1 / 30

Experiences with Organic Agriculture

Experiences with Organic Agriculture. Dr. Sophia Twarog, UNCTAD Standards and Trade Workshop 16 May 2002. Opportunities. Demand growing 10-20% in most major markets US$ 17.5 billion market in 2000 Economic,social, health and environmental benefits for DCS Possible DC comparative advantage

nhi
Download Presentation

Experiences with Organic Agriculture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Experiences with Organic Agriculture Dr. Sophia Twarog, UNCTAD Standards and Trade Workshop 16 May 2002

  2. Opportunities • Demand growing 10-20% in most major markets • US$ 17.5 billion market in 2000 • Economic,social, health and environmental benefits for DCS • Possible DC comparative advantage • Over 100 DCs produce certified organic products

  3. Production Constraints • Limited governmental support • Lack of technical know-how • Lack of organic inputs • Little R&D on plant varieties and prod’n methods best suited to DCs • Conversion period- smallholders have limited financial reserves

  4. Export Constraints • High certification costs • Lack of market information and marketing strategies • Limited physical transport and storage infrastructure • Complex import procedures • Tariff and non-tariff protection

  5. Certification • Most DC exporters depend on certification by international certification bodies • National certification infrastructure limited in most DCs • Unaffordable for smallholders • Smallholder group certification SGC not recognized in importing C reg’s

  6. Standards and import regulations • Multitude of private standards and government regulations • No well-functioning mechanisms for mutual recognition • Multiple certification/accreditation is costly • Obtaining import permits-cumbersome and time consuming

  7. Market information and channels • Limited market information available at producer level • Sometimes DC certified organic products get sold as conventional

  8. Other market risks • Organic market is fairly small (LT 2% of total food market in most dev’d C’s) • Dev’d C efforts to promote OA production, including subsidies • Eastward enlargement of EU could increase OA supply • Increasing consumer preference for locally supplied food

  9. EU Regulation 2092/91 • Para 1: “third country list” (6 C’s) • Para 6: “importer derogation” • Importer submits documentation that products are produced and certified according to rules equivalent to EU’s • Permit takes several weeks or months • Over 80% of EU OA imports, from over 85 countries • Due to expire 31 December 2005

  10. Other EU Regulations • No. 1788/2001: aims to harmonize import procedures throughout EU • from 1 July 2002 • requires an original certificate of inspection for each consignment • Is expected to increase delays • Since July 1999, certification bodies must conform to EN 45011 or ISO 65

  11. USA Regulations • Standards adopted December 2000 • Certifiers operating in foreign countries may apply for USDA accreditation. • In first round (April 2002), 37 foreign certifiers applied, incl. 12 from 10 DCs. • 4 were accepted, including 1 from Peru • The other applications are pending.

  12. USA Regulations, cont’d Otherwise, certifiers seek recognition • USDA determines, upon the request of a foreign gov’t, that its authorities are able to assess and accredit certifying agents as meeting the requirements of the National Organic Programme (NOP), • Or as meeting requirements equivalent to the NOP under an equivalency agreement

  13. Costa Rica • 1.9% of land under permanent cultivation is under organic production or in conversion • Small producers (94% of certified farms are LT 5 hectares) • Exports to EU and USA • Main exports: coffee & bananas

  14. Costa Rica • Institutional support • National Programme for OA (est. 1995) • Dept. on Accreditation and Registration of OA in Ministry of Agriculture, deals with issues related to inspection • National standards • Procedures for accreditation of certifiers; regulations for inspection

  15. Costa Rica • Good certification and accreditation infrastructure • 3 authorized inspection agencies (2 national, 1 German) • These have arrangements with import market-based certifiers • Expected to be soon included in the EU “third country list”

  16. India • National Programme for Organic Production • National Standards—March 2000 • Tea, Coffee, Spices Boards and APEDA—accreditation agencies for products under their responsibility • Applied for EU “third country list”

  17. India • Key role of NGOs and farmer organizations • Commodity-specific boards providing some support to OA • Spices Board meets 50% of certif. Costs • Price premiums—difficult to secure • Ex: organic pepper

  18. Uganda • Small scale producers • Exports include cotton, sesame, coffee, fruits • No national standard • No clear government policy or support • No locally-based certification body

  19. Recommendations • Raising awareness and promoting policy dialogues • Research and development • Training (farmers, agricultural extension workers) • Development of national legislation and standards (for C’s with larger OA sector)

  20. Recommendations, cont’d • Develop domestic markets • Improve access to market information • Develop marketing strategies • Appropriate government support

  21. Recommendations, cont’d • Reducing certification costs • Assistance in meeting certification costs • Local certification/inspection body • Inspections done by local staff charging local fees • Provisions for smallholder group certification based on Internal Control Systems (ICS)

  22. Recommendations, cont’d • Reduce expensive multiple certification through harmonization and mutual recognition of OA regulations, standards and certification • Among governments • Among accrediting agencies • Among private/public certifying bodies

  23. Recommendations, cont’d Facilitating imports of OA products • Regulations reflecting the needs of DCs, e.g. provisions for SGC • Transparent and understandable procedures • Mutual recognition of OA regulations • Providing information (standards, market opportunities, etc.)

  24. Recommendations, cont’d Bilateral and multilateral aid agencies can provide/finance technical assistance to: • Promote OA production • Obtain certification • Identify business partners

  25. Trade rules issues • Implications of developed country subsidies to OA production • Need for transparent and non-discriminatory labelling • Possibilities to grant special & differential treatment, incl. trade preferences, to OA products fr. DCs

  26. Trade rules issues,cont’d • Post-Doha: could the mandated negotiations aimed at reducing or eliminating tariff and non-tariff barriers to environmental goods and services benefit DC exports of OA products?

  27. Possible follow-up activities By UNCTAD and UNEP/UNCTAD CBTF, working closely with IFOAM, FAO, ITC and other relevant institutions

  28. Possible follow-up activities Assisting DCs in designing and implementing appropriate gov’t support for OA production & export, through • Studies, including identifying promising products, ways to reduce certification costs, overcoming constraints • Policy dialogues, incl. to create awareness of benefits of OA and promoting multi-stakeholder committees

  29. Possible follow-up activities Exploring mechanisms for recognition of organic guarantee systems of DCs • Promoting mutual recognition • Examining ways to promote the practical application of the concept of equivalence, including through Task Force involving Governments, IFOAM, FAO, UNCTAD and others.

  30. Possible follow-up activities • Promoting transparent and simple rules governing OA imports • Exploring trade preferences for OA products from DCs • Examining market strategies (ITC) incl. disseminating market research to DCs, explore e-commerce opportunities, promoting partnerships w/ buyers, donors

More Related