1 / 29

Challenges to Organic Trade

Challenges to Organic Trade. Organic Standards and Technical Regulations. 70 countries with organic regulations of some type Some standards only Some, standards plus control of certification Some regulate export but not domestic + Private organic standards and labeling

stefan
Télécharger la présentation

Challenges to Organic Trade

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. Challenges to Organic Trade

  2. Organic Standards and Technical Regulations • 70 countries with organic regulations of some type • Some standards only • Some, standards plus control of certification • Some regulate export but not domestic • + Private organic standards and labeling • 480 organic certification bodies worldwide, but little to no access to domestic certification in some countries. • Few equivalence agreements or other trade facilitating mechanisms

  3. Organic Standards and Technical Regulations • All resulting in barriers to organic trade and missed opportunities • Developing countries are especially challenged

  4. Growth and change in international markets

  5. Seeking Global Solutions the “ITF”

  6. International Task Force on Harmonization and Equivalence in Organic Agriculture (ITF) • Convened by FAO, IFOAM and UNCTAD from 2002-2008 • Public-Private Cooperation • 29 countries • 7 intergovernmental organizations • 27 civil society/private sector representatives

  7. ITF GOALS •Reduce organic trade barriers •facilitate international organic trade and access of developing countries to international organic markets

  8. ITF APPROACH • Be a platform for dialogue between private and public institutions involved in trade and regulatory activities in the organic sector • Common understanding of opportunities for harmonization, recognition, equivalence and other forms of cooperation within and between government and private sector organic control systems

  9. ITF Recommendations – Harmonize standards development. (Regional standards) • Facilitate and Streamline Equivalence Globally • Recognize Foreign Certification Bodies based on internationally agreed performance requirements • Cooperate with others (governments, private sector)

  10. Facilitating Equivalence: ITF “Tools” ITF produced two practical tools for assessing equivalence of organic standards and certification systems AIM is to simplify and standardize the equivalence assessment process internationally

  11. ITF Tools • Equivalent Standards ? Guide for Assessing Equivalence of Organic Standards and Technical Regulations EquiTool

  12. What is EquiTool? • Guidelines for assessing equivalence between two or more standards for organic production/processing; • Elements - standardized procedures to use for the assessment - framework for assessing standards based on a set of Common Objectives and Requirements of Organic Standards (COROS) under development • COROS will help us get away from detailed line-by-line comparisons between two standards.

  13. ITF Tools • Equivalent Certification Performance Requirements ? International Requirements for Organic Certification Bodies (IROCB)

  14. What is IROCB ? • A set of minimum international performance requirements (norms) for conducting organic certification. • Used by governments to recognize that foreign certification bodies operate to equivalent performance requirements. • Also useful for CB to CB recognition. recognition in the private sector • Developed by ITF through comprehensive government and private stakeholder consultation

  15. How would a government use IROCB ? • Step 1: Accept IROCB as a reasonable international common denominator for accepting foreign certification. • Step 2 : Require foreign government and/or CB to demonstrate that the certification performance requirements it uses or operates under meets IROCB) Aim is that there is one evaluation based on IROCB and that one evaluation can achieve import access in multiple countries

  16. Global Organic Market Access A project of FAO, IFOAM and UNCTAD

  17. Purpose • Implement results of the ITF (Tools) • Promote harmonization, equivalence, cooperation among governments • Assist at region and country level

  18. Some GOMA Actors • Canada: Canada Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) • Central America: Organization of Competent Authorities for Organic Agriculture, Central America/Panama/Dominican Republic (ACAO) in cooperation with IICA. • China: Certification and Accreditation Administration (CNCA) • India: Agricultural and Processed Food Export Development Authority (APEDA) • Philippines: Department of Agriculture, BAFS, Organic Program

  19. Some Key GOMA Work Spaces • Pilot Projects to Simplify Equivalence (using Tools) –Philippines-Indonesia – Canada – Australia • New Regional Initiatives on Harmonization & Equivalence • Central America - Harmonized Regional Standards Project • Asia- Building a strategy to support trade flow of organic products within and beyond the region

  20. UPDATE Regional Initiatives

  21. CENTRAL AMERICA • Harmonized Regional Organic Regulatory System standards, certification requirements, supervision • Final draft February 2011

  22. Asia • Framework for Cooperation on Organic Labeling and Trade (South, South-East, East Asia)

  23. Asia Framework for Cooperation Elements • Bilateral equivalence discussions using Tools • Development of Asia Regional Organic Standards (AROS), as basis for long term equivalence and harmonization • Cooperation between regulating and non- regulating countries (e.g. India-Bhutan) • Aim for a Multilateral recognition agreement (with flexibility for participation of both regulating and non- regulating countries)

  24. Asia Framework for Cooperation Potential Participating Governments • Bhutan • China • India • Indonesia • Laos • Malaysia • Philippines • Thailand • Vietnam

  25. Asia Framework for Cooperation Asia Regional Organic Standard Development • Drafting Group, Manila, March 2011  Draft 1 • Consultation • Drafting Group, Hanoi, June 2011  Draft 2 • Consultation • Drafting Group, November 2011  Final AROS • Announce at GOMA Conference 2012

  26. INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 13-14 February 2012 Nuremberg Messe Let Good Products Flow!

  27. www.goma-organic.org

More Related