Title: Certification
1Certification Labeling Considerations for
Agricultural Producers
2Where is Agriculture Growing Today?
- Large-scale commercial commodity focused
producers - Consolidation / economies of size
- Low-cost production strategy
- Niche or differentiated product agriculture
- Often small-scale / customer intimacy strategy
- High-end service and quality attributes
- Recreation or education connection to product
- Activities that add value beyond the farm-gate
- Credence attributes
3Credence Attributes
- Credence attributes are defined as
extra-sensory product characteristics. - can NOT be discerned by consumer inspection
- production/processing techniques chemicals,
animal welfare, fair wages, origin of food,
traceability, etc. - Food products have traditionally been
differentiated through - appearance attributes (sight, touch, smell,
etc.) - experience attributes (taste, sweetness,
flavor, etc.) - seek quality assurances from a third-party.
4Third-Party Certification
- A tool allowing producers to enter a recognized
market using an established umbrella program or
label - Certified products provide consumer assurance
that products meet certain extra-sensory or
production/process attributes - Third-party certification implies that the
certifying party does not directly benefit from
sale of the good (e.g., USDA Organic, Fair Trade,
Certified Angus Beef, Oregon Grown, etc.)
5Branding vs. Certification
Branding A name, term, design, symbol, or any
other feature that identifies one sellers good
or service as distinct from those of other
sellers.
Certification To confirm formally as true,
accurate, or genuine. To guarantee as meeting a
standard.
6Trends Fueling Certification
- Growing household incomes
- Increasing food safety concerns
- Growing separation between agricultural producers
and consumers - Concerns about status/causes of food consumed
- Hierarchy of Consumers Food Preferences
7Five Consumer Questions/Issues
- Does the food product affect the health of my
family? - Does the production of the food product treat
animals in a humane way? - Are the production processes environmentally safe
or friendly? - Are other people affected by the production and
processing techniques? - Does product conform to my religious beliefs?
8Branding
- Generally privately owned managed
- Focus on product attributes that are desired by a
companys target markets - Successful at local or regional level if
consumers associate brand/label with desirable
quality attributes (e.g., Kleenex, Coke, etc.)
9Recognition of Certified Labels
Kona Coffee
10Functions of Third-Party Certification
- Standard Setting
- Specific quality levels, well-defined criteria
and terminology - Testing/Inspection
- Objective verification of production practices,
record-keeping requirements, quality standards,
etc. - Provide Labels to Certified Producers
- Enforcement
- Continued testing inspection
- Fines/penalties for fraud
11Types of Certifying Agencies
- Government Agencies
- FDA, USDA FSIS, NRCS, AMS, etc.
- Majority of US consumers trust govt. certifiers
(85) - Govt. accredits private and non-govt.
organizations - Non-Government Organizations (NGOs)
- World Wildlife Fund, The Food Alliance,
Greenpeace, Organic Consumers Assoc.,
Certification Monitoring Network, Oregon Tilth - Private Companies
- Quality Assurance International, Scientific
Certification Systems (Nutriclean)
12First-Party/Self Certification
- Direct claims made by a firm about its product
- e.g., Healthy, Homegrown, Natures Best,
grass-fed, pasture-raised, exempt organic
producers (lt5,000 in organic sales) - Requires no generally accepted standards
- Firms are still held to truth-in-labeling laws
- Consumers may prefer first-party claims as
personal relationships and trust develop over time
13Label Claims
- No current regulations on grass-fed or pasture
raised - Greener Pastures promote product as going beyond
recognized labels like organic.
14Producer Payoff from Certification
- Immediate recognition by high-income consumers
for niche attributes - Studies show consumers willing to pay premiums
for label identified characteristics - Food safety
- Specific nations/areas of origin
- Natural/organic/reduced chemical inputs
- Humane animal treatment
- Nutritional related factors (e.g. high
antioxidant, low fat) - Social responsibility
15Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Benefits
- Higher prices for goods?
- Increased market access?
- Improved price stabilization?
- Costs
- Price of attaining certification?
- Production process changes?
- Record keeping costs?
- Brand design marketing?
- Comparison must be done for a reasonable
multi-year time horizon
16Which Direction to Pursue?
- Proliferation of certification strategies
available - Own brand still an option
- How does one decide what strategy to pursue, if
any?
17Third-Party Certification Issues
- Guidelines on third-party certification
- Experiences of several enterprises
- Food industry trends
- Numerous labels available
cals.arizona.edu/arec/ wemc/wemc.html
18page 48
Consumer Questions/Issues
19Flowchart Guide (pp. 44-47)
20Selected Web Resources
- Food Safety Inspection Services
- www.fsis.usda.gov
- The American Heart Association
- www.americanheart.org
- List of accredited organic certifiers by state
- www.ams.usda.gov/nop/ -- certifying agents
- Certified Humane Raised Handled
- www.certifiedhumane.com
- Rainforest Alliance
- www.rainforest-alliance.org
- Western Extension Marketing Committee
- ag.arizona.edu/arec/wemc/
21Helpful Certification Resource
1-800-346-9140 1-800-411-3222 (en
Español) www.attra.ncat.org
ATTRA is a project of
22Organic / Specialty Markets
Economic Research Service www.ers.usda.gov