Title: Coping With Market Regulations And More
1Coping With Market Regulations And More!
- Tom Stenzel, President and CEO
- United Fresh Produce Association
- Washington, DC USA
2Todays Agenda
- About United Fresh Produce Association
- Snapshot of U.S. import/export picture
- Southern Hemisphere impact
- Market access issues
- Food safety issues
- Microbiological food safety
- Future issues?
3About United Fresh Produce
- 100-year heritage from United Fresh Fruit and
Vegetable Association - Merger with International Fresh-Cut Produce
Association in 2006 - Based in Washington, DC
- North American market focus in regulatory,
government affairs - Global outreach in food safety and quality,
education and marketing
4Member Participation
- Membership from total supply chain
- Grower, packer, shipper, marketer, retailer
- Over 100 commodity, regional associations
- 40-member Board of Directors
- International membership growing with members in
27 countries - Focus on fresh-cut, value-added produce
- FreshConex/Fruit Logistica partnership
- International membership meeting in Berlin
5Value in the U.S. Marketplace
- Government relations understanding
- Food safety leadership and understanding
- Unique FreshTech and Fresh Marketplace trade
shows, partnership with senior retail management -
- 4-7 May 2008
6U.S. Import/Export Trends
- From 1992 to 2006, imports almost tripled from
2.7 billion to 7.9 billion - In same period, exports almost doubled from 2.2
billion to 4.2 billion - But comparative increase in imports does
contribute to a nationalistic mood - U.S. population is less confident in the benefits
of free trade than in past - Peru Free Trade Agreement is example
- All Statistical Data -- USDA Economic Research
Service
7Peru Free Trade Agreement
- To be considered by Senate next week
- More controversial than expected, although still
likely to pass - Presidential candidates split
- Clinton, Obama support
- Edwards, Biden, Dodd oppose
- But, Clinton opposes Columbia, Panama, South
Korea agreements without labor, environmental
safeguards
8Trade in Fruits and Vegetables
- Imports
- Fruit 4.0 billion
- Vegetables 3.9 billion
- Exports
- Fruit 2.5 billion
- Vegetables 1.7 billion
9Major Importing Partners
- Southern Hemisphere
- Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, New Zealand,
South Africa, Peru - Banana-Exporting Countries
- Columbia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Panama - NAFTA Countries
10Share of Imports
- Southern Hemisphere
- 32 fruit 4 vegetables
- Banana-Exporting Countries
- 36 fruit 7 vegetables
- NAFTA Countries
- 27 fruit 83 vegetables
11Share of Import Value
- Fruit
- Bananas 29
- Grapes 22
- Tropical fruit 15
- Other 35
- Vegetables
- Tomatoes 29
- Peppers 18
- Cucumbers 10
- Other 43
12Long-Term Commodity Trends
- Bananas decreasing as share of imports
- Volume stagnant while others increase
- Greatest increases in tropical fruit
- Pineapples, mangoes, papayas
- Share of imports doubled from 7 to 15 from
1992-2006 - Traditionally Mexico has been market leader, but
Brazil, Peru, Ecuador and Belize rising
13Long-Term Commodity Trends
- Grapes increased share from 16 to 22
- Volume up 61
- Chile accounts for 71 of imports
- Deciduous fruit share of imports steady across
1992-2006 - Apples, pears, peaches average 6-8 market share
of imports - However, volume increases of 41, 60, 32
respectively
14Southern Hemisphere Imports
- Share of commodity imports
- 73 Pears
- 74 Grapes
- 79 Kiwifruit
- 83 Apples
- Almost 100 of peaches, plums, nectarines,
apricots, cherries
15Southern Hemisphere Imports
- Share of U.S. consumption
- 55 Kiwifruit
- 41 Grapes
- 23 Plums
- 14 Pears
- 11 Peaches, nectarines, apricots
- 6 Apples
- 6 Cherries
16Rapidly Growing Imports
- Fruit
- Avocado
- Mango
- Blueberries
- Papaya
- Vegetables
- Asparagus
17Market Access Issues
- Phytosanitary requirements are major factor in
market access - Goal to safeguard domestic agricultural resources
from introduction of plant pests and disease. - Under authority of USDA Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service (APHIS) - Permits required for fresh produce imports
regulations at Title 7 Code of Federal
Regulations 319.56
18Role of Marketing Orders
- Federal marketing orders can establish commodity
quality standards/funding levels that importers
have to meet - Recent experience has been generally favorable in
cooperation across domestic, importing industry - Hass Avocado Board
- National Mango Board
19Market Access Issues
- Diversity of U.S. agriculture and climate makes
protection from plant disease a difficult issue - The regulatory system is not simple, and
importers need local support, willingness to
invest time and money - U.S. growers are also stakeholders, but USDA
approaches SPS issues from a scientific basis in
keeping with trade agreements
20Current APHIS Import Priorities
- Argentina Lemons
- Chile Table grapes, expand citrus to oranges and
grapefruit, baby kiwis - Brazil Melons
- Peru Avocados
- Uruguay Access granted for blueberries
- Source Allen F. Johnson Associates
- www.afjandassociates.com
21Food Safety Issues
- Pesticide issues
- Environmental Protection Agency must have an
import tolerance established for any chemical
residue, or default level is zero - Very problematic, but not likely to change
- Only solution is to register chemicals to
establish a tolerance or not use them - Good news? U.S. retailers and buyers generally
do not apply their own standards for pesticides
22Microbiological Food Safety
- Major issue creating U.S. market turmoil
- Why? U.S. has the most extensive foodborne
disease monitoring system worldwide - Computer network linking all medical reports
- Extensive database analysis with DNA
fingerprinting of pathogens - Ability to link illnesses and pathogens to common
source
23Impact on Produce Industry
- If a pathogen is present, likely to find it
- Most items are eaten raw without cooking
- Medical profession is looking at raw produce more
intensely when someone is sick - If two or more consumers are sick, easy to
identify whether its from a common source - Prevention of contamination is priority
- Low level of incidence is unacceptable
- Government, buyers, producers are equally in
crisis and struggling for solutions
24Commodity Action Steps
- Commodities that have been linked to foodborne
illness are establishing best practices for
growing, distribution and supply chain management - Leafy greens, tomatoes, melons, green onions,
herbs - Can be through federal or state government
regulation, marketing orders, or voluntary
agreements
25Commodity Action Steps
- Commodities that have not been linked to
foodborne illness are also pursuing best practice
standards - Commodity best practice standards likely to
become marketplace expectations, rather than
government mandate - But, importers will find retailers/buyers
demanding compliance - Impact likely across all commodities
26Fear Drives Market Demands
- Retailers/buyers react to food safety fears out
of defensiveness - At least in the U.S., concerns driven as much
about liability as quality - Auditing is in dire need of harmonization
- Cant agree on the standards
- Cant agree on validity of audits, auditors
- Retailers/buyers doing their own thing
- Government under pressure to act
27U.S. Consumer Expectations
- Food should be safe
- Especially healthy food
- People trust what they think they know
- Domestic over imported
- Local/small over distant/big
- Government should determine whether foods are
safe enough - Is the industry doing everything it should?
28The Regulatory Environment
- Imported foods are under microscope
- Problems with products imported from China
galvanized public attention - President Bush appointed team of Cabinet officers
to look at imported food safety - FDA Food Protection Plan just issued, with major
focus on imports - Congress now considering numerous options to
regulate food safety
29Produce Safety Act of 2007
- Introduced by Sen. Tom Harkin
- Chairman of Senate Agriculture Committee
- Supporter of fresh produce
- Wants to support, not punish industry
- Legislative focus
- Minimally processed produce
- Grower food safety plans
- Risk based inspections
- Domestic/import equivalency
30Likely Next Steps
- Congress or FDA will take action
- Some changes may occur sooner, but major action
likely after November 2008 elections - New import regulations will likely require
importers to certify that foods have been
produced in accordance with U.S. standards - Equivalence may be established by bi-lateral
country agreements, or producer/importer
verification - Potential precedent for produce in mandatory
seafood HAACP regulations
31Future Issues?
- U.S. likely to continue to trail Europe in social
issues, but theyre coming - Labor, worker welfare probably greatest chance of
sudden impact in U.S. market look at clothing
industry precedent - Green consciousness is a trend, and will grow
major implications for packaging - Food miles, carbon footprint still a remote
concept to most in U.S. - But, Tesco is coming to America
32Future Opportunity?
- Cant leave you only with the challenges
- Tremendous opportunity to expand fresh produce
consumption - Farm Bill poised to expand school snack program
to 4.5 million children - Government WIC feeding program to offer FV
vouchers for poor women and children - Worldwide health commitment with industry support
should provide basis for growing markets for
decades to come
33For Follow-Up
- For a complete set of data and research from this
presentation, and regulatory issues in the U.S.
market, please link to - www.unitedfresh.org/southernhemispherecongress
- Thank you!