commerce and Chill, an
intervention program for disadvantaged
kids. According to Sean, “Once you get a
team set up, it’s easy. It’s a great way
for partners to get to know each other
better, get closer, feel more like a team
and also contribute to a great cause.”
69 WORKPL ACE
Recognizing Our Partners
Starbucks success re?ects the quality, imagination and
initiative of our partners. We developed the Starbucks Partner
Recognition Program to honor our partners’ contributions.
Currently there are 18 formal recognition programs
that partners can use as tools to reward and inspire one
another. Tey range from company awards for leadership
and exceptional service to “on the spot” awards given by
co-workers for a job well done.
In recognition of our outstanding performance as a company,
Starbucks shared a special cash award with more than
100,000 partners in May 2006.
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FREEDOM AWARD
Starbucks was honored by the U.S. Department of Defense
with the 2006 Secretary of Defense Employer Support
Freedom Award for outstanding support of activated partners
who serve in the National Guard and Reserve. The Freedom
Award is the highest award bestowed by the Department of
Defense in recognition of an employer. Starbucks partner
Matt Parkinson nominated Starbucks for the award after
serving 15 months in Iraq. Starbucks supports partners, like
Matt, by making up the difference between partners’ military
and civilian pay as well as continuing bene?ts. Partners are
able to continue medical, dental and vision coverage for up
to 24 months of active duty and to continue Starbucks life
and disability insurance for up to 12 months
The CUP Fund
Since 1999, the CUP (Caring Unites Partners) Fund has
assisted partners with ?nancial support as a result of an
unexpected event such as the death of a partner or family
member, ?re or natural disaster. Starbucks partners support
the CUP Fund with personal contributions. All Starbucks
partners are eligible to apply for assistance. In total, the CUP
Fund provided more than $1.4 million in direct ?nancial
assistance to more than 1,600 partners in ?scal 2006.
My Starbucks –
Starbucks CUP Fund rescued my family
from a dif?cult ?nancial situation. We
were drowning ?nancially, due primarily
to tens of thousands of dollars in
medical expenses. My family is so thankful
for the small but regular contributions
that many Starbucks partners make
to the CUP Fund. These partners
embody the truth that “we are a people
company that sells coffee.” In addition,
the partners that I spoke with about
the CUP Fund were kind, compassionate
and timely in their response to our
request. In times of need, it’s nice to
know Starbucks partners provide each
other a lifeline through the CUP Fund —
caring really does unite partners.
Dave Mahoney, barista, Memphis, TN
70 WORKPL ACE
Partner Training and Career
Development
Starbucks continually invests in training programs and career
development initiatives to help partners grow and advance
their careers at Starbucks.
All store partners receive comprehensive training. Baristas
receive two weeks of initial training to become experts in the
preparation and delivery of our products. After 90 days on
the job, they receive additional training to deepen their co?ee
knowledge and build their con?dence. When a barista moves
into another retail position, he or she receives four weeks of
training as a shift supervisor, eight months of development as
an assistant store manager, eight weeks as a store manager and
15 weeks as a district manager trainee. In total, in ?scal 2006,
our U.S. and Canadian retail partners received an estimated
4.9 million hours of training, in addition to practice hours.
In ?scal year 2006 Starbucks added two new career
development programs for store managers:
• Store Manager 200 o?ers over 50 hours of in-place
training to develop leadership and other key
managerial skills.
• Store Manager 301 is a year-long mentorship and
development program that helps high-potential store
managers build the competencies necessary for the next
level in their careers.
We believe in looking internally ?rst and o?ering our
partners opportunities to grow and advance. Partners receive
information about career advancement opportunities on
mypartnercareer.com, and through partner and leadership
communications.
Te following ?gures re?ect internal promotions for certain
positions in ?scal 2006:
• 86% of shift supervisor positions were ?lled by
Starbucks baristas.
• 67% (approximately) of assistant and store managers were
?lled by internal partners.
• 54% of district manager positions and over 70% of
regional director positions were ?lled by internal partners.
STARBUCKS NAMED TO THE TRAINING
MAGAZINE TOP 100 LIST IN 2006
For the third year in a row, Starbucks has been named to the
Training magazine Top 100 list. This recognition is based
on an evaluation of the company’s training and development
programs and resources. Starbucks training programs noted
in this award include those for career development, coffee
education, leadership and front-line manager training.
Workplace Policies and Respecting
Partners’ Rights
Starbucks workplace policies provide for equal employment
opportunities, and strictly prohibit discrimination or
harassment on the basis of age, race, gender, color, national
origin, religion, sexual orientation, physical or mental
disability, as well as any other basis prohibited by federal,
state, local or provincial laws. We follow all laws regarding the
employment of minors. Te current standard minimum age
of employment at Starbucks is 16, although it may be higher
or lower in some locations as required by local regulations.
Starbucks also recognizes our partners’ right to organize.
We have always focused on providing a great workplace
environment and a comprehensive Total Pay package. (See
page 66 for information about Total Pay.) At the end of ?scal
2006, 129 Canadian partners in two cities were the only
Starbucks partners who had certi?ed union representation.
In March 2006 Starbucks entered into an informal settlement
agreement with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB),
resolving all outstanding unfair labor practice charges ?led
by the International Workers of the World (IWW) Local
660. Te charges originally were ?led in connection with
a May 2004 petition by the IWW, which it subsequently
withdrew, to unionize one Starbucks store in New York City.
Te settlement agreement provided that Starbucks admitted
no wrongdoing or liability, but allowed Starbucks to resolve
all charges without the distraction of a long and expensive
hearing process.
Tis settlement and the underlying claim have generated some
national and international press attention. We understand
that the press coverage stems from a belief that employees
should be treated fairly, with dignity and respect. Tis is a
value very much shared by Starbucks.
Starbucks has always sought to provide a great place to
work for all our partners, while staying true to our Mission
Statement and Guiding Principles. Starbucks is committed
to following any and all labor laws in a fair and consistent
manner. We do not take action or retaliate against partners
who express their views about unions or who take part in
union activity.
71 WORKPL ACE
Health and Safety
Starbucks is committed to creating a safe environment for
our partners and customers by reducing the risk of injuries.
Safety programs for Starbucks stores and roasting plants are
designed to meet or exceed the most stringent regulatory
standards wherever we do business.
Partner and customer safety is a primary consideration in
the development and selection of all Starbucks products
and equipment in an e?ort to engineer out as many causes
of injury as possible. Where potential risks of injury are
identi?ed in our stores and production facilities, speci?c
programs are implemented to remove or mitigate those risks
through design, engineering, equipment or materials changes
that further protect partners and customers from common
causes of injury such as hot liquids, repetitive stress, lifting
or falls. In addition, the company stresses partner awareness
of Starbucks safety standards and potential risks in the work
environment, and reinforces awareness through partner
training, safe work procedures, regular communication,
inspections and audits.
Te Interstate Experience Modi?cation Factor, a metric
provided in this report in previous years, has been removed
going forward to ensure that we accurately report our partner
injury experience. Starbucks has chosen to become self-
insured for Workers’ Compensation insurance in a number
of states, and the Experience Modi?cation Factor – which
is calculated by an outside agency and does not take into
account Starbucks injury experience in self-insured states –
does not accurately re?ect the company’s partner injury
experience. Te Injury Rate per 200,000 Hours Worked
continues to be the best measure of Starbucks workplace
injury experience. (See graph.)
* Injury rate per 200,000 hours worked is an average for all U.S.
full- and part-time store partners, the majority of whom are baristas.
** Data have been retroactively adjusted to re?ect new claims
that were ?led after the ?scal years ended.
Injury Rate Per 200,000 Hours Worked – Starbucks Retail Stores*
4.00
6.00
8.00
Fiscal year 2004** 2005** 2006
7.92
7.05
5.46
72 DI VERSI TY
FOSTERING DIVERSITY AND
INCLUSION
At Starbucks, we “embrace diversity as an
essential component in the way we do business.”
This is a Guiding Principle of the company and
one of our core values.
As we expand throughout the world, Starbucks
is recruiting and operating within a broad range
of multicultural, multilingual, and multiracial
environments. Not only must Starbucks actively
prepare to embrace and navigate diversity across
the globe, we must tailor our efforts to each
unique area of the world.
Our continued success compels us to create a business that, at
all levels, re?ects the communities in which we operate, the
customers and marketplaces we serve, and the shareholders
who invest in our company. Featured in this section are our
companywide e?orts to embrace diversity, which include
the following:
• Diversity and inclusion in the workplace
• Supplier diversity
• Urban Co?ee Opportunities: Bringing the Starbucks
Experience to diverse communities
STARBUCKS MAKES DIVERSITYINC
TOP 50 LIST
Starbucks was recognized as one of the Top 50 Companies
for Diversity in 2006 by DiversityInc magazine, which
reports and analyzes diversity issues and their impact on
business in the U.S. Starbucks also ranked in the Top 10
Companies for DiversityInc’s Latinos sub list. The application
process for the Top 50 list entails an in-depth analysis of a
company’s diversity management, leadership and marketing.
CORPORATE EQUALITY INDEX
In 2006, Starbucks achieved a score of 85 out of 100 on
The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation’s Corporate
Equality Index (CEI), a nationally recognized measure of
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) workplace
equality. This index is the principal method of evaluating
diversity efforts toward GLBT employees and consumers.
Scores are based on a voluntary survey of company policies
as well as independent research by HRC.
To achieve a higher score, Starbucks must ?rst have a
written nondiscrimination policy covering gender identity
and expression. We are currently working on updating our
nondiscrimination policy and hope to achieve a higher HRC
score in the future.
Diversity and Inclusion in the
Workplace
At Starbucks, our diverse workforce includes men and
women of various ages, races, national origin, religious
a?liations, sexual orientation, physical and mental attributes,
and di?ering levels of education, skills and experiences.
Our partners also come with their own ideas, opinions and
communication styles. We respect the di?erences our partners
bring to the workplace. We view their di?erences as assets
that can help us to be more creative and innovative in our
approach and products, more competitive globally and more
attractive as an inclusive employer wherever we do business,
We implemented the following initiatives and programs in
?scal 2006 in an e?ort to reach our diversity and inclusion
workplace goals and objectives.
• A “Diversity and Inclusion Scorecard” was created
for our ceo and his direct reports, which includes key
metrics for diversity and inclusion in the workplace. Te
scorecard establishes benchmarks related to workforce
representation, diversity leadership competencies,
workplace environment, supplier diversity and customer
experience.
• Partner Network Groups were initiated to bring partners
together voluntarily to partner with the business in an
advisory capacity. Additionally, these groups provide
personal and professional networking opportunities,
address issues of concern and opportunity, and provide
mutual advocacy to help the company achieve our diversity
and inclusion goals. Te program was piloted with three
groups: Te Pride Alliance Network: (lesbian, gay, bi-
sexual, transgender), Partners with Disabilities Network,
and Emerging Workforce, a group of partners that is
working to develop ?exible workplace solutions in order to
achieve both their business and personal goals. Te Partner
Network Groups are currently available to partners at the
Starbucks Support Center (SSC), the company’s global
headquarters in Seattle.
• Diversity and Inclusion Leadership Teams were organized
to identify strengths, gaps and opportunities within
speci?c business units and regions as well as to create
structures to foster sustainable, robust diversity and
inclusion strategies throughout the company. Team
members are partners from all levels of the company
bringing cross-functional expertise in e?orts to drive
ownership of the diversity and inclusion strategy within
Starbucks. In ?scal 2006, two regional teams were
launched in the U.S. and seven were launched within
speci?c business units or functions at the SSC.
73 DI VERSI TY
• Te Disability Standard Assessment, a comprehensive
tool that addresses disability, access and accommodation
as it a?ects every aspect of our company, was initiated.
Starbucks is undertaking the Assessment in partnership
with the Employer’s Forum on Disability, an organization
that provides guidance on all aspects of disability,
access and accommodation as a business and an equal
rights issue. We will complete the assessment in ?scal
2007 and use the results to guide the development of a
comprehensive plan.
• Executive diversity education was researched and designed
in ?scal 2006, with plans to pilot and integrate it into a
comprehensive educational plan for partners in ?scal 2007.
Diversity and inclusion education at Starbucks includes
integration into existing and developing programs, stand-
alone o?erings and experiences that extend beyond the
classroom, such as forums, facilitated discussions and
reciprocal mentoring.
• Several partner training programs, focused on workplace
disability matters, were enhanced or developed at many
levels. Additionally two new workshops were created and
piloted: “Best Practices: Creating a Deaf Friendly Work
Environment” and “Best Practices: Disability 101.”
Starbucks is dedicated to developing our diversity and
inclusion strategy globally. In ?scal 2006 we began working
to de?ne diversity and inclusion priorities by region, but we
have not yet completed a global strategy.
Te following table represents the percentage of women and
people of color holding senior positions at Starbucks:
Starbucks Senior Of?cers*
Fiscal 2006
Women 28%
People of color 22%
*Senior vice presidents and above
F UT URE G OA L S
In ?scal 2007, we will strive to:
• Make Partner Network Groups a permanent
diversity and inclusion program at the Starbucks
Support Center.
• Design and deliver customized diversity and
inclusion educational programs to our Partner
Resources (HR) department.
• Audit Starbucks core educational offerings from a
diversity and inclusion perspective.
• Incorporate the new Best Practices: Creating a Deaf
Friendly Work Environment into our educational
offerings.
• Develop a diversity and inclusion DVD in which
Starbucks partners, with a facilitator, share their
personal stories in an effort to increase awareness in
the areas of diversity and inclusion.
• Continue the creation and implementation of
business unit–speci?c Diversity and Inclusion
Leadership Teams across the company.
• Solidify a strategic initiative to link the Diversity and
Staf?ng organizations.
Women
Fiscal year 2004 2005 2006
31%
63%
34%
65%
33%
66%
Executives (vice presidents
and above)
Total U.S. workforce
People of Color
Fiscal year
Executives (vice presidents
and above)
Total U.S. workforce
2004 2005 2006
15%
30%
14%
30%
15%
30%
74 DI VERSI TY
My Starbucks –
The National Braille Press honored
Starbucks barista Cindy Rogers and
Starbucks with its prestigious Hands On!
Award in September 2006. The award
recognized Cindy’s outstanding work on
behalf of braille literacy, and Starbucks
supportive workplace environment and
emphasis on literacy. Cindy shared
the honor this year with First Lady
Laura Bush at a Gala event in Boston.
Since June 2005, Cindy has hosted
a Children’s Story Hour in her Mesa,
Arizona, Starbucks store to read braille
storybooks to children and adults.
She also has visited 75 schools in the
past year, talking to children about
her blindness, and passing out braille
alphabet cards to help children learn
letters. Cindy credits Starbucks for
encouraging her to start her Story
Hour series. “Starbucks inspires us
to give back to our communities, so I
decided to make it my mission to share
my passion for braille literacy as a
vehicle to transform lives,” Cindy said.
Supplier Diversity
To operate and grow our business, Starbucks depends on a
broad network of suppliers that ranges in size and scope. We
are dedicated to providing a world-class supplier program that
supports diversity. Starbucks instituted a Supplier Diversity
program several years ago to ensure that quali?ed and
certi?ed diverse U.S. businesses have equal opportunities to
provide our goods and services. A diverse supplier is de?ned
by Starbucks as a business that is certi?ed by an independent
third party to be at least 51 percent owned, operated and
managed by women, minorities, or individuals who are
socially or economically disadvantaged.
Te commitment we’ve made to supplier diversity is intended
to provide not only opportunities for diverse businesses, but
also to create a positive and sustained economic impact on the
local communities where these businesses are based.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks did $213 million in business with
?rst tier* women- and minority-owned businesses, exceeding
our goal of $206 million.
* First tier suppliers are paid directly or relationships are managed directly by
Starbucks for their products and services. Only ?rst tier suppliers are counted in
our diverse supplier spending.
In ?scal 2006, Starbucks made the following improvements
in our supplier diversity program:
• Developed a new coding system to better identify
minority- and women-owned suppliers, which we plan to
implement in ?scal 2007.
• Increased our presence at minority business events and
diversity trainings.
• Increased our level of participation with the National
Minority Supplier Development Council and Women’s
Business Enterprise National Council.
More information about Starbucks Supplier Diversity
program is available at Starbucks.com.
Spending with Diverse Suppliers
(in millions)
$114
$166
$213
2006 Fiscal year 2004 2005
F UT URE G OA L S
Our goals for ?scal 2007 include:
• Spending $250 million on purchases from certi?ed
diverse suppliers.
• Implementing a supplier diversity training program
for all new buyers.
• Developing a ?ve-year supplier diversity plan that
enables Starbucks to further advance our diverse
supplier base.
• Creating a supplier diversity advisory council to
support the advancement of supplier diversity at
Starbucks.
• Developing meaningful key performance indicators
(KPIs) to help track and measure progress toward
our supplier diversity goals.
75 DI VERSI TY
Urban Coffee Opportunities
Bringing the Starbucks Experience to Diverse
Communities
In 1998, Starbucks formed a joint venture with Johnson
Development Corporation (JDC), which is owned by
Earvin “Magic” Johnson. Together we created Urban Co?ee
Opportunities, LLC (UCO), bringing Starbucks stores to
diverse communities. We opened 15 new UCO stores in ?scal
2006 and ended the year with a total of 102.
We are close to meeting our goal of opening 125 UCO stores
in the U.S. and expect to reach the 125 store benchmark by
late 2007 or early 2008.
When scouting for new UCO locations, Starbucks and JDC
consider the economic vitality and long-term potential of
a given market. In many of the communities where UCO
stores have opened, Starbucks arrival has helped to serve as an
economic stimulus with the creation of new jobs, use of local
suppliers, our support for community-based organizations,
and by attracting other retailers to the area. Te collective
economic impact that our UCO stores generated in ?scal
2006 included:
• Providing more than 2,100 jobs in 102 UCO stores.
• Paying an estimated $29.8 million in salaries/wages
and bene?ts to UCO partners.
• Providing healthcare bene?ts to eligible and participating
part- and full-time store partners, their spouses, domestic
partners and eligible dependent children.
76
Independent Assurance Report
To the Stakeholders Starbucks Co?ee Company:
We have been engaged to provide assurance on the Corporate Social Responsibility (“CSR”) Fiscal 2006 Annual Report (the
“Report”) of Starbucks Co?ee Company (“Starbucks”), for the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006.
We have performed evidence-gathering procedures on the following subject matter:
• Key Performance Indicators Summary and Highlights for Fiscal 2006;
• Information and data provided in each area of focus of the Report (Products, Society, Environment, Workplace, and
Diversity) and
• Te management and reporting for the preparation of this information and data.
We have considered the subject matter against the following evaluation criteria:
• Te procedures by which the CSR information and data were prepared, collated and compiled internally and
• Te control environment over the quality of the information and data.
Our statement should be considered in conjunction with the inherent limitations of accuracy and completeness for CSR data,
as well as in connection with Starbucks internal reporting guidelines.
Te Board of Directors of Starbucks is responsible for both the subject matter and the evaluation criteria.
Our responsibility is to report on the internal reporting processes, information and data for CSR based on our evidence-
gathering procedures. Currently there are no statutory requirements or generally accepted veri?cation standards in the
United States of America that relate to the preparation, presentation, and veri?cation of CSR reports. Tere are international
standards for the CSR reports that were approved by the International Auditing and Assurances Standards Board (IAASB) in
January 2005. Using the IAASB approved standards as a guideline, we planned and performed evidence-gathering procedures
to provide a basis for our conclusion. However, we have not performed an audit in accordance with the International
Standards on Auditing. Accordingly, we do not express such an opinion.
Our evidence-gathering procedures included, among other activities, the following:
• Testing the e?ectiveness of the internal reporting system used to collect and compile information on each area of focus in
the Report;
• Performing speci?c procedures, on a sample basis, to validate the CSR data on site at Starbucks co?ee buying operations in
Switzerland; C.A.F.E. Practices operations in Costa Rica; and corporate headquarters in Seattle, Washington;
• Interviewing partners responsible for data collection and reporting;
• Interviewing partners at retail locations;
• Assessing the information gathering and compiling process of each area of focus in the Report;
• Reviewing relevant documentation, including corporate policies, management and reporting structures and
• Performing tests, on a sample basis, of documentation and systems used to collect, analyze and compile reported CSR
information and data.
In our opinion, based on our work described in this report, the CSR information contained in the Report gives a fair
representation of CSR performance and activities of Starbucks Co?ee Company for the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006.
Statements, assertions and data disclosed in the Report are reasonably supported by documentation, internal processes and
activities, and information provided by external parties.
Moss Adams LLP
Seattle, Washington
January 15, 2007
77
Your Feedback Matters
In preparing Starbucks Fiscal 2006 CSR Annual Report,
we provided a copy of our previous year’s report to a broad
cross-section of stakeholders, and asked for their candid
feedback and advice on the ways in which we could improve
transparency. We also received a great deal of feedback from
readers of last year’s report via an online survey, something we
are doing again. Tis collective input provided some excellent
suggestions that we incorporated into this year’s report,
including the changes we made to print only an abridged
version focused on our most material issues and to publish the
full report online.
We invite our readers to help us improve our future reporting
by providing feedback on Starbucks ?scal 2006 CSR Annual
Report. Tis can be done via an online survey at www.
starbucks.com/csrsurvey. Please be assured that all feedback
will be thoughtfully considered and greatly appreciated.
Veri?cation
External veri?cation of the data and statements made in
Starbucks CSR Annual Reports began in 2002, when the
company retained Seattle-based Moss Adams LLP, the
12th largest accounting and consulting ?rm in the U.S.
Te selection of Moss Adams met Starbucks criteria for a
high-quality ?rm that had not worked with the company
previously, and a ?rm that could develop a customized
approach for verifying CSR-related data and content. (See
page 76.)
About the Paper Used for this Report
To minimize the environmental impact, this report was
printed on 100 percent post-consumer recycled ?ber.
For more information:
Starbucks Co?ee Company
Customer Relations
PO Box 3717
Seattle, WA 98124-3717 USA
Phone: 800-23-LATTE
(800-235-2883)
Contact us through the “customer service” section of
Starbucks.com.
To receive a printed copy of this report, please call the
number listed above. Te report is also available online at
www.starbucks.com/csr.
© 2007 Starbucks Co?ee Company. All rights reserved.
Printed in the USA. CSR-199 SKU-XX
Tis report includes forward-looking statements regarding trends
in or expectations regarding store openings. Tese forward-
looking statements are based on currently available operating,
?nancial and competitive information and are subject to various
risks and uncertainties. Actual future results and trends may
di?er materially depending on a variety of factors including but
not limited to successful execution of expansion plans, ?uctuations
in U.S. and international economies, the impact of initiatives by
competitors, and other risks detailed in the company’s ?lings with
the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the “Risk
Factors” section of Starbucks Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the ?scal year ended October 1, 2006. Te company assumes no
obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements.
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