What organic and fair-trade certify
Organic certification verifies how a crop is farmed: that the land, inputs, and handling meet a defined organic standard, audited by an accredited body. Fair-trade certification verifies how a crop is traded: labor conditions, producer pricing, and the terms under which growers are paid. Both are real, independently audited, and worth having. For a brand standing behind its sourcing ethics and its agricultural inputs, they carry genuine weight.
What they do not certify
Neither certification confirms which subspecies the butter is. Organic West African shea and organic Nilotica carry the same organic seal and, on the label, the same INCI name, Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter. An organic certificate cannot tell a buyer whether the fat in the drum is the East African oleic-dominant subspecies or the West African one. Neither does either certification confirm what happened to the material after it left the farm: whether it was blended, cut with a cheaper fat, or substituted somewhere along the processing and shipping chain. Organic auditing follows the farm and the handling system. It does not fingerprint the fat in the finished lot against a subspecies reference.
Two different axes, not a hierarchy
It helps to see these as two separate axes rather than competing claims. Organic and fair-trade sit on the farming-and-trade axis: how it was grown, how it was traded. Subspecies identity and lot integrity through processing sit on the authentication axis: what the material actually is, and whether the drum matches its documentation. A product can be fully organic and fair-trade and still not be verified Nilotica. It can carry every ethical seal and still have been altered after the farm. The certifications and the verification are complementary, answering different questions, not interchangeable.
This gap is not unique to shea. Substituting a cheaper material for a premium one while the paperwork stays clean is a documented category of risk, economically motivated adulteration, that recurs across high-value ingredients: in one large DNA study of the U.S. seafood market, about a third of samples were mislabeled, most identified as a different species than the label claimed. Nilotica sits squarely in that pattern, with a twist that makes it harder to catch than most: because both shea subspecies share the INCI name Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter, selling West African shea to a buyer who paid for Nilotica is not even technically mislabeling, which is precisely why authentication, not certification, is the only thing that confirms what arrived.
Why this matters for a Nilotica buyer
If you are paying the Nilotica premium, an organic seal tells you the farming was clean and a fair-trade seal tells you the growers were paid fairly. Neither tells you the butter is genuinely the oleic-dominant East African subspecies, or that what arrived matches the lot Certificate of Analysis. That is the question subspecies verification answers: gas chromatography fatty acid analysis under AOCS Ce 1h-05, supported by lot-level government laboratory documentation. Many serious buyers want both, organic and fair-trade for inputs and ethics, and verification for identity and integrity. That verification layer is what Burgess Origin Co is built to confirm.
Documentation, not a claim.
Burgess Origin Co is establishing the first U.S. documentation standard for verified Vitellaria nilotica shea butter, authenticated by gas chromatography (AOCS Ce 1h-05) and supported by lot-level Ugandan government laboratory reports.
Request an Originilotica sample with COA Read the white paperFrequently asked
No. Organic verifies how the crop was farmed, not which subspecies it is. Organic West African shea and organic Nilotica carry the same seal and the same INCI name. Authenticity is confirmed by subspecies analysis, not by the organic certificate.
No. Fair-trade verifies trading terms and labor conditions, not subspecies identity or whether the material was altered after the farm. It answers an ethics question, not an authentication question.
They answer different questions, so many buyers want both: organic and fair-trade for farming inputs and trade ethics, and subspecies verification for identity and lot integrity through processing.