Updates

New report: Sustainability standards expand, though pace slows

12 August 2022
ITC News

Consumer preferences for healthier and more sustainably grown foods underpin the continued popularity of certified commodities.

More farm and forestry land than ever is used to grow sustainable commodities, though the pace of expansion is slowing, a new International Trade Centre (ITC) publication finds. The growing popularity of certified goods helps ensure the production and trade of more agricultural commodities that promote environmental quality, social equity and economic prosperity.

The State of Sustainable Markets 2021 is the sixth edition of ITC’s annual report on the status of sustainable markets, covering 14 major standards for eight agricultural sectors and forestry. For the first time, the report was  presented first as an e-publication before being produced as a book.

‘Consumer choices to support small farmers and values-based, sustainable trade are transforming lives,’ said ITC Executive Director Pamela Coke-Hamilton.

These standards can help tackle challenges ranging from labour issues and loss of biodiversity in the banana and sugarcane markets to deforestation, soil erosion and the use of agro-chemicals in the tea sector. The more than 400 such standards across the globe represent an opportunity along international supply chains to meet resource shortfalls.

Sustainability standards are expanding as more consumers choose more nutritious, ethically grown products. Organic was the biggest sustainability standard in terms of area and product variety, covering 72.1 million hectares or 1.5% of farmland worldwide.

Certified area for agricultural commodities expanded by at least a third in 2015–2019. Certified sugar grew the most – almost 124% – while cotton doubled. The certified cocoa area expanded by 53.2% and tea grew by 30.2%.

Certified coffee and cocoa both lost ground in 2018–2019, with the area used to cultivate sustainable coffee shrinking by 18.5% and cocoa by 12.7%. The share of cultivated land for certified soybeans declined 6%.

 

Some single-sector standards predominate

Standards that certify just one commodity, such as Bonsucro, the Better Cotton Initiative and the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, dominate in some sectors, the report finds.

Cotton still covers the most certified land area – with more than 6.5 million hectares (16.8% of the global cotton area) – and 12.6% of that certified by the Better Cotton Initiative. Oil palm overtook cocoa as the second-biggest sustainable crop, with 3.1 million hectares certified, or 10.9% of the global oil palm area. The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil certifies almost all of this (10.8%).

Some 2.8 million hectares, or 22.7% of the global cocoa area, are certified, mainly by UTZ (20.8%). Sugarcane has moved into fourth place, edging ahead of coffee. More than 2.5 million hectares, or 9.5%, of the global sugarcane area is certified, with 5.8% by Bonsucro.

Supply often outpaces demand, so some standard-compliant products are not labeled or sold as such. Europe and North America drive demand and the pace of growth in other regions is not keeping up.

ITC published the report jointly with the Research Institute of Organic Agriculture and the International Institute for Sustainable Development. The report is funded by the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs. Voluntary standards are usually third party-assessed norms and requirements linked to environmental, social, ethical and food safety issues.