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A Starbucks coffee shop, in Boston, on July 14, 2021.Charles Krupa/The Associated Press

Starbucks Corp. will nearly double its spending with suppliers and vendors from under-represented groups in North America by 2030 to US$1.5-billion, it said on Tuesday.

Dennis Brockman, Starbucks’ chief global inclusion and diversity officer, said the company believes it can use the COVID-19-related global supply-chain disruption to increase diversity.

“This will give us an opportunity to seek out and search for more” Black, Indigenous and people of colour who are building businesses, he said. “Smaller companies … can take advantage of this current situation.”

The global coffee chain said it will update annually its progress on the spending.

Starbucks and other major restaurant companies, including McDonald’s Corp., have laid out new diversity goals amid a national reckoning over race prompted by the May, 2020, murder of George Floyd, a Black man, by a Minneapolis police officer.

Starbucks also said on Tuesday that it will spend 15 per cent of its fiscal 2022 paid media budget with minority-owned media companies. The company declined to provide a dollar figure.

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