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« STEWARDSHIP AND RESPONSIBLE USE OF PESTICIDES » COCOA SPS CAPACITY BUILDING WORKSHOP

« STEWARDSHIP AND RESPONSIBLE USE OF PESTICIDES » COCOA SPS CAPACITY BUILDING WORKSHOP June 07-10 2011; Yaoundé, Cameroon. B. Yao, WCA Hub Coordinator. CONTENT. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES. CROP PROTECTION TECHNOLOGY, SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE & FOOD SECURITY.

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« STEWARDSHIP AND RESPONSIBLE USE OF PESTICIDES » COCOA SPS CAPACITY BUILDING WORKSHOP

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  1. « STEWARDSHIP AND RESPONSIBLE USE OF PESTICIDES » COCOA SPS CAPACITY BUILDING WORKSHOP June 07-10 2011; Yaoundé, Cameroon. B. Yao, WCA Hub Coordinator.

  2. CONTENT • PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES. • CROP PROTECTION TECHNOLOGY, SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE & FOOD SECURITY. • STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING THE BENEFITS, MINIMIZING THE RISKS OF PESTICIDES.

  3. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES A GLOBAL FEDERATION......

  4. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES ….LED BY 08 R/D MULTINATIONALS PPPs, SEEDS & BIOTECHNOLOGIES

  5. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES 11 R/D PPPs, SEMENCES & BIOTECHNOLOGIES.

  6. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES Hub North Africa Middle East Nat. Associations Hub West and Central Africa Hub East and South Africa Nat. Ass: 06/30 en AOC: Cameroun, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal.

  7. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES Vision: Coopérer pour une Agriculture Durable Respect Ouverture Engagement Technologie Durabilité Mission Values Étant un réseau mondial CropLife International agit comme l’ambassadeur pour l’industrie des sciences végétales, encouragant la compréhension et le dialogue pour promouvoir une technologie agriocle dans le contexte d’une Agriculture Durable et le Développement.

  8. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES • GLOBAL (SSA/WCA) FOOD SECURITY THREATENED BY: • GLOBAL POPULATION SET TO EXCEED 8 BILLION BY 2030. • INCREASING CALORIE DEMAND BY 50% . • ONLY 5-10% MORE LAND GLOBALLY COULD BE AVAILABLE TO BE BROUGHT INTO AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION. • PRACTICAL CLIMATE CHANGES AND WATER SHORTAGES.

  9. AGRICULTURE: AT THE HEART OF THESE CHALENGES! CROP PROTECTION: A VITAL PART OF THE SOLUTIONS! CROP PROTECTION TECHNOLOGIES, SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE & FOOD SECURITY GROWING FOOD - CREATING RENEWABLES - SUPPLYING SUSTAINABLY

  10. Stewardship & sustainability Technological innovation Integrated approach Responsible dialog Consumer focus CROP PROTECTION TECHNOLOGIES, SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE & FOOD SECURITY FROM MISSION TO ACTION: AN INDUSTRY TRANSFORMATION Unsustainable use Regulatory pressure Competing technologies Value chain indifference Defensive reaction

  11. PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY & GLOBAL CHALLENGES STRATEGIC PRIORITIES PPPs ExCo & GA IPRs & AntiCFT Biotechnology Nat. Associat. Dev. & Mgt Communicat. Brand & Iimage Building Regulations Harmonisation Stewardship Sust. Ag

  12. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS DEFINITION: THE RESPONSIBLE AND ETHICAL MANAGEMENT OF A PLANT PROTECTION OR BIOTECHNOLOGY PRODUCT THROUGHOUT ITS LIFECYCLE. Responsible Use • IPM/RU-SU • Cont. Mgt • ObStocks • Int. CoC • Resistance Mgt MANDATE: TO ENHANCE AND PROMOTE THE PLANT SCIENCE INDUSTRY’S CONTRIBUTION TO SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE THROUGH STEWARDSHIP.

  13. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS IPM/RU Lessons learnt: Impacts, Efficiency Measurement & Reporting Cont. Mgt Reputation & Partnerships 2020 ObStocks Influencers: Food Chain, NGOs Regulatory Environment CoC Current Issues: Food Security, Climate Change, Water & Environment

  14. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS IPM/RU

  15. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS IPM/Responsible Use Vision: Industry-led IPM/RU programmes are recognized as essential elements of Sustainable agriculture. Major stakeholders seek partnerships to disseminate and implement these programmes. Strategy: ▪ Adopt a harmonized set of guidelines. ▪ Build more local sustainable capacity. ▪ Increase funding and outreach through partnerships. ▪ Prioritize projects to increase impact and outcome. ▪ Agree KPIs and measurements.

  16. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS • BUILDING TRAINING CAPACITY: ToTs & CASCADE OR TECHNICAL TRAINING TARGETING DISTRIBUTION CHAIN, END USERS !! • IPM TRAINING MANUAL DEVELOPED AND ROLLED OUT • COMMON SET OF GUIDELINES, TRAINING MANUALS. • STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS DEVELOPED: IFDC, ATP… • COUNTRIES LEVEL COOPERATION AND FUNDING. • GLOBAL FUNDING OBTAINED: USAID. • INDUSTRY EXPERTISE ACKNOWLEDGED BY OUTSIDE STAKEHOLDERS.

  17. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Building Training Capacity

  18. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Building Training Capacity

  19. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Global Training Guidelines

  20. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Is the global federation representing the plant science industry

  21. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS IPM/Responsible Use

  22. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Application training in Togo

  23. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS STEWARDSHIP: CONTAINER MANAGEMENT

  24. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Container Management Vision: To have a safe and responsible management of empty cleaned pesticide containers worldwide with our industry recognized as a leader of this initiative. Strategy: ▪ Develop container management programs in Key countries. ▪ Provide guideance and support for CM programs. ▪ Establish information flow for all countries. ▪ Base all program components and end use decisions on solid technical science. ▪ Seek and implement cost reduction opportunities. ▪ Work with Govts/stakeholders to achieve these goals (e.g. mandatory regulation to involve all stakeholders).

  25. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS

  26. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS Obsolete Stocks Vision: To have a world free of the legacy of obstocks with effective measures to prevent recurrence. This will be achieved through multi-stakeholder efforts in which industry is recognized as a key partner. Strategy: ▪ Progressive destruction/safeguarding of stocks originating from CropLife member companies. ▪ Influencing national and international policy on obstocks prevention. ▪ Promote a common policy within the industry. ▪ Provide informed expert resource to participating companies. ▪ Enhance reputation through effective participation in multi-stakeholder activities.

  27. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS OBSOLETE STOCKS

  28. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS 10-15 years (50,000 tonnes) US $250 million Industry contribution: up to US $30 million Partners: Participant countries, FAO, WWF, PAN-UK, PAN-Africa, CropLife, NEPAD, African Union, Basel Convention, UN agencies.

  29. STEWARDSHIP: MAXIMIZING BENEFITS, MINIMIZING RISKS International Code of Conduct Vision: CropLife members know, follow and promote internally and externally the International CoC. The reputation of the industry is enhanced with stakeholders (Govt/value chain/NGOS/General public) as a result of adherence to the code and participation in its further development. Strategy: ▪ Use the e-learning modules to drive awareness in CropLife mc, associations and key stakeholders and demonstrate extent of awareness at all levels. ▪ Encourage FAO/WHO/UNEP and other “code owners” to champion and promote the code as the primary guiding principle for improved chemical management. ▪ Maintain and improve inputs into development including guidance documents.

  30. SHAPING THE FUTURE Vision 2020 recognises the increasing importance of sustainable agricultural practices, food security and food safety to stakeholders. The Stewardship Vision has thus been expanded: ‘To be recognised as a responsible industry promoting effective stewardship programmes, which are essential elements of sustainable agriculture, food security and food safety’

  31. THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION Bama O. YAO WCA Hub Coordinator CropLife Africa Middle East 28 BP 437 ABIDJAN 28 Côte d’Ivoire Tel.: +225 22 507 783 Fax: +225 22 507 782 E-mail: bama@croplifeafrica.org CropLife Africa Middle East: www.croplifeafrica.org CropLife International: www.croplife.org

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