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 Presented by: Amos Thiongó. 3. For Consumers I.Food safety – proper use of pesticides to ensure food is safe for human consumption. Involves ensuring.

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Presentation on theme: " Presented by: Amos Thiongó. 3. For Consumers I.Food safety – proper use of pesticides to ensure food is safe for human consumption. Involves ensuring."— Presentation transcript:

1  Presented by: Amos Thiongó

2 3. For Consumers I.Food safety – proper use of pesticides to ensure food is safe for human consumption. Involves ensuring that farmers comply with chemical use recommendations, pre-harvest intervals, hygiene in produce handling etc II.Traceability – a consumer can trace a produce right to an individual farmer. It makes a consumer feel confident when he knows where the food on his plate is coming from III.Promote trade justice through execution of purchasing power – some certifications promote trade justice by allowing ordinary consumers to contribute to development of producing communities. The Fairtrade premium is a good example of a trade justice tool available to ordinary consumers through their purchasing power.

3 4. For The Environment and Animals I.Animals welfare groups are particularly strong in developed countries – farms are certified for keeping livestock in humane conditions, responsible slaughterhouse and handling II.Protection of fauna and through through Good Agricultural practises,

4 Some of the certifications also promote specific benefits for farmers including; 1. Safety net prices (Fairtrade) – to ensure products do not tumble beyond a particular minimum threshold. The Fairtrade minimum price is participatorily computed using Cost of Sustainable Production (COSP) 2. Community Development premiums (Fairtrade, Rainforest alliance, UTZ) – a percentage price mark up is reserved for producing community development projects 3. Online Track and Trace system (UTZ) – an online system for traceability of products 4. Technical support to comply with standards (organic, Fairtrade, UTZ, RA) – support farmers to comply with various standards

5  Cost of certification is prohibitive – cost of on site inspection is quite high (over $ 2000 for a small co-operative) for most of the certifications. The cost of certification is mainly borne by the farmers  Competition amongst the certification institutions which has led to market segregation and fragmentation  Rapidly changing standards due to climatic and social and economic factors both in producing and consuming countries  Different markets favor different certifications. This makes it very expensive and tedious to access different markets since you have to be audited for each certification

6  Who drives the certifications? Is it the producer or is it the consumer???? In most cases it is the consumer and standards set may not take recognition of producer context

7  Due to increased social and environmental awareness by consumers, certification schemes will continue to grow  Organic and Fairtrade products are gradually getting available in middle to High income retail chains in developing coutries  Climate change debate is driving need to reduce carbon footprint and water footprint… and the need for compliance.

8 Asanteni Sana


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