The Organic Movement Continues To See Tremendous Growth ??
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The Organic Movement Continues To See Tremendous Growth ??

An Introduction

The 23rd edition of the World of organic agriculture, which is produced in collaboration between FIBL and IFOAM Organics International is out. Easily one of the important books that come out from the organic movement and also one of the most underrated ones. It’s a book that really helps us to better appreciate where the organic movement has come from, where we are at, and gives us a sense of where we are going based on some of the achievements we’ve had from the previous years.

I do not think?most people appreciate enough how important this book is to the organic movement. A lot of sectors find it very hard to have this kind of book, which could give them a detailed overview of their industry. In fact, in some situations, industry leaders have to pay in order to have access to these kinds of books. But for us as the organic movement, we are in a very good position to have it consistently over the years without coughing any money for it. One thing you can do is help support?FIBL ?and?IFOAM Organics International .

The book is usually released during BIOFACH, An international trade fair for organic food that happens in mid-February, but due to the COVID situation, the trade fair was postponed to the summer from the 26th to the 29th of July. It’s a book that has a lot of information with over 300 pages worth of information. So my mission here is to help condensed down this information to bits that are easily digestible and give you the information that you need to know. In case you are working out or driving, you can listen to the audio version of this summary on Spotify.

The State Of The Organic Movement

As of 2020, the organic movement is in 190 countries. Considering Coca-Cola is virtually in every single country, except North Korea and Cuba mainly due to political reasons, we have work to do. That being said, remember that organic is a philosophy, mindset, vision of how agriculture should be done. Arguably, we are in all countries, it’s just that these activities haven’t been documented yet.

In terms of organic agricultural land, we had over 74 million hectares. Compare that to 1999, when we only had 11 million hectares. From the perspective of continents, Oceania continues to dominate with 35.9 million hectares — which hosts almost half of the world’s organic agricultural land while Africa has the least with 2.1 million hectares, which represents only 2.8 percent of the total organic agricultural land.

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From the countries perspective, Australia continues to spearhead with about 36 million hectares, followed by Argentina (4.5 million hectares) and Uruguay (2.7 million hectares). Globally, Agricultural land that was organic stood at 1.6% with Liechtenstein really showing us how organic should be done with over 40% of its land being organic, Austria followed in second by 26.5 percent.

It’s fair to note that in 18 countries, 10 percent or more of the agricultural land was organic. The organic movement saw an Increase of organic agricultural land by 4.1 %, that’s 3 million more (ha) with Argentina leading the race with a 21% increase.

Organic Farmers

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Back in 1999, we only had 200,000 producers, fast forward to NOW, we have over 3.4 million producers, Although this number can be assumed to be way higher mainly due to the fact that numbers reported by some countries report only the numbers of companies, projects, or grower groups, which may each comprise many individual producers or some countries do not provide data at all on the number of producers.

56 percent of the world’s organic producers are in Asia, followed by Africa 24 percent and Europe 12 percent. India continues to lead the way with about 1.6 Million producers followed on a far by two African countries; Ethiopia 219,56 and Tanzania 148,607.

The Organic Market

The Organic market also continues to show tremendous growth now reaching 120.6 billion euros. Back in 2000, it was only worth 15.1 billion euros. If we were to look at the organic market from a GDP standpoint, the organic movement would be the 57th country in the world above countries like Kuwait, Ukraine, Cuba among others.

From an African perspective, it would be fourth only below Nigeria, South Africa & Egypt. The USA continues to dominate this area with a market worth 49.5 billion euros followed in a distance by Germany 15.0 billion euros and France 12.7 billion euros.

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Canada was the country that registered the biggest growth with its market growing by 26.1 percent. Per capita consumption stood at 15.8 euros, which basically means that each year, every person spends about 15.8 euros on organic.

Switzerland has the highest Per capita consumption of 418 euros followed closely by Denmark 384 euros and Luxembourg 285 euros. European countries continue to lead in the percentage at which the organic market has of the total market with Denmark leading the pack with 13.0 percent, followed by Austria 11.3 percent and Switzerland 10.8 percent.

The Rise Of Organic Cotton

Probably one of the most neglected areas within the organic movement but quickly becoming an important and integral part. For years, we focused on the food part but seemed to forget about the fiber part. But it's No surprise given how damaging conventional cotton is, a lot of popular brands such as Nike Adidas, Superdry all have organic cotton initiatives, with Superdry even penning a deal with one of the global football superstar, Neymar JR. A Story that I?covered ?to help front their organic cotton section.

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For the fourth year in a row, organic cotton production saw an increase, making 2019/20 a record-breaking season with the biggest ever harvest of organic cotton. This followed three years of strong growth; 31 percent in 2018/19, 55 percent in 2017/18, and 10 percent in 2016/17. In total, production has increased 112 percent in the previous four years, from 118'032 tones (MT) in 2016/17. Organic cotton accounted for almost one percent of global cotton production in 2019/20, up from 0.5 percent in 2016/17

In terms of production, India dominates with up to 50 percent of organic cotton originating there, China is second with 12percent, and Kyrgyzstan with 12 percent. Sub-Saharan Africa saw the biggest growth in 2019/20, with production rising 91 percent, thanks primarily to the expansion of projects in Tanzania and Uganda. The region now accounts for seven percent of the global total. Organic cotton production is forecasted to skyrocket in 2020/21, with an estimated 48 percent growth, stemming predominantly from India and Turkey.

Organic Policy

As of 2020, 76 countries and territories have fully implemented organic regulations with 20 countries having organic regulations that are not fully implemented and 13 are drafting legislation. European Union and New Zealand represented countries that are going through significant revisions. Several countries are fostering agroecology such as Madagascar, which had the first law on organic agriculture promulgated in 2020.

Nicaragua enacted a Law on Agroecological and Organic Production, The Philippines which has The Organic Agriculture Act of 2010 mandated the development and promotion of organic agriculture and Uganda launched a national Organic Agriculture Policy (NOAP) in 2019, among other countries.

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Several other countries a pursuing Pathways towards 100% organic. Sri Lanka is one of them where In March 2021, the government released the National Agriculture Policy proposing a shift to organic fertilizers from 1 to 30 percent in three years. The Government of Togo also published its National Development Plan in 2018 (2018–2022 with a vision to 2030), which includes provisions for the development of the organic sector in the country.

The New Zealand Government also introduced the “Organic Products Bill” in February 2020. The intention is to establish a regulatory framework aiming to develop a single national standard to cover export, domestic, and imported certified products. In June 2021, the Peruvian Government also passed an Organic Agriculture National Plan 2021–2030 (PLANAE 2021–2030) as an essential tool for implementing organic agriculture law at a national and municipal level. Other several countries are working towards an organic future.

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XOXO, The Organic Guy.

*Quick Hits*

Podcasts Episodes You Might Have Missed!

My Organic Product Of The Week Series!

This is a weekly series that I will be sharing with you my organic product of the week. My hope is that by the end of the year, you will be inspired by the amazing variety of organic products that there is to choose from! - So be sure you have subscribed to my?youtube channel? or you are following me on?Instagram ?to ensure you don’t miss any updates!

Organic & Science

Organic and Science is a series of posts I release every Monday to highlight?peer-reviewed science?that supports organic some of which most scholars probably don't want you to see. Always be on the lookout for that. And if you are NOT following me on social media, Do so?here!

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Till the NEXT one, Be Organic.

Roberto Ccorimanya Conde

Independiente en Privado

2 年

GRACIAS!!! Pude escuchar pero no entendi debido al idioma, soy de lengua o habla espa?ol. si por favor la proxima sea traducida al idioma espa?ol

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