IP/07/807
Brussels, 12 June 2007
Organic Food: New Regulation to foster the
further development of Europe's organic food sector
European Union agriculture ministers today reached
political agreement on a new regulation on organic production and labelling,
which will be simpler for both farmers and consumers. The new rules set out a
complete set of objectives, principles and basic rules for organic production,
and include a new permanent import regime and a more consistent control regime.
The use of the EU organic logo will be mandatory, but it can be accompanied by
national or private logos. The place where the products were farmed has to be
indicated to inform consumers. Food will only be able to carry an organic logo
if at least 95 percent of the ingredients are organic. But non-organic products
will be entitled to indicate organic ingredients on the ingredients list only.
The use of genetically modified organisms will remain prohibited. It will now be
made explicit that the general limit of 0.9 percent for the accidental presence
of authorised GMOs will also apply to organic products . There will be no
changes in the list of authorised substances for organic farming. The new rules
also create the basis for adding rules on organic aquaculture, wine, seaweed and
yeasts. In the second part of this revision exercise, and building on this new
regulation, the existing strict detailed rules will be transferred from the old
to the new Regulation.
Mariann Fischer Boel, Commissioner for Agriculture and Rural Development,
said: “This is an excellent agreement which will help consumers to
recognize organic products throughout the EU more easily and give them
assurances of precisely what they are buying. Organic food is a successful and
growing market and I hope that this new set of rules will provide the framework
to allow this growth to continue – through a combination of market demand
and the entrepreneurship of European farmers."
The new regulation will:
- lay down more explicitly the objectives, principles and production rules for
organic farming while providing flexibility to account for local conditions and
stages of development,
- assure that the objectives and principles apply equally to all stages of
organic livestock, aquaculture, plant and feed production as well as the
production of organic foods,
- clarify the GMO rules, notably that GMO products continue to be strictly
banned for use in organic production and that the general threshold of 0.9
percent accidental presence of approved GMOs applies also to organic food,
,
- close the loophole under which the unintended presence of GMOs above the 0.9
percent threshold does not currently preclude the sale of products as
organic,
- render compulsory the EU logo for domestic organic products, but allow it to
be accompanied by national or private logos in order to promote the
“common concept” of organic production,
- not prohibit stricter private standards,
- ensure that only foods containing at least 95 percent organic ingredients
can be labelled as organic,
- allow non-organic products to indicate organic ingredients on the
ingredients list only,
- not include the restaurant and canteen sector, but allow Member States to
regulate this sector if they wish, pending a review at EU level in 2011,
- reinforce the risk-based control approach and improve the control system by
aligning itto the official EU food and feed control system applying to all foods
and feeds, but maintaining specific controls used in organic production,
- set out a new, permanent import regime, allowing third countries to export
to the EU market under the same or equivalent conditions as EU producers,
- require the indication of where the products were farmed, including for
imported products carrying the EU-logo,
- create the basis for adding rules on organic aquaculture, wine, seaweed and
yeasts,
- make no changes to the list of permitted substances in organic production,
and require publication of demands for authorisation of new substances and a
centralised system for deciding on exceptions,
- be the basis for the detailed rules to be transferred from the old to the
new Regulation, containing among others the lists of substances, control rules
and other detailed rules.
In 2005, in the European Union of 25
Member States, around 6 million hectares were either farmed organically or were
being converted to organic production. This marks an increase of more than 2 per
cent compared with 2004. Over the same period, the number of organic operators
grew by more than 6 percent.