First ever international labeling agreement for organic industry
The
A so-called "equivalency agreement" was signed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency at the Organic Trade Association annual conference in
The agreement means that products certified as meeting USDA standards need not go through double-certifying for export into
American exporters of organic products --- ranging from foods and beverages of every description to textiles and paper products for home supplies --- will ship goods without the need for double-approval into a growing Canadian market currently worth about $2 billion, Matthew Holmes, Canadian head of the Organic Trade Association, said. Canadians sell into an older
USDA deputy secretary Kathleen Merrigan said in a speech to the OTA conference that the agreement is "the first step toward global harmonization of organic standards." Christine Bushway, executive director of OTA in the
(Source: Journal of Commerce)