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Company Name:
Miki
Website:
www.miki.uk.com
Industry Sectors:
On-line retail
SEE Listing Publication Date:
01 April 2010

SEE Questionnaire Summary

Business Introduction

Description of business

We sell fair-trade, organic and recycled clothes, accessories, and interiors. At Miki, if we are selling a product it has to be ethical, beautiful and sustainable. Importantly, we believe ethical shopping should be available to all.

Business vision

To be become a website with a boutique feel, one that people will enjoy for the style not just the ethics.

Business philosophies and beliefs

We believe in individuals doing what they can to help the world - but we realise that people do not want to altogether give up on modern living, fashion etc. so we offer a happy medium: we want people to feel great when they shop with us, because of what they buy and the value of what they buy to the producers.

Business Information

Date established:
2008
Contact details
Claire Watson, Co-Founder, claire@miki.uk.com, 023 92 717808
Business structure
partnership
Address of company headquarters
6b Wilberforce Road, Southsea, Hampshire PO5 3DR
Countries of operations
UK
Countries where goods and/or services are sold
UK
Size of workforce
just me!
Financial year
4 April - 3 April
Turnover (last financial year)
Under £100,000
Profit (last financial year)
No information submitted
Details of owners
Claire Watson 100%
Directors' other business interests
Claire also is the sole trader of My Little Eco

Goods and Services

We sell on-line a range of sustainable and fair-trade products from many sources. Our range include;

- clothing for men and women
- accessories
- jewellery
- gifts
- homewares

All our merchandise is sustainable and includes recycled and organic products and things made from sustainably sourced wood.

Business Responses

Jump to:

Environment

Does your company engage in commercial activities that pose a threat to endangered species and their natural habitats or to other scarce natural resources?

Question developed with World Land Trust

Rationale for question

This question is focused on the responsible management of natural resources.

Natural resources underpin our commerce and our lifestyles. There are two types of natural resources: renewable and non-renewable. Once non-renewable resources, such as fossil fuels and minerals, are used up, they cannot be replenished either naturally or by human action. Renewable natural resources, such as plants and animals, water and topsoil, can be replenished and may be used indefinitely if the rate of extraction does not exceed the rate of renewal and there is a minimal level of stock. Uncontrolled use of a vulnerable habitat or over-exploitation of a vulnerable or endangered species may render these natural resources finite and non-renewable. The current debate about the management of the fisheries in the North Sea is a good example of the issues involved.

Commercial exploitation of natural resources has significant environmental and social impacts. Mining, for instance, may continue to cause damage to the environment even after operations cease through the long-term pollution of soil or groundwater. Over-fishing, often on a commercial rather than a local scale, will eventually destroy the fishery. On the other hand, well-managed resources bring immense and sustainable benefits to a community: for example, food security, employment and income. The mismanagement of natural resources, or the operations to exploit them, can lead to greater social inequality and exclusion, social repression and political corruption, amongst other problems. Scarcity and inequitable access to natural resources is a major source of conflict throughout the world and one likely to increase.

Most of the issues about natural resources are interdependent; therefore, here are three examples of commercial activities that pose a threat to scarce natural resources.

  • Mismanagement of a renewable resource: Both fish stocks and timber are considered renewable natural resources because they can be sustained or replenished over time, i.e. those caught or cut will be naturally replaced by the new generation growing up. However, over-fishing and unsustainable logging threaten this replenishment and effective management regimes are crucial to their long-term survival. Increasingly these are regional or global problems rather than just national ones.

  • Overuse of a finite resource: Heavily depleting reserves of a finite natural resource may impact not only on the human activities that heavily rely on the resource, as in the case of oil and gas, but also on the wider ecosystem. When we burn these fossil fuels, it is a major contributing factor in climate change and global warming. But once they are gone, they are gone.

  • Over-concentration on a single resource to the detriment of biodiversity: Excessive cultivation of a single natural resource can damage scarce, unique or fragile habitats and the associated flora and fauna. For example, the rapid expansion of palm oil plantations, often for bio-fuels, is leading to the destruction of rainforests in Indonesia and Malaysia. This has a devastating impact, replacing one of most species-rich ecosystems in the world with a monoculture.

  • Defining Terms

    'Endangered Species' are any living organism threatened with extinction because a) its numbers have declined to a critical level or b) because its habitat has become so reduced it can no longer support the population. These might be either man-made or natural changes.

    'Habitat' is the dynamic natural environment in which an organism or population lives. It may refer to all of the organisms and their physical, chemical and biological environment in a particular place. In its widest sense, it refers to the major assemblages of plants and animals found together.

    'Scarce' refers to a natural resource that is in short supply. Scarcity is sometimes specific to certain regions. For example, some regions suffer water scarcity while other regions have an abundance of water.

    The following definitions are based on those from the World Bank:

    'Non-renewable natural resources' are natural resources that cannot be replaced or replenished either naturally or by human action. These include fossil fuel products and mineral resources because they are regenerated on a geological, rather than human time scale.

    'Renewable natural resources' are natural resources that can be replaced or replenished by natural processes or by human action. Fish stocks and forests are both renewable natural resources as long as they are used in a sustainable way.

    Primary and Secondary answer requirements

    ANSWERING YES

    Companies must:

    1. state whether they directly pose a threat to a scarce natural resource, or invest in a company that does so;
    2. mention any threat they pose to vulnerable habitats or specifically to endangered or threatened species of plants or animals in the Redlist; and
    3. explain what policies and guidelines they have to mitigate these effects, such as planning measures and precautions.

    Companies may:

    1. describe any future plans to reduce use of the scarce natural resource, find sustainable alternatives, protect vulnerable habitats or improve operations.

    ANSWERING NO

    Companies may:

    1. still answer NO even if they are reliant on transport networks that are dependent on fossil fuels;
    2. mention any use of natural resources and the actions that they take to ensure their sustainable use, such as using those with sustainable management certifications; and
    3. describe any specific efforts to preserve scarce natural resources or promote biodiversity.

    DON'T KNOW is not a permissible answer to this question.


    NOT APPLICABLE is not a permissible answer to this question.


    NO ANSWER YET is only permissible under extraordinary circumstances and then for only a limited period.

    NO

    As an on-line shop, Miki offers stylish and contemporary clothing & accessories that are eco-friendly. We will not sell products that harm endangered species or put pressure on scarce resources. All the wood used in our products, for example, is from sustainable sources and have FSC or PEFC certification.

    However, trade can help preserve the environment too. We sell some jewellery that is made from seeds obtained from the Amazon rainforest in Peru. This 'vegetable ivory' comes from native palms. It is more valuable to local people than farming or banana plantations so it encourages them to conserve their natural environment. We provide a market that helps supports their livelihood.

    Submit a comment and/or challenge the accuracy of this information:

    (1 = v poor, 2 = poor, 3 = ok, 4 = good, 5 = v good)

    If you believe the information provided in this answer is inaccurate, misleading or incomplete, please use this form to say so and an investigation will be initiated. You will need to tick the box below and provide an email address. Your challenge will be sent directly to SEE Ltd. Your email address will not be passed on or made known to the company without your permission.

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    Yes No Don't know No answer yet Not applicable