Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?

This paper considers European organic seed as a market in the sense of economic theory and explores factors impacting seed supply and demand. Under the organic regulation, farmers have to use seed multiplied in organic farming or apply for a derogation. We evaluated the functioning of the organic se...

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Main Authors: Susanne Padel, Stefano Orsini, Francesco Solfanelli, Raffaele Zanoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/18/10305
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spelling doaj-39bb91a9b1ef40d9815739eba1028bf32021-09-26T01:29:26ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-09-0113103051030510.3390/su131810305Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?Susanne Padel0Stefano Orsini1Francesco Solfanelli2Raffaele Zanoli3Thünen Institute for Farm Economics, 38116 Braunschweig, GermanyOrganic Research Centre, Trent Lodge, Stroud Road, Cirencester GL7 6JN, UKDepartment of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Sciences (D3A), Università Politecnica delle Marche, 60131 Ancona, ItalyDepartment of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Sciences (D3A), Università Politecnica delle Marche, 60131 Ancona, ItalyThis paper considers European organic seed as a market in the sense of economic theory and explores factors impacting seed supply and demand. Under the organic regulation, farmers have to use seed multiplied in organic farming or apply for a derogation. We evaluated the functioning of the organic seed market, based on case studies of seed supply chains for arable, vegetable and forage crops; a farmer survey; and a status-quo analysis of the organic seed sector from the European LIVESEED project. The organic seed market is characterised by small size, great diversity of crops grown, unsolved technical problems for some crops and limited capacity of breeding varieties adapted to organic farming conditions. Demand vastly outstrips supply for most crops, but strong regional and sector differences were observed. A lack of information about availability and price for organic seed is likely to act as barrier to investment. Full enforcement of the regulation to use only organic seed might have unforeseen consequences, such as a reduction of agrobiodiversity in organic farming, rather than supporting an increase in supply. We conclude that the market alone is not likely to deliver 100% organic seed and government intervention is justified.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/18/10305organic seedorganic regulationseed market
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Susanne Padel
Stefano Orsini
Francesco Solfanelli
Raffaele Zanoli
spellingShingle Susanne Padel
Stefano Orsini
Francesco Solfanelli
Raffaele Zanoli
Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
Sustainability
organic seed
organic regulation
seed market
author_facet Susanne Padel
Stefano Orsini
Francesco Solfanelli
Raffaele Zanoli
author_sort Susanne Padel
title Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
title_short Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
title_full Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
title_fullStr Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
title_full_unstemmed Can the Market Deliver 100% Organic Seed and Varieties in Europe?
title_sort can the market deliver 100% organic seed and varieties in europe?
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-09-01
description This paper considers European organic seed as a market in the sense of economic theory and explores factors impacting seed supply and demand. Under the organic regulation, farmers have to use seed multiplied in organic farming or apply for a derogation. We evaluated the functioning of the organic seed market, based on case studies of seed supply chains for arable, vegetable and forage crops; a farmer survey; and a status-quo analysis of the organic seed sector from the European LIVESEED project. The organic seed market is characterised by small size, great diversity of crops grown, unsolved technical problems for some crops and limited capacity of breeding varieties adapted to organic farming conditions. Demand vastly outstrips supply for most crops, but strong regional and sector differences were observed. A lack of information about availability and price for organic seed is likely to act as barrier to investment. Full enforcement of the regulation to use only organic seed might have unforeseen consequences, such as a reduction of agrobiodiversity in organic farming, rather than supporting an increase in supply. We conclude that the market alone is not likely to deliver 100% organic seed and government intervention is justified.
topic organic seed
organic regulation
seed market
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/18/10305
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AT raffaelezanoli canthemarketdeliver100organicseedandvarietiesineurope
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