CO2 Responsible emblem

CO2 Responsible Product:
Bean North Coffee

Project

Developed by the non-profit organization Taking Root, the Limay Community Carbon Project is much more than planting trees!

Taking Root works with local famers to restore ecosystems, improve livelihoods and tackle climate change all at the same time.

Visit the Limay Community Carbon Project
Project

Each carbon offset removes one tonne of CO2 from the atmosphere. This is done through social reforestation.
How do carbon offsets work?

Product

To make each kilo of Bean North coffee, 1.7 kg of carbon dioxide (CO2) is released into the atmosphere. That's like driving a car for 6.6 km.

To help manage the carbon footprint of its coffee, Bean North Coffee Roasters Ltd. invests in carbon offsets developed through Taking Root's Limay Community Carbon Project, a social reforestation project in Nicaragua.

See the carbon footprint details

CO2 Responsible: Promoting CO2 responsible businesses, products and services. Find out more.


Bean North's Carbon Footprint

Deforested mountainside Deforested mountainside Participating family Participating family

To calculate Bean North's footprint, Taking Root measured the following business activities:

  • The transportation of coffee beans by land and sea from the coffee plantations to the roaster in Whitehorse;
  • The propane consumed during the daily operations of the roaster and the Bean North café;
  • The gas used by the company's vehicles;
  • The hydroelectricity consumed in the daily operations of the roaster and café; and
  • The distribution of roasted coffee to american and canadian retailers.

Overall, importing, roasting and distributing one kg of coffee generates an average of 1.7 kg of CO2. This is like driving a standard-sized car for 6.6 km.

With this report, Bean North can identify ways to further reduce its footprint before offsetting its unavoidable emissions.

How Bean North reduces its footprint


Amount of CO2 per 1 kg of coffee

Product's footprint graph

Download the full footprint report

Logo Bean North

How Bean North reduces its footprint

The first step in being CO2 Responsible is to take actions to reduce your carbon footprint. Each action counts!

Bean North does this by building environmentally conscious practices into its daily activities. This includes:

  • Waste-management
    • Sharing excess coffee chaft and grinds with local farmers in the Yukon
    • Reusing jute coffee bags as a way to raise funds for projects in the coffee lands
    • Composting organic waste in our garden
  • Local and organic
    • Using seasonally grown foods from our own gardens in the café
    • Operating and processing according to its organic certification, thus ensuring that the coffee in its bags is organic from crop to cup
  • Sustainable design
    • Introducing reusable coffee cans as a sustainable way to retail fresh roasted coffee
  • Travel and energy use
    • Traveling by train and hybrid vehicles whenever possible
    • Favouring active transportation for going to work: walk, bike and ski
    • Limiting travel by combining business and personal travel
    • Using energy efficient appliances and lighting
    • Retrofitting of our facility with energy efficiency in mind
  • Reuse and recycle
    • Recycling cans, bottles and paper
    • Reusing boxes for mail order packages

Next, Bean North decided to take responsibility for its remaining emissions by purchasing Taking Root's social reforestation carbon offsets and supporting the Limay Community Carbon Project.

To find out more about Bean North, visit: www.beannorth.com

Visit the Limay Community Carbon Project


Participating family Deforested mountainside Deforested mountainside Participating family Participating family Participating family Participating family Participating family Participating family

Images of the Bean North café and roastery

Logo Bean North

Limay Community Carbon Project

The Limay Community Carbon Project is a community-based reforestation initiative that works with small-scale farming families in Nicaragua to restore ecosystems, improve livelihoods and tackle climate change. The project is located in one of the region's most critical watersheds, which feeds directly into the Estero Real, one of Central America's most important estuaries.

The project is developed according to the Plan Vivo Standard, a system that offers incentives to farmers who agree to manage their land in a way that provides an ecological service, such as planting and maintaining trees to absorb carbon.

The Limay Community Carbon Project is developed by Taking Root, a non-profit organization, based in Montreal (Canada).




Project location

Click on the image above to view our interactive map and visit the farmers participating in the Limay Community Carbon Project. On the map, you can click on an outlined area of land to meet the landholder.

See project photos

Find out more about the project's components or download the full Project Design Document.


Project Components: Ecosystems

One of the three main aims of Taking Root's project is to protect and restore ecosystems through reforestation. Here are some of the ways this is done.

Preserving ecosystems

Forest preservation: In order to protect other forests from being cut down for farmland, Taking Root only reforests land that isn't being used. Also, specific trees are planted for the farmers to use as firewood and timber.

Air quality: Trees improve air quality by retaining humidity, absorbing carbon and producing oxygen.

Waterways: The trees help capture water in the dry season and minimize flooding and landslides in the rainy season. They also help regulate the water that flows into the nearby Estero Real, one of Central America's most important estuaries in terms of biodiversity.

Biodiversity: Seeds are collected from a variety of surrounding tree species in order to help strengthen these species. Trees that have been over-logged are also re-introduced. All this new growth rebuilds habitat for local wildlife.




Ecosystems

Above: Forests play an important role in cleaning the air, balancing weather patterns and providing habitat for plants and animals.

Find out more about the project's components or download the full Project Design Document.


Project Components: Livelihoods

A second core aim of the project is to improve the livelihoods of the participating community members through reforestation.

Improving livelihoods

With over 136 small-scale farmers in 21 communities as of 2012 working to reforest underutilized parts of their land, there are a lot of people involved in every step of the process. Among other things, participants help select the tree species, gather seeds, build nurseries, plant trees, and protect them as they grow.

Incentives are put into place to encourage participation and help farmers at each step of the project.

Interest-free loans: Taking Root provides interest-free loans to help farmers build fencing, clear shrubs and plant the seedlings. This in turn generates many jobs within the community.

Regular payments: Each participating farmer receives guaranteed 'payments for ecosystem services,' which are regular payments over a 10-year period, proportionate to the area of land they reforested and maintain.

Trees for firewood: Specific trees are planted within the project that are meant to be used for firewood or timber, in order to make room for the other trees as they grow. These harvested trees can also be sold locally as another new source of income.

Fuel-efficient cookstoves: Community members receive fuel-efficient cookstoves that use about one-third of the amount of wood. This reduces the pressure on nearby forests and minimizes the time spent gathering wood. The stoves also release far less CO2 and smoke into the air, which is a big health benefit for the women who traditionally spend a great deal of time cooking by the fire.




Livelihoods

Above: The Benavidez family - project participants.

Find out more about the project's components or download the full Project Design Document.


Project Components: Climate change

The third core aim of the project is to use social reforestation to tackle climate change, a serious global issue that must be addressed.

Mitigating climate change

Preventing emissions: Deforestation accounts for over 17% of global CO2 emissions - almost as much as all the cars, trucks, boats and planes on the planet combined! By working with communities to preserve forests and prevent further destruction, Taking Root is reducing the amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere.

Effective carbon pumps: Since about half of a tree's dry weight is made of carbon, trees serves as pumps, pulling CO2 out of the air and storing it in their plant tissue. Closer to the equator, these trees can grow up to 10 times faster than in northern climates.

Offsetting our footprints: Taking Root develops high quality carbon offsets according to the rigorous Plan Vivo Standard. Buying these offsets is a way for businesses and individuals to take responsibility for their unavoidable greenhouse gas emissions while also helping to improve livelihoods in Central America.




Climate Change

Above: Deforested side of a small mountain in Esteli, Nicaragua.

Find out more about the project's components or download the full Project Design Document.


Project Components: Standard

Plan Vivo logo

Taking Root proudly follows the Plan Vivo Standard, a system for developing and managing community-based land-use projects with long-term carbon, livelihood and ecosystem benefits.

Plan Vivo is one of the only carbon offset standards developed exclusively for use in community-based projects. Certified projects help support people by improving livelihoods and conserving and restoring local ecosystems. Producing offsets according to these standards requires rigorous measurement, monitoring and third party verification procedures.

Among Plan Vivo's stakeholders and supporters are the Clinton foundation, the United Nations Development Programme, and Rainforest Alliance.

Visit: www.planvivo.org




Standard

Above: Measuring the trees to calculate growth and carbon content.

Find out more about the project's components or download the full Project Design Document.


Project photo gallery

Deforested mountainside Deforested mountainside Participating family Nursery Nursery Project participant Project participant Project participant Child Field calculations

Click on a thumbnail to enlarge the image.

The Limay Community Carbon Project currently works with over 136 small-scale farmers. Browse through the pictures above to see a snapshot of the area, the community members and the hard work they do to make the project a reality.





What is carbon offsetting?

Sometimes known as carbon credits or Verified Emission Reductions, carbon offsets represent the removal of greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, compensating for one's carbon footprint. One carbon offset is equal to the removal of one tonne of CO2 from the atmosphere. Since wood is approximately 50% carbon by weight, the more trees we plant, the more carbon we remove from the atmosphere.

While recognizing that offsetting is just one step towards curbing carbon emissions, Taking Root offers businesses and individuals worldwide a way to better manage and offset their carbon footprint and help improve the livelihoods of small-scale farmers in developing countries.

Visit the Limay Community Carbon Project




How our carbon offsets work

The carbon cycle

About CO2 Responsible

CO2 Responsible emblem

Taking Root has developed the CO2 Responsible promotional kit to help participating businesses communicate with their customers about their decision to buy social reforestation carbon offsets.

The kit includes use of the CO2 Responsible emblem (right), which represents a business' dedication to reducing its impact on the environment, and a personalized CO2 Responsible microsite where customers can find out more about each product or service that has been offset.

Take part

Taking Root invites you to be a part of a movement towards more CO2 responsible businesses. Take advantage of this powerful educational and promotional kit and demonstrate to your clients that you are making your business more environmentally responsible.

Download the Promo Kit outline for more details.

Don't hesitate to contact us:

Samuel Gervais
Co-Executive Director and Co-founder
T : +1 (514) 277-1700

About Taking Root

Taking Root is a Montreal (Canada) based non-profit organization that develops social reforestation projects in collaboration with small-scale farmers in Nicaragua. Its activities are funded through the sale of third-party verified carbon offsets to businesses and individuals around the world.

Founded in 2007, Taking Root's mission is to restore ecosystems, improve livelihoods, and tackle climate change. It follows the Plan Vivo standard, a holistic reforestation framework that emphasizes community participation, using native tree species and protecting critical watersheds. Find out more at: www.takingroot.org

Taking Root / EnRacine headquarters
6863 rue St Hubert, #201
Montreal (Quebec), Canada
H2S 2M7