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A year’s effort by the Agricado Farms team in collaboration with COLEACP’s Fit For Market programme has resulted in the company’s achievement of GLOBALG.A.P. certification (Option 1 – Single Producer Certification). Confirmed following an audit in January 2021, this certification will have a major positive effect on the company’s ability to access international high-end markets. Agricado Farms Uganda Ltd is a new fresh fruit and vegetable company located in Kampala, Uganda. It targets the European and Middle Eastern markets for supplying hot peppers, green and red chillies, eggplants, okra, sweet potato, peanuts, avocado and macadamia nuts. To enhance capacity building for its staff and to achieve GLOBALG.A.P. certification, Agricado Farms submitted a request for support to the Fit For Market programme. A Memorandum of Understanding, including an individual action plan, was signed with COLEACP after a meeting at Fruit Logistica (Berlin) in February 2020. Although in March 2020 Covid-19 had a major impact on the horticultural sector in Uganda, with a lot of restrictions on local movement and even temporary closing of the airport in Kampala, Agricado Farms found solutions to reach the main goal of achieving GLOBALG.A.P. certification by the end of the year. Fit For Market support included group training on hazard analysis and critical control points (HACCP), offering the most important building blocks to develop a food safety management and traceability system according to international standards. As a second step, COLEACP organised technical assistance with a baseline assessment to identify corrective actions to be taken in terms of documentation, procedures, infrastructure and training to reach compliance with GLOBALG.A.P. Following this needs assessment, the company’s quality management team took part in training on how to introduce the GLOBALG.A.P. standard to its workers. On top of this training, tailor-made technical assistance was offered to close the remaining gaps to meet all GLOBALG.A.P. requirements. When all GLOBALG.A.P. requirements were in place, a final validation of the quality management system was organised in November 2020, to make sure that the certification audit would not reveal an unacceptable number non-conformities that would hinder GLOBALG.A.P. certification. COLEACP congratulates the Agricado Farms team on this achievement, especially in the demanding context of 2020. The Fit For Market programme is implemented by COLEACP within the Framework of Development Cooperation between the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) and the European Union.
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A diagnostic study on inspection and control procedures for the entry, sale and use of pesticides is currently under way in the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC). Implemented under COLEACP’s Fit for Market SPS programme, the study was initiated by a request from CEMAC’s Comité Inter-Etats des Pesticides de l'Afrique Centrale (CPAC), which coordinates the management of pesticides within CEMAC. The study will involve defining an action plan for the six CEMAC States, which should contribute to reducing the circulation of illegal pesticides and improving the SPS quality of their agricultural production. The first results are expected by the end of May 2021. Find all the news of our actions in Cameroon here.The Fit For Market SPS programme is implemented by COLEACP within the Framework of Development Cooperation between the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) and the European Union.
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The UK Government has provided these useful tools to help importers and exporters negotiate the steps for importing from, and re-exporting UK goods to the European Union: Flowchart diagram (pdf) Step-by-step process Rules of Origin presentation form: Defra_EU_Rules_of_Origin_Business_Guidance_Presentation.pdf (mcusercontent.com) Rules of Origin business guidance documents: Defra_EU_Rules_of_Origin_Business_Guidance.pdf (mcusercontent.com) Sector specific guidance focused on the most relevant Rules of Origin articles and with industry specific examples: EU_RoO_Sector_Guidance_All_Sectors.pdf (mcusercontent.com)
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In collaboration with the Dominican Agroenterprise Board (Junta Agroempresarial Dominicana, JAD), COLEACP is organising a series of webinars on market access for processed products in the pineapple, mango and avocado sectors. These are part of the CALIFRUP project “Quality enhancement for the development of MSMEs in the processed fruit value chain”, which aims to support the strategy of value chain development and, specifically, to strengthen the processed fruit value chain.The second webinar, on 17 February, focused on regulatory and private requirements, and the action plan that companies will need to implement before being able to export mango, pineapple and avocado to Europe. The webinars are supported through COLEACP’s Fit For Market programme.
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Research & Innovation activities at COLEACP aim to ensure that solutions are available to farmers to tackle priority pests and diseases Challenges following EU ban on PPPs Every year, the use of many plant protection products (PPPs) is affected by regulatory changes – that is, changes in approvals and Maximum Residue Limits (MRLs). This has a direct impact on producers who often must change production methods (good agricultural practices – GAP) to comply with the new rules. Any non-compliances can lead to the interception and destruction of goods, and thus cause significant financial loss as well as reputational damage.It is essential for producers to keep up-to-date and to make any necessary adjustments in time to ensure compliance with the regulations, either by adjusting the GAP, or using alternative control methods.However, this is not an easy task. Many recently banned PPPs in the EU have been widely used for many years as inexpensive and effective broad-spectrum compounds, and in many cases no comparable alternatives are currently available.With this in mind, Research & Innovation activities at COLEACP aim to ensure that solutions are available to farmers to tackle priority pests and diseases. Invitation to take part This work is a participatory and iterative process where all stakeholders (farmers, governments, NGOs, PPP manufacturers, etc.) are invited to contribute to identify the most relevant research and innovation activities. If you want to learn more, contact us at: network@coleacp.org COLEACP supports research into new alternatives COLEACP's Research & Innovation Service acts as a research broker, bringing together a diversity of resources to adapt and disseminate technologies and solutions that contribute to safe and sustainable food. One of our core activities addresses the need for effective and affordable crop protection in ACP horticulture. Climate change and regulatory reforms are contributing to serious challenges for growers, and there is a pressing need to develop new methods of pest management, as well as to facilitate access to the most appropriate and affordable technologies available.In the framework of the EU-funded Fit For Market SPS programme, our team of experts have drafted a list of key priorities (crop-pest combinations). Criteria for selection1 comprise a variety of factors, including regulatory changes, and also the efficacy of existing solutions, trade volumes (import/export), social impact, and farmers’ feedback based on a survey conducted within the COLEACP network.The next step is to identify existing crop protection products that have the potential to address these priorities, but which are not currently tested or registered in ACP countries. By bringing together farmers’ knowledge, the research, start-ups and PPP manufacturers, COLEACP experts seek to identify the most relevant solutions and fast-track their access to the market. This support may include technical backstopping, bioefficacy screening, establishment of GAPs, trials for registration and other support towards ACP registration, and the establishment of Codex MRLs.In practice, this support is reflected in field trials and targeted studies. Based on the prioritisation exercise conducted in 2019, COLEACP is implementing a trial programme to generate the necessary data and knowledge to fast-track registration of relevant technologies. Field trials to generate data and fast-track registration Table 1 summarises field trials conducted since the launch of Fit For Market SPS in 2019 and planned for the first half of 2021.Table 1 Field trials conducted since 2019 and planned for the first half of 2021
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The situation in the global papaya market is quite stable at the moment (Fresh Plaza, 12 February). But the lack of air cargo capacity due to the coronavirus pandemic has had a significant impact on the supply and price levels of papayas, which are significantly more expensive than in other years.
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Capping a year that was one of the three warmest on record, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) has released its fifth Adaptation Gap Report, finding that although many nations have advanced in adaptation planning, developing countries face a significant gap in adaptation finance (IISD, 25 January). The report places special focus on nature-based solutions that promote protection, sustainable management and restoration of ecosystems. It finds that nature-based solutions must receive significantly greater funding and attention, given the low-cost benefits they bring to climate change adaptation, society and biodiversity.
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COLEACP has been providing training in performance management, effective communication and lean management principles for the senior managers of AAA Growers, one of Kenya's leading exporters of premium and prepared vegetables and the country's largest commercial grower and exporter of chillies.
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During 2020, Kenyan SME Vert Limited received support from COLEACP’s Fit For Market programme to update its policies towards social compliance. Vert Limited is a Kenya-based, indigenous company specialising in growing and exporting fresh produce, targeted specifically at the European market. The company sells fine vegetables on the export market and has ventured into mango puree and dried mango. Social compliance has become an important sustainability parameter for consumers. Proof of social welfare in the form of certification has been finding its way upstream in international supply chains, and the horticultural industry is no exception. One commonly requested standard by European importing companies is the Sedex Members Ethical Trade Audit (SMETA), a social auditing methodology that enables businesses to assess their sites and suppliers in order to understand working conditions in their supply chain. For Vert Limited, benchmarking its social and human resources policy against the SMETA standard demonstrates the management’s commitment to a sustainable and inclusive business.
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COLEACP is working with the Tanzania Horticultural Association (TAHA), the Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology (NM-AIST), and the World Vegetable Center (WorldVeg) towards an accredited Horticulture Practical Training Programme in Tanzania. A recent working meeting was held for the partnership members and the team of COLEACP experts. During the early months of 2021 this COLEACP team will provide direct support for the mapping/needs assessment needed to define and establish the training programme, as part of the two Fit For Market programmes. The process will follow COLEACP's “Jobs-Skills-Training approach” under the lead of Professor Bruno Schiffers. COLEACP's Jobs-Skills-Training approach This approach first analyses the working situations in all the jobs/professions involved in horticultural production and processing. The intention is to ensure that training providers present a training offer that is directly relevant to the skills needs that are identified.In June 2020 in Arusha, the members of the partnership confirmed their collaborative effort to establish and run an accredited programme offering certificate and diploma courses. The programme aims to provide competent, market-ready horticultural practitioners across the value chain in Tanzania and other countries in Eastern and Southern Africa. The four partnership members are working together to run a market-driven skills development programme that will bridge the wide skills gap of agricultural (and specifically horticultural) graduates and practitioners in Tanzania, which has been a barrier to realising the untapped full potential of the horticulture industry for the country. TAHA, a member-based association of Tanzanian horticultural private sector actors, aims to drive an inclusive, transformative, competitive and sustainable horticulture industry in Tanzania through improving the business-enabling environment, and providing technical services including horticultural extension, and market development services. NM-AIST contributes to the development of a critical mass of high-level science, engineering, technology and innovation experts, techno-preneurs, industry captains and innovation managers in Science, Engineering, Technology and Innovation for Tanzania and sub-Saharan Africa. WorldVeg (formerly the Asian Vegetable Research and Development Center, AVRDC) is an international non-profit institute for vegetable research and development, which mobilises resources from the public and private sectors and works in partnership across the research-to-development continuum to realise the potential of vegetables for healthier lives and more resilient livelihoods.
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Ghana and the UK have finalised negotiations on a new Interim Ghana-UK Trade Partnership Agreement (Ghana-UK Joint Statement, 4 February). The agreement will enter into effect following the completion of relevant internal procedures required in both Ghana and the UK. But while trade negotiations have now been finalised, duty-free access has still not been restored for Ghanaian exports to the UK, and Ghanaian exporters continue to pay import tariffs on banana unloaded in the UK (EPA Monitoring, 9 February). Urgent action is required from the UK Government to add Ghana to the list of countries subject to the "bridging mechanism" applied to a range of other countries where trade negotiations have been completed, but agreements have not yet been signed.
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The second session of the Pan African Farmers Organization (PAFO)-COLEACP Innovation Series, held on 21 January, focused on ‘Grow local: Conquering local markets’.You can view the whole session in French and English.07:03 Jeremy KNOPS, General Delegate, COLEACP 17:41 Affiong WILLIAMS, Founder & CEO, Reelfruit, Nigeria 28:29 Catherine KROBO EDUSEI, Managing Director, Eden Tree Limited, Ghana 40:58 Komi AGBOKOU, President and Founder, Choco Togo 56:27 Bertille Guèdègbé MARCOS, Les Jus Tillou, Benin 01:09:29 Escipión OLIVEIRA GOMEZ, Assistant Secretary-General, Dept Sustainable Economic Transformation and Trade, Organization of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS) 01:25:11 Debisi ARABA, Managing Director, AGRF, Kenya 01:33:45 Dimitry VAN RAEMDONCK, Fund Manager, EDFI AgriFI 01:40:24 Question & answer session 02:12:41 Elizabeth NSIMADALA, President, Panafrican Farmers Organisation (PAFO) Session N°3 – African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA): Opportunities for SMEs and businesses in the agrifood sector – will be on 18 March (12h00-14h00 GMT).