Making the international trade in plants and seeds a safer venture
Making the international trade in
plants and seeds a safer venture
International plant health body adopts
new global standards
13 April 2017, Incheon, Republic of
Korea/Rome - The international body that oversees plant health has
taken a big step forward with the adoption of a new global standard
to help ensure that the international trade in plants and seeds,
while very profitable, is also safer.
The International Plant Protection
Convention (IPPC)'s governing body, the Commission on Phytosanitary
Measures (CPM) adopted the standard during its 12th session in
Incheon, South Korea, which wrapped up today.
In this globalized world, food and
agricultural products are continuously on the move. Ships are
constantly underway from port to port, each year ferrying more than
500 million large steel containers filled with all kinds of cargo to
and from all corners of the planet.
Unfortunately, that cargo can sometimes
hide stowaways - agricultural pests that once on shore can devastate
crops - from gypsy moths to giant African snails to Argentine ants.
The rapid growth in agricultural trade via online marketplaces is
aggravating the situation, making it harder for countries to ensure
that all shipments - big or small - are free from bugs and diseases.
And of particular concern is the threat
of pest transmission posed by seeds. Unlike other agricultural
products that are destined for consumption, such as wheat, barley or
lentils, seeds are a cause for greater concern - being destined for
planting, there is a greater risk that any pests they carry could
establish themselves and spread after planting.
Addressing these risks presents a
highly complex task.
Seed companies often operate breeding
programmes in multiple countries so they can produce more than one
crop each season. These seeds are then shipped to all corners of the
globe for cleaning, treating, testing, and packaging prior to being
sold and shipped again - sometimes after being in storage for long
periods of time. Their final destination may not be known at the time
of export from the country of origin.
All of this makes it very difficult --
if not impossible -- to take into account all possible phytosanitary
import requirements of the countries that will eventually import the
seeds.
By proposing standard approaches to
risk assessment and testing, the new standard will help harmonize how
countries deal with the complexities of the international seed trade,
thereby facilitating trade in seeds -- valued at some $US 12 billion
annually -- while ensuring such shipments safeguard food supplies for
a growing global population.
Protecting plants vital to feeding a
hungry world
FAO recognizes that the IPPC's work is
vital to achieving the world's Sustainable Development Goals.
Protecting the health of the world's plants requires sustainable
agriculture, climate change resilience, biodiversity protection, and
the facilitation of safe trade.
"Because the IPPC is the only
organization to set government-recognized plant health standards that
facilitate international trade, the decisions made here will be
essential to further protecting the world's plant resources, the very
foundation of life," said Kundhavi Kadiresan, FAO Assistant
Director-General and Regional Representative for Asia and the
Pacific. "Indeed, FAO's vision of a world without hunger can
only be accomplished with healthy plants that are free from regulated
pests."
"These standards, which are built
on consensus, are the most effective way to prevent the introduction
and spread of plant pests to new environments, and avoid devastating
impacts on plants as well as biodiversity, food security and trade,"
said Jingyuan Xia, IPPC Secretary.
The CPM further considered guidelines
for an import regulatory system and a series of treatments that stop
pests from burrowing into wooden packaging materials and methods to
stop fruit flies from attacking citrus fruits.
The Commission is also seeking approval
for its proposal that 20
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