Stewardship Dialogue 2011 Reaching Out. Global Crop Protection Stewardship Programmes Keith Jones, Director, Stewardship & Sustainable Agriculture

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1 Stewardship Dialogue 2011 Reaching Out Global Crop Protection Stewardship Programmes Keith Jones, Director, Stewardship & Sustainable Agriculture

2 All elements of the lifecycle are covered Responsible Use

3 but CropLife s emphasis is at the field level Responsible Use

4 Integrated Pest Management & Responsible Use

5 IPM Vision Industry-led IPM/Responsible Use programs (IPM/RU) are recognized as essential elements of sustainable agriculture. Major stakeholders actively seek partnerships with industry to disseminate and implement these programs.

6 Pesticide Use Context Policy/ Regulatory Framework Tools/ Equipment IPM/ Responsible & Effective Use User Practice (Training/Capacity Building)

7 Addressing the key elements in the Pesticide Use Context Regulatory/Policy domain Regulatory harmonization Appropriate products made available Access to illegal/counterfeit products prevented Container management systems in place Policies to promote IPM/ICM Policies to support farmers thru info, inputs, etc Markets encouraged through infrastructure, financial systems, information access

8 Addressing the key elements in the Pesticide Use Context Tools/Equipment domain Functioning input channels - products/tools available Safe and appropriate application equipment available Equipment and spare parts available Practical PPE available that is appropriate for conditions of use

9 Addressing the key elements in the Pesticide Use Context User practise building capacity Knowledge - newspapers, books, posters, leaflets, radio, television as well as formal teaching Skills - participatory training courses, farmer days, mentoring and supervised practice Positive attitudes - best tackled by longer term information and communication campaigns via multiple media and, as a result, is often omitted All needs long-term commitment and support from all Players in the food chain

10 Numbers Trained 72 Countries across the world (circa 58/yr) In partnership with over 250 groups governments, donors, farmer groups, international orgs, universities

11 Location of association supported IPM/RU training

12 A range of trainees

13 Number of trainees in each region

14 A range of trainees

15 Responsible Use training: Andhra Pradesh, India Train the Trainer approach 25 Master trainers and 25 Motivators 25,000 farmers trained in ,000 trained by 2015 Independent impact assessment

16 Farmer training groups (FTGs) 177 FTGs were identified Direct farmers in each FTG (Total 5077) Each Direct Farmer asked to train 4 Indirect Farmers (Total 19905) Training handouts developed to be used by Direct Farmers

17 Field demonstration carried out on Personnel protection equipment and Secure storage box In the training classes and fields usage of SSB was also demonstrated in the farmer s houses

18 Re-enforcement: Posters, Mass Meetings, Wall Writings

19 Re-enforcement: Door-to-Door Campaign, School Campaign, Cultural Events

20 Container Management

21 Container Management Vision To have a safe and responsible management of empty, properly rinsed pesticide containers worldwide, with our industry recognized as a leader for this initiative.

22 Packaging Mass (Global) (estimate as of 2004; confirmed in 2007) 37,000 tons 34,000 tons 76,000 tons 10,000 tons 33,000 tons Total: 190,000 tons (PMD; 2004)

23 Collection schemes 2011 Collection schemes starters Collection schemes > 3 years Collection schemes under consideration New in 2010 Africa Pilots: South Africa (2) Namibia Ethiopia Madagascar Mauritius Uganda Kenya Malawi Cameroun Nigeria Ghana Under consideration: Tanzania Zambia Asia/Pacific Pilots: China Sri Lanka Malaysia Philippines Indonesia Under review: Vietnam India Thailand Korea Japan

24 tons Packaging collected Global Collection Schemes: Packaging Material Recovered [to] Year Year Africa [to] Africa Can US/Australia [to] [to] [to] Africa [to] Can Africa Latin-America Can US/Australia [to] [to] Latin-America Can US/Australia [to] [to] [to] Latin-America Africa Can Europe US/Australia [to] Europe Can Latin-America US/Australia [to] [to] Europe Latin-America Latin-America Europe Europe Europe [to] [to] [to] [to] [to]

25 U$ [%] Packaging collected [%] (of total packaging mass over all countries; estimate: 190,000 to) 35% 30 30% 25 25% 20 20% 15 15% 10 10% 5 0 5% 0% Year

26 [%] Collection rates [%] (Regions) Africa [to] Can US/Australia [to] Latin-America [to] Europe [to] Year

27 U$/kg Cost per kg collected [US$/kg] (global) 1,60 1,40 1,20 1,00 0,80 0,60 0,40 0, Year

28 Management & Disposal of Obsolete Stocks

29 Obstocks Vision To have a world free of the legacy of obsolete stocks and with effective measures to prevent their reoccurrence. This will be achieved through multi-stakeholder efforts in which industry is recognized as a key partner.

30 Global Obsolete Stocks Management Programs in Developing Countries 5000 t. in last 20 years approx 20 projects Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia, Niger, Southern Africa, Mozambique, Uganda, Madagascar, Pakistan, Brazil.. Industry commitment to the Africa Stockpiles programmes Circa 10,000 tonnes removed from Developed countries

31 Location of obsolete pesticide stocks collection

32 Disposal projects pre-asp Mauritania 1998, 2000, 2002, 2004 Pakistan 2000 & 2001 Cape Verde, 2004 Senegal 1999, 2004 Gambia 2000 Ethiopia, 2005, 2006 Niger 1993 Uganda 2000 Brazil 2000 Madagascar 1993 & 2000 Uruguay 2006 South Africa 2000 Mozambique 1994, 2002,

33 African Stockpiles Programme Removal and destruction ongoing in Ethiopia (800 tonnes) and South Africa (100 tonnes) FAO has destroyed 400 tonnes from Mozambique, agreement on CropLife contribution underway World Bank proceeding with removal from Tunisia (circa 1200 tonnes) Inventories complete in Mali, Nigeria, Tanzania Safeguarding countries: Inventories completed in Kenya (160 tonnes), Ghana (170 tonnes) and Malawi (380 tonnes). Cameroon inventory 30% complete

34 Prevention of Obsolete Stocks Stock management IPM Locust pesticide procurement policy Prevention is better than cure!

35 Implementation of the International Code of Conduct

36 International Code of Conduct CropLife International s member companies and associations are committed to promoting the CoC Have developed training tools to promote understanding of the code across its network: o o Elearning available in several languages Tracking uptake Provides expert input into development of guidelines that support the CoC Stewardship Stocktaking Report summarises activities and impact

37 Global Training Guidelines

38 Global Training Guidelines

39

40 Local Guidelines/Material

41 Thank you