Title: Pesticides and Sustainable Agriculture: An OECD Perspective
1Pesticides and Sustainable Agriculture An OECD
Perspective
Kevin Parris Trade and Agriculture Directorate,
OECD, Paris, France kevin.parris_at_oecd.org
www.oecd.org/tad/env/indicators
European Voice Conference, Brussels, Belgium 14
October 2008
2Policies, Pesticides and the Environment
State of Environment
Policies
Driving Forces
- Agricultural -- CAP Support for
crops - Agri-environmental -- Support for organic
farming - Environmental -- EU Water Framework
Directive
- Farm systems Conventional to Organic
- Farm practices Integrated Pest Management
- Farm input use Pesticides
- Soils Soil biodiversity
- Water Quality
- Air Ozone, methyl bromide
- Biodiversity Wild species in terrestrial and
aquatic ecosystems
This framework excludes some issues, e.g. human
health, container disposal
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3Volume of active ingredients, Index 1990-92100
Trends in EU15 Pesticide Use 1990 to 2006
4Recent Trends in EU15 Pesticides
- Declining use (volume) by 6.5 between 1990-92 to
2004-06 but growth in crop output mainly
explained by - Interaction of higher crop productivity and lower
crop subsidies - Adoption of improved pest management practices
- Expansion of organic farming, partly due to
support - Human health and environmental risks declining,
but - Information is limited with no EU wide indicator
- Widespread presence of pesticides in rivers,
lakes, aquifers - Continuing harmful impacts on wildlife
- Persistence of older (banned) pesticides (e.g.
DDT, atrazine), but 75 reduction in methyl
bromide use (ozone depleting substance) - Monetary costs of pesticide use remain high, e.g.
in UK about 150 million annually for water
companies (this excludes other human health
costs and harm to biodiversity)
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5Producer Support Estimates (PSE)
PSE as a share of Gross Farm Receipts (PSE
billion, average 2004-06, for Brazil China 2005)
Norway 2.4
EU25 113
OECD 225
USA 31
China 28
Australia 1.0
Brazil 3.4
6Medium Term Outlook (next 10 years)
- Higher international agricultural commodity
prices, including growth in biofuel production
and organic sector - Impact of climate change on crop production and
patterns - Improvements in crop husbandry, pest management
and related technologies, especially
biotechnologies - Increase in public pressure to improve
information on the health and environmental
impacts of using pesticides - Decline in overall EU and OECD agricultural
support and change in how support is provided to
farmers
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7International market price projections 2017
Nominal prices fall but stay above average levels
of the past
8Future Challenges
- Matching imbalance between benefits of pesticide
use and support for farming, with social and
environmental costs - Improving the uptake of Integrated Pest
Management - Developing technologies that reduce health and
environmental risks but that improve crop yields - Strengthening knowledge, science and monitoring
to underpin better decision making - Enhancing public understanding of health,
environmental, transgenic crops and pesticide
use linkages - Recognising pesticides are also used by other
sectors, e.g. in Belgium farming accounts for
65-70 of pesticides
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9Policy Actions
- Continue reforms of Common Agricultural Policy by
lowering overall level and composition of support
- Enhance coherence between EU farm and env.
policies so that carrots provided if farmers
comply with sticks - Ensure policy mix to balance pesticide cost and
benefits regulatory, economic (taxes),
information and voluntary - Support the collection and public dissemination
of science and monitoring data related to
pesticides - Undertake cost-benefit analysis of pesticide use
in agriculture and its health and environmental
impacts
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10Thank you for listening
Views expressed in this presentation are those of
the author and do not necessarily reflect those
of the OECD or its member countries
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