Download - 2 Day 2 EHarvey Certification
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Certification in the
Cocoa Value Chain
Ena Harvey
Management Coordinator- Caribbean &
Agribusiness (Agrotourism) Specialist
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Trends and Pressures
Environmental Standards
Ethical Trade Child slavery in cocoa
Consumer pressures
Food Safety concerns Climate Change impacts
Energy
Carbon footprint
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3 main certifications for cocoa
Rainforest Alliance
UTZ Certified
FairTrade
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Other Certifications Environmental
Standards
and Ethical Trade
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Specialty Food Trends
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Sustainable Supply Chains
UTZ CERTIFIED is a worldwide certification
program that sets standards for responsible
production and sourcing of agriculturalcommodities.
UTZ, which means "good" in a Maya language
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UTZ Certified Code of Conduct
for Cocoa
An internationally recognizedset of
criteria for economic, socialand environmental responsibleproduction.
Based on the international ILOConventions and includes theprinciples of good agriculturalpractices.
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Fairtrade Certification
Meet agreed environmental, labour anddevelopmental standards.
Overseen by a standard-setting body, FairtradeInternational (FLO), and a certification body, FLO-CERT
System involves independent auditing ofproducers to ensure the agreed standards aremet.
Certification system covers a growing range ofproducts, including bananas, honey, oranges,cocoa, coffee, spices, sugar, tea
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Benefits to Cocoa Farmers
Fair Trade helps cocoa farmers, traders and chocolatemanufacturers participate in long-term, stable
relationships that support dependable incomes for
farmers and their families, which in turn allows them to
provide reliable, high-quality cocoa supplies for theindustry.
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Fair Trade provides economic, social, and environmental
sustainability: the protection of a floor price, so that
producers never have to sell their crop below the cost
of sustainable production.
The Fair Trade allows producer groups to invest in the
future of their farms and communities; Fair Trade
standards are a framework for farmers to increase their
environmental sustainability
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Belize - Toledo Cacao
Growers
The world's first Fairtrade and organic
certified cacao producers
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Fairtrade CocoaDom. Rep
Conacado is a well-established Fairtrade co-operative with 9,500 members. Cocoaaccounts for 90% of the members cash
income, so earning the Fairtrade premiummakes a significant difference to thefarmers lives.
Sales to the Fairtrade market have enabledConacado to set up a nursery that supplieslow cost plants to farmers so they can growmost of their own food. Conacado alsoprovides its members with other assistance
such financial support with interest freeloans and access to credit, investing in arural health care clinic, providing freemedical assistance and supporting theconstruction of a new school.
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Grenada - Organic Certified Cocoa
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GLOBAL G.A.P.
GLOBALGAP is an internationally recognized set of farmstandards dedicated to Good Agricultural Practices(GAP).
Through certification, producers demonstrate theiradherence to GLOBALGAP standards. For consumersand retailers, the GLOBALGAP certificate is reassurancethat food reaches accepted levels of safety and quality,and has been produced sustainably, respecting the
health, safety and welfare of workers, theenvironment, and in consideration of animal welfareissues.
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GLOBALGAP (formerly known as EUREPGAP) has established itself as a key reference for GoodAgricultural Practices (GAP) in the global market place, by translating consumer requirements intoagricultural production in a rapidly growing list of countriescurrently more than 80 on everycontinent.
GLOBALGAP is a private sector body that sets voluntary standards for the certification ofagricultural products around the globe. The aim is to establish ONE standard for Good AgriculturalPractice (G.A.P.) with different product applications capable of fitting to the whole of globalagriculture.
GLOBALGAP is a pre-farm-gate standard, which means that the certificate covers the process of thecertified product from farm inputs like feed or seedlings and all the farming activities until theproduct leaves the farm. GLOBALGAP is a business-to-business label and is therefore not directlyvisible to consumers.
GLOBALGAP certification is carried out by more than 100 independent and accredited certificationbodies in more than 80 countries. It is open to all producers worldwide.
GLOBALGAP includes annual inspections of the producers and additional unannounced inspections.
GLOBALGAP consists of a set of normative documents. These documents cover the GLOBALGAP
General Regulations, the GLOBALGAP Control Points and Compliance Criteria and the GLOBALGAPChecklist.
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Beyond HACCP
These standards, which are either approved orrecognized by the GFSI and therefore acknowledgedinternationally, include:
BRC Global Standard Food Safety (British RetailConsortium)
FSSC 22000 (Food Safety System Certification)
Global GAP (Good Agricultural Practice)
HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points) IFS Food (International Featured Standard)
SQF (Safe Quality Food)
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Establishes science-based standards for the safe productionand harvesting of fruits and vegetables to minimize the riskof serious illnesses or death, and will set standards for thesafe transportation of food.
FDA will for the first time have a congressional mandate forrisk-based inspection of food processing facilities
Requirement that importers verify the safety of food fromtheir suppliers and the authority for the FDA to block foodsfrom facilities or countries that refuse our inspection. FDAwill also be working more closely with foreign governmentsand increasing its inspection of foreign food facilities
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