Down to Earth

Inorganic move

The government's latest move to regulate the domestic organic market may push small players out of business, and favour big brands

- MEENAKSHIS­USHMA

A new government regulation may put small players in organic farming out of business

FOR 20 years, R Selvam has been painstacki­ngly growing paddy, groundnut, coconut and sesame seeds organicall­y in his 2.8-hectare farmland in Tamil Nadu’s Arachalur village. But July 1 onwards, Selvam can no longer sell the produce to organic retail stores due to a new regulation that bans the retail sale of food labelled as organic unless it has been certified by the government. The regulation, he says, will reduce his farm income by over 70 per cent, which is worth `25 lakh a year. “I sell only 30 per cent of the produce directly to customers, which the regulation says can be done without a certificat­ion,” says Selvam. He fears that if the government does not come up with a cheap certificat­ion process for individual­s, farmers like him might “disappear” altogether.

As per the new regulation by the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (fssai), farmers can obtain certificat­ion through two processes, both of which, Selvam says, are difficult and time-consuming. The first option is to get a certificat­e, valid for one year, from one of the 28 thirdparty certificat­ion agencies accredited by the Agricultur­al and Processed Food Products Export Developmen­t Authority (apeda) under the National Programme for Organic Production

(npop). This process can cost a farmer anywhere between `15,000 to `50,000 per year and an existing organic farm-

er like Selvam will have to wait for one whole year to get the certificat­e (see ‘Certified problem’). The other option is the Participat­ory Guarantee SystemIndi­a (pgs), under which a group of farmers come together and vouch for each others’ produce. While pgs certificat­ion can be obtained for free, getting the certificat­e takes three long years, even if the farmer is already practising organic.

Before the new regulation kicked in, only farmers and food processors exporting their products needed mandatory certificat­ion and domestic players could operate without a certificat­ion. “The certificat­ion is a mark for the genuine farmers, processors and manufactur­ers, as currently, anyone can claim they are organic,” says Pawan Kumar Agarwal, ceo, fssai.

Drafted to hit small players?

While there is no doubt that the regulation is desirable, most industry players say it may slow down the country’s organic movement.

“The regulation needs to be revised to make it more realistic,” says Narayana Upadhaya, director, Aditi Organic Certificat­ion Pvt Ltd, one of the 28 npop-accredited private agencies responsibl­e for verificati­on of the organic farmers, processors, manufactur­ers and traders, and issuing them certificat­es. “The certificat­ion requires farmers to use organic seeds, but we know they are not easily available in the market,” he says. An analysis by Down To Earth shows that most organic farmers soak the convention­al seeds in beejamruta­m, a mixture of cow urine, cow dung and neem oil, for two-three days and then follow the organic farming methods. The procedure is also recognised by the guidelines of the Centre’s ambitious Paramparag­at Krishi Vikas Yojana

(pkvy), launched in 2015 to promote organic farming (see ‘Seedless future’,

Down To Earth, 1-15 March, 2018).

The regulation comes at a time when pkvy is yet to gain a foothold in most states. In Punjab and Haryana, which along with Uttar Pradesh is referred to as the food bowl of India, just 131 and 488 farmers have been covered under the scheme; Uttar Pradesh has 38,781 farmers under the scheme. The scheme so far has issued 95,688 certificat­es to farmers, of which 18 per cent have not opted for renewal.

Worse, the regulation will now push tens of thousands of organic farmers out of business. Joy Daniel, executive director, Institute of Integrated Rural Developmen­t, a non-profit in Maharashtr­a, says, “In the northeaste­rn states, excluding Assam, 10 million hectares are organic by default as farmers do not have access to chemical fertiliser­s. They will no longer be able to sell their produce as organic. The same is true for farmers in most remote tribal regions.”

Then there are those growing and processing organic crops with the help of certificat­es issued by nonprofits. For instance, the Participat­ory Guarantee Systems-Organic Council

(pgsoc), a network of 21 civil society organisati­ons, has so far issued certificat­es to over 10,000 farmers in 14 states. All these farmers will have go through expensive and time-consuming processes to obtain organic certificat­ion from npop or pgsIndia. Deccan Developmen­t Society, a member of pgsoc, wrote a letter to the Prime Minister on June 30 against the notificati­on and urged that nonprofits already working with organic farmers be allowed to issue certificat­es. “We have urged the Prime Minister to ensure that the power to give certificat­ion should not be given to one single government body,” says P V Sateesh, founder, Deccan Developmen­t Society.

Time to shift focus

“We need an accountabl­e mechanism where any farmer desirous to shift to organic farming can do it without joining a collective or enrolling under a government scheme,” says Kavitha Kuruganti, member of the Alliance for Sustainabl­e and Holistic Agricultur­e. The certificat­ion should be free of cost, time-bound and simple. This is missing right now. The current regulation, she fears, would keep only big organic brands in the business.

Devinder Sharma, a food and trade policy analyst, goes a step further when he says that fssai should introduce certificat­ion for non-organic farmers, who are responsibl­e for environmen­tal pollution and a myriad of illnesses.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India