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Sustainable Practices Program Development: Strategic Planning. North Coast 2008 Pear Research Meeting. Ukiah, CA February 11, 2009. Today’s Agenda. 2008 Project Background Sustainable Practice Programs Practice “Checklist” Availability
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Sustainable Practices Program Development: Strategic Planning North Coast 2008 Pear Research Meeting Ukiah, CA February 11, 2009
Today’s Agenda • 2008 Project Background • Sustainable Practice Programs • Practice “Checklist” Availability • Pursuing a Multi-Commodity Sustainable Practices Program • Summary & Next Steps – 2009 Project
Project Justification and Background We need a strategic plan to develop a sustainable practices program to address a rapidly evolving market and regulatory environment driven by environmental, social, and economic concerns. Three forces acting on the industry are: • Regulatory Compliance • Meeting existing & evolving regulatory requirements • Regulatory/Financial Incentives • Qualifying for public/private incentives targeted at improving or recognizing sustainable practices (e.g., NRCS EQIP, Insurance, etc.) • “Commercial” Compliance • Meeting market demands/opportunities
Business Process Leading to Practical Results 2007 Project 2008 Project Business process management approach to the integrated design, development and implementation of sustainable practices programs
Strategy Development What? • Industry leadership team formed • Research - 3 crop groups + 8 UC researchers • Strategic planning meeting Why? • Decision making formalized • Explore crop group cost sharing opportunities • Determine potential UC resources • Strategic plan lays out program “roadmap” Continue?
Summary of Practice Program Strategy • Scope = California growers only • California pear industry program goal will be to provide initial benchmarking and to continue to show leadership in specialty crop sector • Start with environmental practice areas using a combination of Yes/No and 4-Level Least-to-Most questions • Utilize existing “free” practice checklists • Explore working with other tree crop groups • Analyze historical production research from a sustainability perspective
Key Potential Program Benefits Industry • Public relations – proactive effort + part of “good story” • Identify grower education & outreach opportunities • Regulatory incentives via collaboration with agencies • Industry-level source for sustainably grown fruit Grower • Operational cost reductions – improved practices • Private incentives – insurance, lending • Regulatory relief via program participation • Favorable contracts for sustainably grown fruit
Sustainable Practice Programs/Frameworks • Various models to choose from • Different models require different levels of effort and resources to develop • Framework selection depends on short- and long-term goals – what is appropriate for the California pear industry?
Current Sustainable Practice Programs SYSCO Sustainable/IPM = Soil, Water, IPM, nutrients, recycling, HR (little bit of many things…)
Pear Specific Example: Food Alliance • Whole farm + crop specific practices • Levels of sustainability
Example: Positive Points for Citrus • Developed by UC Extension with citrus industry • Evaluation of usage of sustainable practices
UC Sustainable Ag Support Structure Agricultural Sustainability Institute UCD Researchers UC ANR - UCCE SAREP • Early organizational stage: prioritizing activities • Laundry list of “Sustainability Solutions” (topics to be addressed) • No immediate tools, but will come… Tom Tomich very interested in pear process
“Checklist” Summary * Economics = UC cost/return studies across many practice areas
Sustainable Practice “Checklist” Availability • UC Resources • IPM, water conservation, water quality, air quality, nutrient management • SYSCO Sustainable – can use as long as proper credit is given • Sustainable Winegrowing Program – no-fee licensing agreement to use their content • Very few others are immediately usable
Pear Industry Practice Program • Use available checklists – UC IPM, SYSCO, SWP • Focus on environmental practice areas and maybe several practices from other areas • Create simple checklists for initial industry benchmarking
Multi-Commodity Practice Program • Contacted cherry, dried plum, pistachio, walnut, and stone fruit association executives and most are interested in getting together to discuss a program • Great Valley Center grant from Columbia and Heller Foundations to explore potential • Can pear industry leverage this cross commodity funding opportunity? • What the process might look like…
Multi-Commodity Practice Program Concept Tree Crop Overlap Orchard Mgmt Pest Mgmt Ecosystem Mgmt Water Conservation Water Quality Harvest Air Quality Soil Quality Energy Efficiency Harvest Human Resources Neighbors/Community
Next Steps – Benchmarking & Analysis Business process management approach to the integrated design, development and implementation of sustainable practices programs
Select Practices from Existing Sources • Growers • Processor/Packer • UCCE Committee Review California Pear Industry Sustainable Practices
Industry Benchmarks in 2009 California Pear Industry Sustainable Practices Data Capture Survey Aggregate Results Generate Reports Individual growers All growers • Industry averages • Grower vs. industry average • Year-to-year comparison
Continue “Good Story” Background Work What? • Link historical research to Sustainability • Results/benefits conveyed in “sustainable-ese” • Incorporate into future research decisions How? • Compile historical research project info • Analyze each project against resources & “3 E’s” • Analyze final results for communication needs