Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Don’t uproot the positive parts of organic farming

The draft law for chemicalfr­ee foods has several flaws. If it is cleared, small farmers will be adversely affected

- CHANDRA BHUSHAN Chandra Bhushan is deputy director general, Centre for Science and Environmen­t, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) recently announced the Draft Food and Standards (Organic Food) Regulation­s, 2017, aimed at curbing sale of fake organic products. This regulation will require products sold in the market as “organic” to be certified by either the National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP) or the Participat­ory Guarantee Scheme (PGS).

The NPOP was designed for the export market and involves third-party companies, which verify organic status, while in PGS, a collective of farmers guarantee that everyone in the group is practicing organic farming. On the face of it, this looks like an excellent regulation, with a promise of protecting consumers’ rights. But our analysis shows that it cannot curb sales of fake organic products, and it might do more harm than good to the organic farming movement in India.

The demand for a regulation on organics itself is suspect, as it is led by the Crop Care Federation of India (CCFI), which represents pesticide companies. In December 2014, CCFI released a report, prepared by the Indian Agricultur­al Research Institute (IARI), on pesticides in organic vegetables from Delhi. Interestin­gly, IARI has not made this report public.

The institute tested 150 vegetable samples from one organic store in Delhi and found traces in 50; in 10 of these, the levels were above the maximum residue limit (MRL). The store identified a certified farm in Sonipat as the source of the vegetables. The farm was certified by one of the largest NPOP certifiers.

To begin with, sampling from one store from one city is scientific­ally untenable. Second, finding small traces of pesticides in organic vegetables is not surprising because pesticides are present in water and air, and will find their way into a produce even if the farmer is practicing organic farming. Third, the 10 samples in which levels exceeded the MRL were sourced from a certified farm – which means certificat­ion cannot be an answer to the problem.

Let us accept that fake organic products do exist. But the scale is difficult to ascertain till we have a pan-India study on it. Second, a fake organic product is not a safety concern; it is an issue of ‘misbrandin­g’ or ‘misleading advertisem­ent’. So the question is: Is certificat­ion required to tackle misbrandin­g? The FSSAI has a definition of and penalty for misbrandin­g of food and misleading advertisem­ents. The food safety act does not specify that to prevent misbrandin­g or misleading advertisem­ent, a product has to have a certificat­ion. Why, then, are organic products being singled out? To understand how this new regulation impact farmers, one must examine the certificat­ion itself. First, both NPOP and PGS are process-based certificat­ion systems. Their main concern is processes and practices of farming and food-processing, not testing food for pesticide residues. The former (NPOP) being more expensive than PGS, is preferred by big farmers, companies and exporters.

Under NPOP, only the produce of a NPOP-certified farm can be processed by a NPOP-certified processor and sold as ‘organic’. The NPOP processor cannot take fresh produce from a PGS farmer, process it and sell it as ‘organic’. Under PGS, only the food processed by the PGS group of farmers can be labelled as ‘organic’. The problem: PGS groups, run by small farmers, are not capable of processing organic produce. They sell their produce to other processors for value addition.

The draft regulation will make it difficult for small farmers to sell their produce for value addition. They will be forced to sell fresh produce directly to consumers or get NPOP certificat­ion. If a small farmer gets NPOP certificat­ion, it makes his product more expensive and so uncompetit­ive. If he sells only fresh produce, his value addition is low. So the draft regulation will dissuade small farmers from doing organic farming. The FSSAI’s regulation threatens to stem the Indian organic farming movement’s growth. Instead of making laws that require mandatory labelling of foods grown with pesticides, why is the FSSAI targeting the positive attribute of ‘organic’? If it is so anxious about fake products, it should set standards and penalise under its ‘misbrandin­g’ provision.

THE ORGANIC MOVEMENT IN INDIA IS WITNESSING AN UPSWING. INSTEAD OF TARGETING THE SECTOR, SHOULDN’T THE STATE GO FOR LABELLING OF FOODS GROWN WITH PESTICIDES OR GMOS?

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