The Co-op has become the first UK supermarket to switch all its own-label coffee to fair trade.
The group said the move would boost the UK fair trade coffee market by 15%, or about £4m, a year.
World coffee prices are now at a 30-year low with many farmers selling coffee for less than it costs them to produce it.
Sales of fair trade coffee increased by almost a third last year, according to the Fairtrade Foundation.
Growing popularity
Under fair trade, coffee growers get a better price, currently double or triple the global market price.
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It's the simplest way we can make a real and immediate difference
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Adrian Lovett, Oxfam's Director of Campaigns, welcomed the move.
"The Co-op is setting a global standard for the coffee companies to follow," he said.
"Buying fair trade is the simplest way for shoppers to help coffee farmers and the Co-op is providing what consumers want - coffee with a conscience."
Malcolm Hepworth, chief operating officer at Co-operative Retail, said: "The coffee crisis is complex, and fair trade is only part of the solution.
"But it's the simplest way we can make a real and immediate difference. Immediate, because all consumers have to do is buy fair trade. Real, because growers will get much more for their coffee."
Boosting sales
The Co-op is sourcing its fair trade coffee, which will be used to make its instant and ground coffee brands, from five farmer co-operatives - four in Central and South America and one in Tanzania, East Africa.
It believes the switch should increase its existing sales of fair trade coffee from £2.1m to £6.5m, it said.
Co-op will continue to stock both conventional and other fair trade labels.