In a move that could give a boost to export of agriculture and processed
food from the country, India is framing its own organic products policy
with clearly prescribed safety standards, traceability norms, soil
certification guidelines and good agricultural practices.
The good agricultural practices (GAP) followed by countries such as the
US, Brazil, the Netherlands and France are being studied by trade
experts and officials to generate adequate inputs for the policy, a
government official told BusinessLine. The Commerce Ministry is framing
the policy in collaboration with the Food Safety and Standards Authority
of India (FSSAI).
Image & Article courtesy : thehindubusinessline.com |
“The idea is to have one uniform policy for the organic products sector
so that domestic consumers as well as foreign buyers gain confidence
that the items that are being sold to them as organic meet certain laid
down standards,” the official added.
A policy is also important for farmers as it would let them know exactly
what they are supposed to do when they are organically farming a
certain product, pointed out Arpita Mukherjee from research body ICRIER.
“Every organic product has its own set of pesticide and bio-fertiliser
and farmers have to know exactly what inputs they are to use,” she said.
While the global organic food market is estimated at an annual $ 72
billion, exports from India are a miniscule $ 298 million. India exports
mostly to the US, Europe, Korea, Australia, New Zealand and countries
in South East Asia.
In India, organic products for exports are certified by various
certifying agencies accredited by the National Programme for Organic
Production (NPOP), India, under Agriculture and Processed Food Products
Export Development Agency (APEDA). For organic products sold in the
domestic market, the certification process is largely voluntary, but
FSSAI and Agmark are taking some steps to regulate it, the official
added.
Certification of organic soil in the country is a problem as there are
no domestic certification agencies for that and the services of foreign
certifying agents is use to certify the soil.
“When India is exporting organic products to the US or to the EU, it has
to be first established that the norms being followed at identified
organic farms match the existing norms in the buying countries,” the
official said.
With a proper policy in place, the process of cross checking guidelines
by importing countries would become smoother. The same guidelines would
also apply on items for exports, imports and domestic market.
Traceability of inputs, especially in case of processed food to
determine if all ingredients in a certified organic product are also
organic, is also expected to improve once the policy is in place, the
official added.
India produced around 1.35 million tonne of certified organic products
which includes all varieties of food products such as sugarcane, oil
seeds, cereals & millets, cotton, pulses, medicinal plants, tea,
fruits, spices, dry fruits, vegetables and coffee.
source: thehindubusinessline.com
source: thehindubusinessline.com
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