Press Release
Organic Agriculture in Europe: Continued Growth
FiBL presents current facts & trends at Biofach 2005
(Frick, 22.2.2005) In Europe the area farmed organically is continuing
to expand. Growth of land and of the number of organic farms is
accompanied by better policy support, a growing market and increasing
research activities. The Research Institute of Organic Agriculture
(FiBL) will present current trends at the Biofach Congress 2005,
February 24.
According to FiBL and the Welsh Institute of Rural Sciences,
by December 31, 2003 more than 5.8 million hectares were managed
organically by some 151,000 farms in European Union (EU) and EFTA
countries. This constituted 3.4% of the total agricultural area.
FiBL expects the organic area to continue to grow over the next
years. This will happen particularly in the new EU member states,
where accession has triggered major growth. The European action
plan for organic food and farming as well as other policy support
measures can be expected to boost organic farming in all 25 European
countries in the future.
The new European Action Plan for Organic Farming is a milestone
for the organic sector in Europe. Matthias Stolze of FiBL criticises,
however, that the European Commission did not set clear targets
for the development of organic farming in the EU and did not allocate
financial resources for its implementation. Nonetheless, with the
action plan the Commission has underlined the importance of organic
farming as a component of EU agricultural policy.
European sales of organic products are estimated to have expanded
by about 5 percent in 2003 to reach approximately 10.5 to 11.0
billion Euro. Germany remains the biggest national market in Europe
(3.1 billion Euro organic sales in 2003). Toralf Richter of FiBL
notes that Switzerland can be considered the clear organic market
leader in Europe, or even the world, with an expenditure of more
than 100 Euro per capita and year for organic food.
Research into organic farming is another major driver for the future
development of the sector. In Europe organic farming research has
definitively stepped out of the niche; currently up to 80 million
Euro per year are spent for research into organic farming. Germany
is – thanks to its federal scheme for organic farming, the
BÖL - the heavyweight in organic farming research, spending
about seven million Euro on organic farming research annually,
topped up by another approximately twelve million Euro funded by
other federal or regional sources. Organic farming can answer many
ecological and ethical problems of modern societies as it can counter
problems of food quality, malnutrition, obesity and public health
costs, says FiBL director Urs Niggli. There is a continuing need
for research to explore these interactions.
Further information:
Contact
at FiBL: Urs Niggli,
Toralf Richter,
Matthias Stolze
and Helga Willer
Contact
during Biofach: Helga
Willer
Background
Information on Organic Farming in Europe (.pdf)
Programme
of FiBL presentations at BioFach 2005 (german)
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