European Union Farm to Fork Strategy Aiming to Change Agriculture – If you are a fan of Sci-Fi then you know The BORG from Star Trek. If you are unfamiliar, Wikipedia identifies them as a collective alien civilization who are interconnected, and their goal is to ASSIMILATE to achieve “Ultimate perfection†and they are a signature villain in the Star Trek saga. Why am I thinking about the BORG? After learning more about the EU Farm to Fork strategy (F2F) I am thinking that the EU is the BORG and they are after ultimate perfection by way of making the world assimilate.
The EU representatives will deny this as they say, “You can choose to deal with us or not.†So, if the market is in the EU then possibly your future options are limited. The F2F strategy was released in early 2020 during a pandemic as a key part of the European Green Deal which aims to make the EU climate neutral by 2050. It is bold and ambitious. According to EU representatives, it is something that they are already working on and will be fine tuning it to hit the targets. What are the targets? By 2030 the EU is aiming to achieve the following through F2F:
- Reduction by 50% the overall use and risk of chemical pesticides and reduce use by 50% of more hazardous pesticides
- Reduce nutrient losses by at least 50% while ensuring no deterioration in soil fertility this will reduce use of fertilizers by at least 20%
- Reduce sales of antimicrobials for farmed animals and in aquaculture by 50% and
- Achieve at least 25% of EU’s agriculture land be organically farmed.
These are not new targets for the EU but what is new is the speed of change as was amplified by a comment from an EU presenter, “2030 is only 9 growing seasons out.†Working in parallel with these targets is achievement of reduction of consumer wastes, food security and working with international counterparts to adopt EU practices and goals. Where does that put Canada?
Clearly the EU is an important market for Canadian goods. Canadian representatives from various federal government departments are watching and learning more about the F2F. The webinar I attended was hosted by Market Industry Services Branch and had 3 EU representatives explaining the goals of the program and the changes that they anticipate seeing in their representative countries but also the changes that they see globally. The message is, “if you want to do business with us then you will be more successful if you follow our lead.â€
Sustainability goals are being worked on in Canada and many farmers are already ahead of the curve. The Canadian ag sector needs to be aware of the F2F and we need to watch to see how it affects our trade and how it can trigger other things like investigations in to crop protection chemistries if the EU puts bans on products. It was an interesting webinar and one where my limited SCI-FI knowledge could not stop thinking, “You will Assimilate.†APG Office report March 26, 2021
Cheers
The EU representatives will deny this as they say, “You can choose to deal with us or not.†So, if the market is in the EU then possibly your future options are limited. The F2F strategy was released in early 2020 during a pandemic as a key part of the European Green Deal which aims to make the EU climate neutral by 2050. It is bold and ambitious. According to EU representatives, it is something that they are already working on and will be fine tuning it to hit the targets. What are the targets? By 2030 the EU is aiming to achieve the following through F2F:
- Reduction by 50% the overall use and risk of chemical pesticides and reduce use by 50% of more hazardous pesticides
- Reduce nutrient losses by at least 50% while ensuring no deterioration in soil fertility this will reduce use of fertilizers by at least 20%
- Reduce sales of antimicrobials for farmed animals and in aquaculture by 50% and
- Achieve at least 25% of EU’s agriculture land be organically farmed.
These are not new targets for the EU but what is new is the speed of change as was amplified by a comment from an EU presenter, “2030 is only 9 growing seasons out.†Working in parallel with these targets is achievement of reduction of consumer wastes, food security and working with international counterparts to adopt EU practices and goals. Where does that put Canada?
Clearly the EU is an important market for Canadian goods. Canadian representatives from various federal government departments are watching and learning more about the F2F. The webinar I attended was hosted by Market Industry Services Branch and had 3 EU representatives explaining the goals of the program and the changes that they anticipate seeing in their representative countries but also the changes that they see globally. The message is, “if you want to do business with us then you will be more successful if you follow our lead.â€
Sustainability goals are being worked on in Canada and many farmers are already ahead of the curve. The Canadian ag sector needs to be aware of the F2F and we need to watch to see how it affects our trade and how it can trigger other things like investigations in to crop protection chemistries if the EU puts bans on products. It was an interesting webinar and one where my limited SCI-FI knowledge could not stop thinking, “You will Assimilate.†APG Office report March 26, 2021
Cheers
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