Posted on : June 20, 2008
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The rise of developing nations such as China, Brazil, Ethiopia, India and Thailand
as organic supply sources has been a welcome addition to an organic
industry struggling to meet booming demand in North America, Europe and
Japan. But unless domestic organic markets are fostered in these
developing nations, organic output may go unsold and eventually grind
to a halt if the current Western boom cools off as many experts
predict.
"Demand is booming in First World countries but production is
not--in fact in parts of North America and Europe organic farmland has
actually decreased," the director of UK-based consultancy Organic
Monitor, Amarjit Sahota, told FF&N. "At the same time, production
is booming in Third World countries for the export market with Latin
America, Africa and Asia having established supply sources in many
products and ingredients. What we are seeing is a disparity between
production and demand. The consequences of that are risky for both
suppliers and Western markets."
G7 countries account for more than 80 per cent of total organic
sales but possess only 12 per cent of the globe's international organic
farmland. "Producers in developing countries are advised to develop
internal markets for organic products to spread business risk," Organic
Monitor said in a report. Developments were occurring in Singapore,
Malaysia and Taiwan, which have recorded 30-40 per cent annual sales
growth, albeit from a very small base.
Sahota warned of the potentially disastrous effect implementation of
protectionist policies by Western nations could have on new
suppliers--further motivation to develop local organic demand.
"Protectionist policies are one of the big dangers that could leave
developing world suppliers without markets," he said. "They then might
have to sell product as non-organic without premiums and risk losing a
lot of money."
Economic realities mean that as things stand there is little
incentive to develop domestic markets. "Producers could do more to
develop domestic markets but they don't really want to. They can earn
200-300 per cent premiums selling into the West as opposed to 20-30 per
cent in their home market. That is why 90 per cent of production is
being exported. Producers are converting not because they believe in
organic practices but because they are looking at export and generating
hard currency."
At 3.5 million hectares and more than 10 per cent of the world's
organic production, China has more land devoted to organic production
than any other country except Australia, according to the International
Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM).
It is the classic example of the growth of a developing-world
organic supplier, despite the existence of nascent end-product organic
markets in increasingly wealthy cities like Shanghai and Beijing.
"China has increased production--mainly primary ingredients like seeds
and grains--almost entirely for the export market," Sahota said. "At
the moment, it is just not cost-effective to produce finished goods and
export them to places like Europe. It is easier to fill up bulk
containers and sell them in bulk and get them packaged abroad."
Organic products such as biscuits and beverages being sold in major
urban centres are being imported back into the country--mostly from
Europe, and often incorporating organic ingredients of Chinese origin.
Sahota noted examples of domestic activity, such as a network in
Brazil where organic farmers sell organic produce direct to consumers
at knock-down prices. "It's working really well. It started off in one
state and then it spread to a number of states across southern Brazil.
It would be good to see more of that. But it may be a cooling off in
demand from the West that will precipitate the rise of domestic organic
markets in some of these developing countries."
The situation in many Western markets has been exacerbated by an
excess in organic supply that occurred in Europe and other regions at
the beginning of the new century. "A lot of farmers converted to
organic but couldn't find a market and then they had no choice but to
convert back to conventional farming," Sahota said. "Because of that
there is some reluctance for farmers to convert to organic, but that is
changing because demand is so strong."