We verify where products actually come from. We publish what we find. That's all.
Snevara certifies supply-chain traceability. Sealed containers, signed events, continuous mass-balance checks, random lab tests — and a fact sheet on every certified unit stating what was verified, what was not, and what it cost us to know.
We don't sell the products. We don't rank them. We can't be paid more for a pass than a fail — our fees are published and fixed before we look.
Live counts, including the embarrassing columns. We haven't certified anyone yet — the honey pilot runs through the 2026–27 flow seasons in India; first certificates are expected Q2 2027. These numbers will never be hidden, rounded, or footnoted away.
What a certificate says
Two facts, always: how deep the chain was verified (T1 facility → T4 forensic origin) and how the physical product flowed (identity-preserved, segregated, or mass-balance). A T4-IP jar of honey and a T1-MB bar of soap are both honestly certified — the certificate just says different things. How it works →
What a certificate doesn't say
"Ethical." "Sustainable." "Clean." Our certificates never say these words, and our clients aren't allowed to put them in our mouth. Every fact sheet carries a NOT VERIFIED section listing what's outside scope — labor conditions, environmental practices, health claims — unless they were actually verified.
Why you can check us
The methodology is an open specification. Event records are hash-anchored on a public ledger — anyone can verify a fact sheet's evidence exists and when it was recorded. Lab samples are chosen by public randomness neither we nor the client can steer. Read the documents →
Currently certifying
Honey (India) — pilot in progress. India's honey trust problem is measured, not rumored: in 2020, 10 of 13 major brands failed the NMR adulteration test. And if you export, your EU buyers now need origin percentages computed from traceability documentation — yours. That documentation is what our system produces. Brands & exporters: the design-partner brief →
Coffee — 2027, timed to the EUDR deadline Indian estates and exporters face through their EU buyers.