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CERES Policy
No |
Issue |
Text |
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1 |
Aims |
Avoid environmental damage for obtaining or managing organic farmland. |
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2 |
Background |
Logging and burning woodland is common practice in many countries, to obtain new farmland, or to destroy fallow vegetation. Besides, burning is used for weed control on field margins, to promote grass re-sprouting on natural grassland, and for destruction of crop residues.
These habits may be time-efficient and help to release in a short-term considerable amounts of plant nutrients, but they involve serious environmental damage, like species extinction, global warming, and loss of soils. Destruction of primary forests is the most outstanding environmental problem all over the tropics. Besides timber exploitation, slash and burn aims basically at obtaining farm and pasture land. Also in temperate countries like China, logging for obtainment of new farmland contributes to reduce even more the shrinking forest areas.
Consumers, who pay higher prices for organic food, tend to have a high level of environmental consciousness, and expect organic food to be produced without such damaging practices. |
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3 |
Normative framework |
EU-Regulation, JAS:
Regulation (EEC) 2092/91 and JAS do not address this problem.
NOP:
§ 205.2 (Definitions) Organic production: A production system that is managed in accordance with the Act and regulations in this part to respond to site-specific conditions by … practices that foster cycling of resources, promote ecological balance, and conserve biodiversity.
§ 205.200: Practices implemented in accordance with this subpart must maintain or improve the natural resources of the operation…
§ 205.203: (e) The producer must not use: (3) Burning as a means of disposal for crop residues produced on the operation: Except, that, prunings from perennial crops may be burned to suppress the spread of disease. |
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4 |
Terms, clarifications, abbreviations |
Sustainable: A system is sustainable, when it can be maintained in the same form for a very long time. In the case of forestry, this means, e.g., that soil fertility must be preserved or improved, and that the amount of extracted timber must not exceed the biomass, which grows up in the same period. |
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5 |
Policy |
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5.1 |
Shifting cultivation |
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5.2 |
Logging and burning of ecologically valuable forests |
• Burning and logging of forests with a high ecological value by organic farmers is not allowed, be it to obtain farm or grassland, or for other purposes.
• After logging and/or burning such forest areas, the land has to undergo a three years conversion period, until organic certification can be achieved.
• Farmers, who have destroyed such forests, have to reforest a similar area, using native tree species. They have to take care of reforested plots during at least five years. Loss of high numbers of trees due to a lack of care during this period, may lead to suspension of certification or other sanctions.
• Exceptions can be made in cases, where a combination of the following factors is given:
o Logging is highly selective, leaving a very considerable number and diversity of trees, e.g. as shade trees for low-input coffee, cocoa, cardamom, or similar plantations;
o Smallholders are extremely scarce of land;
o Selective extraction of trees is part of a long-term and wide ecological management plan, which must include considerable areas, that remain untouched, or are reforested; commitment to such a plan must be in a long term and sanctioned by internal or external authorities; specialists in forestry or ecology must cooperate in working out and supervising the implementation of these plans.
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5.3 |
Logging and burning of forests of lower ecological value |
• Secondary or fallow vegetation of lower ecological value can be cut to obtain farmland in areas, where sufficient other forest or similar resources exist, provided that local authorities permit this practice.
• In case of burning of such vegetation, the respective plot has to undergo at least one year of (additional) transition. Exceptions can be made, where smallholders have definitely no technical alternatives to burning, like chainsaws and/or tractor ploughing. |
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5.4 |
Burning of field margins and crop residues |
• Field margins, weeds and crop residues must not be burned for other reasons than avoiding the spread of plant diseases and pests. Time efficiency in weed control is not sufficient as an argument for burning. |
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6 |
Related documents |
None. |
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