Farm practices must change to protect endangered species and habitats
ZURICH,
June 27, 2017 — Sustainable agriculture practices must be widely
implemented in order to stem an alarming loss of biodiversity and to
protect endangered species.
This
is according to the Standards and Biodiversity report released
Tuesday by the International Institute for Sustainable Development.
Agricultural
production currently accounts for 40 per cent of global land surface
and is responsible for 70 per cent of projected losses in terrestrial
biodiversity due to widespread land conversion, pollution and soil
degradation.
“What
happens in agriculture matters,” said Scott Vaughan, President-CEO,
IISD. “Growing demand for certified products presents a major
opportunity to protect our natural resources. The market is rewarding
efforts to conserve critical habitats, protect soil and water
quality, and mitigate the impacts of climate change. But market
forces are not enough.”
The
market value of certified agricultural products was estimated to be
USD 52.5 billion in 2015 for eight major commodities (bananas,
cotton, coffee, cocoa, tea, sugar, palm oil and soybeans) according
to Standards and Biodiversity. That is up from USD 31.6 billion in
2012, the previous estimate by the State of Sustainability
Initiatives Review.
Two
other major commodities–fisheries and forestry–also registered
significant growth, according to the new estimates. The sustainable
forestry market grew to USD 231.8 billion in 2015 from USD 200.3
billion in 2012. The sustainable fisheries market grew to USD 8.9
billion in 2015 from USD 6.8 billion in 2012. The total trade value
of the top ten sustainable commodity markets grew to USD 293.2
billion in 2015 from USD 238.7 billion in 2012.
Some
agricultural commodity markets are now dominated by sustainability
standards. Half of global coffee production was standards-compliant
in 2014 (the latest available data,) along with 30 per cent of cocoa
production, 22 per cent of palm oil production and 18 per cent of
global tea production.
The
study forecasts that four other agricultural commodities—bananas,
cotton, sugar and soybeans—will have compliance rates of at least
10 per cent by 2020.
However,
standards remain a negligible force across global agricultural
production as a whole. If those eight agricultural commodities became
100 per cent certified, the study found it would still only amount to
12 per cent of global agricultural land area.
“If
voluntary standards are to play a major role in reducing the impacts
of agriculture on biodiversity loss, they will have to, at a minimum,
establish a significant presence.
among
other crops—most notably, staple crops such as wheat, maize and
rice,” said study author Jason Potts, a senior associate at IISD.
“The
good news is that we can build political will to address biodiversity
loss,” Potts added. “Parties of the UN’s Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD) are leading efforts to identify concrete
solutions and immediate actions to achieve their biological diversity
targets.”
The
IISD study builds upon the CBD’s Biodiversity Impact Indicators for
Commodity Production (BIICP), which identifies a core set of
biodiversity indicators that can help governments and the
agricultural industry understand how best to reduce negative impacts
on biodiversity. The CBD Secretariat contributed to the development
of the report.
“Voluntary
sustainability standards are an important element of the necessary
policy mix to redirect funding towards sustainable production
practices and reducing biodiversity loss,” said Dr. Cristiana Paşca
Palmer, Executive Secretary, CBD. “This report makes an important
contribution by providing a better understanding of the role and
potential of different voluntary sustainability standards, and what
policy-makers can do to promote their wider application and their
more robust integration into overall policy frameworks.”
The
study was released at ISEAL Alliance’s annual meeting—the 2017
Global Sustainability Standards Conference—in Zurich, Switzerland.
It identifies a wealth of information about specific commodities,
such as:
·
Cocoa certification appears to be well positioned to promote
improved soil fertility where it matters most through a strong
presence in countries facing soil fertility challenges.
·
Coffee certification appears to be well positioned to limit
the negative impacts on lakes and other water sources because
standards are highly active in areas where the threat of
eutrophication is most prominent.
·
The banana sector may be approaching a “glass ceiling” on
growth, as it is currently limited to the small portion of production
that is traded internationally.
·
Cotton certification appears to be under-represented in
countries where cotton-related water use is most problematic: the
expansion of certified cotton across Pakistan and India is
strategically important.
·
Palm oil certification is geographically focused where forest
conversion is most problematic but may nevertheless have limited
impact due to the scale of demand for conventional palm oil by Asian
countries.
·
Soy certification is most active in key areas of biodiversity
vulnerability but has low adoption rates due to low demand for
certified soy from Asia.
·
Sugarcane certification is highly concentrated in Brazil,
which has lower per-volume fertilizer use than other major producing
countries. India, China, Pakistan and Mexico represent strategic
opportunities for the expansion of certified sugarcane aimed at
protecting water quality.
·
Tea production compliant with standards accounts for 18 per
cent of global tea production (by volume) but only 13 per cent of
global area under tea production, as it appears to be concentrated in
higher-yielding production systems.
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