The Fair Trade Town campaign was first launched in 2001 in
Garstang,
Lancashire, under the initiative of Bruce Crowther, a local
Oxfam supporter, and the Garstang Oxfam Group. The initiative, which aimed to promote Fair Trade certified goods in the town, was highly successful: within a couple of months, awareness of the
Fairtrade Mark jumped to over 70% in the town while sales of Fairtrade certified goods increased significantly. Moreover, over the course of the campaign, Garstang developed links with Fair Trade cocoa farming communities in West Africa, which led to the
twin town relationship with
New Koforidua,
Ghana. As the activities at Garstang gained wider attention, the
Fairtrade Foundation launched a set of Fair Trade Town Goals and an Action Guide to encourage others to follow in the town's success. During the 2001-2006 period, over 209 British towns were awarded the Fair Trade status by the Fairtrade Foundation. In October 2009 448 British towns and 312 towns worldwide (in total 760) were awarded the Fair Trade status. In November 2012, there were over 1200 worldwide. In an attempt to replicate the success of the Fairtrade Foundation's Fairtrade Town program, a Europe-wide program called "Fair Trade Towns in Europe", part-funded by the
European Commission, was launched jointly by several Fair Trade labelling initiatives. In November 2006, the first ever European Fair Trade Towns conference was hosted at London Southbank University. The goals of the conference were to • identify and develop procedures to strengthen the links within and between local communities and private and public organisations; • develop strategies to enable the UK Fair Trade Towns model to meet the requirements of each individual country. Following the success of the first event, a second Fair Trade towns conference was subsequently held in Brussels in January 2008. The sixth conference was held in Poznan (Poland) in November 2012, and the 2013 and 2014 international conferences are foreseen to take place in Oslo (Norway) and Kumamoto (Japan), respectively. There are currently Fair Trade Towns in
Australia,
Austria,
Belgium,
Brazil,
Canada,
Denmark,
Finland,
France,
Ireland,
Italy,
Norway,
New Zealand,
Spain,
Sweden, the
Netherlands,
Germany, the
United Kingdom and the
United States. The
list of Fairtrade settlements is a more comprehensive current list. == Criteria ==