Sourcing Better Cotton through Strategic...
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LEARN
Sourcing Better
Cotton through
Strategic Partners
Wednesday, 25 June 2014
G E N E R A L
ASSEMBLY
2 0 1 4
LEAD
DRIVE THE CHANGE
Strategic Partners we will hear from
today
» AbTF (CMiA) Tina Stridde
» Abrapa Denilson Galbero
» Cotton Australia Adam Kay
» IPUD Sukran
LEARN LEAD DRIVE THE CHANGE AMSTERDAM 2014
LEARN
Sourcing Better
Cotton through
Strategic Partners
» Tina Stridde, AbTF (CMiA)
G E N E R A L
ASSEMBLY
2 0 1 4
LEAD
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I N C O O P E R AT I O N W I T H T H E B E T T E R C O T T O N I N I T I AT I V E
A m s t e r d a m , 2 5 . 0 6 . 2 0 1 4
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Côte d‘Ivoire
Zambia Malawi
Mocambique
Zimbabwe
In 2014* CmiA works with 660.000 small-scale farmers and produces
approx. 250,000 tons of CmiA lint.
Ghana
CmiA activates market forces to promote a socially and
environmentally sustainable cotton production in Africa
Burkina Faso
Cameroon
* Tanzania, Ugana, Ethiopia to be integrated
- ILO core labor standards are implemented at field and gin level
- Social projects in health, education and women empowerment
- Tailored qualification programs to improve yields and income
- Exclusively rain-fed cotton production (no irrigation)
- Promotion of organic fertilizers (compost pits)
Excellent Eco-Footprint (low greenhouse gas emissions and zero fresh water consumption)
- Reduced usage of pesticides/ promoting biological pest control
- Exclusion of GM seeds
- No deforestation of primary forests and protection of national parks and birdlife sanctuaries
- Higher income (+30% in average) through higher yields
- Punctual payment and transparent contracts
- Pre-financing of inputs
Profit
Planet
People
Cotton made in Africa promotes sustainability on field and gin level
Commonalities
1. Promoting (i) minimum entry criteria and (ii) development criteria to improve the
performance of farmers.
2. Activating market forces by levying a volume-based fee at brand / retail level.
3. Co-financing training and other support at farm level.
4. Measuring impact of co-financing measures.
5. Geared to be simple, yet effective, to maximize impact at farm and minimize cost at retail
level.
Distinctions
1. BCI is a global standard while CmiA works exclusively in Sub-Saharan Africa.
2. BCI works with farms of all sizes while CmiA works exclusively with smallholder farmers.
3. BCI is GMO “neutral” while CmiA excludes the production of GMO crop.
4. The CmiA ecological footprint is distinctly African while BCI’s footprint will represent about
the world average.
5. CmiA is fully traceable throughout the entire supply chain if implemented as hard identity
preserved cotton
6. CmiA gives brands and retailers the opportunity to label their products while BCI does not.
Commonalities and distinctions between CmiA and BCI
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• CmiA registered cotton traders* sell the CmiA verified cotton to BCI registered spinning mills
• Cotton traders enter the quantities into the BCI cotton tracer
• Cotton traders report quantities of traded CmiA cotton to the AbTF
• AbTF and BCI are regularly crosschecking quantities entered in the cotton tracer by participating cotton traders
• The spinning mills must be registered with BCI
• Retailers need to feed the cotton tracer according to the BCI requirements
COTTON YARN
*Plexus, Reinhart, Louis Dreyfus, Cargill, EKOM
CmiA cotton into the BCI Supply Chain
Contacts and further information
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Tina Stridde Sales/Marketing
T +49 (0) 40 6461 7461
Christian Barthel Supply Chain
T +90 (0) 212 322 90 20
Christoph Kaut Standard, Verificiation,
Impact Assessment
T +49 (0) 40 6461 8015
Core information on CmiA like
- CmiA Criteria matrix & Governance
- Verification results
- List of registered Traders
- CmiA CI & Communication Guideline
- CmiA Chain of Custody Guideline
- CmiA‘s Annual Report
is available at
www.cottonmadeinafrica.org/downloads
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T h a n k yo u
LEARN
Sourcing Better
Cotton through
Strategic Partners
» Denilson Galbero, Abrapa
G E N E R A L
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ABRAPA - Brazilian Association of Cotton Growers 2014 – 15 years since foundation
Denilson Galbero: Sustainability Manager
E-mail: [email protected] Phones: +55 61 3028-9701/ +55 61 8112-9750
Brazilian Association of Cotton Growers
Gilson Pinesso President
Amsterdam, June 2014.
Cotton in Brazil - History
System of Bales Traceability of Abrapa
History – Facts: Brazil retook cotton production in early 90´s; Migrated form Southeast (hand picked) to Central
West (machine harvest). Reduced from 24K growers to +/- 1000 (large farms); Brazil the 4º biggest exporter of cotton lint; → Potential: 2 million ton of lint/season; → Domestic market: 900 mil ton/year; Brazil exported more than 1 million ton - season
2011/12, becoming the 3º exporter in the world.
Area, Production, Yield, Export e Import - Cotton
28.6
1,052.8
572.9
767.0
300.0
3.2 17.4 48.0
0.0
500.0
1,000.0
1,500.0
2,000.0
2,500.0
EXPORTAÇÕES (1000 t) IMPORTAÇÕES (1000 t) AREA ( 1000 ha) PRODUTIVIDADE (kg/ha) PRODUÇÃO (1000 t)
Export (1000 t) Import (1000 t) Area (100 Ha) Yield (kg/Ha) Production (1000 t) Fonte: Conab, ICAC e Aliceweb-MDIC
Sustainability – Brazil – Cotton Production
Total Cotton Production Expectation
ABR/BCI & Only ABR
Season 2013/2014 - ABRAPA
ABRAPA
ABR/BCI
Number of
Farms
Production
Seeded (Ton)
Total Area
(Ha)
1. ABRAPA
ABR+BCI 173 932.761 294.218
2. ABRAPA
Only ABR 63 186.095 64.355
TOTAL ABRAPA 236 1.118.856 358.573
Projections – Brazilian Cotton
Cotton – Largest Producers in the World
Fonte: ICAC – Maio, 2014
6.925
6.400
7.400 7.300
6.700
6.003
1.194
1.960 1.877
1.310 1.644 1.652
0.000
1.000
2.000
3.000
4.000
5.000
6.000
7.000
8.000
Proj. Proj.
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15
CHINA BRASIL INDIA USA PAQUISTÃO UZBEQUISTÃO OUTROS
Cotton – Largest Exporters in the World
0.433 0.435
1.052 0.938
0.767 0.814
0.000
0.500
1.000
1.500
2.000
2.500
3.000
3.500
Proj. Proj.
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15
BRASIL USA INDIA AUSTRALIA CFA ZONE UZBEQUISTÃO
Fonte: ICAC – Maio, 2014
Contacts: 1- Abrapa: Denilson Galbero: Sustainability Manager
E-mail: [email protected] Phones: +55 61 3028-9701/ +55 61 8112-9750 E-mail: [email protected] Phones: +55 61 3028-9700 E-mail: [email protected] Phones: +55 61 3028-9700
Obrigado! [email protected]
Cotton in Brazil - History
System of Bales Traceability of Abrapa
LEARN
Sourcing Better
Cotton through
Strategic Partners
» Adam Kay, Cotton Australia
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Summary of Presentation
» High performance industry
» Strong commitment to responsible production
» Significant industry improvement
» History of best practice implementation
» myBMP and Better Cotton
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
High Performance Industry
» 1500 cotton farms
» High Yields - Av irrigated yield of 2T/ha lint in 2013
» High Quality - 85% base grade and above in 2013
» Focus on production efficiency
» Fast adopters of new technology
» Biotechnology
» Round bale pickers
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Strong Commitment to Responsible Production
» Environmental awareness and stewardship started in early
1990’s
» Conducts own industry environmental audits (3 done)
» Cornerstone of industry R&D direction
» Implemented industry Environmental Monitoring program -
BMP in mid 1990’s
» Continued support & improvement of Best Practice
» Strong focus on continual improvement goals
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Significant Industry Improvements
» 28% increase in average yields over last 2 decades
» 95% reduction in pesticide use over last 15 yrs
» 40% increase in water productivity over last decade
» 40% of cotton farm area dedicated to native veg
» Stewardship program for resistance management
» Focus on full farm Best Practice outcomes (myBMP)
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Long History of Best Practice
» Launched Best Management Practice 20 years ago
» Continued and significant commitment to ongoing
development and improvement
» Re-launched as myBMP in 2010 - web based
» Covers all areas of cotton production
» Nationally recognised as a model for other agricultural
industries to follow
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Better Cotton and myBMP
» Long history of responsible cotton production
» Many similarities between Better cotton and myBMP
standards
» Opportunity for myBMP cotton to be recognised as Better
Cotton
» Benchmarking project initiated in early 2013
» Agreement signed in June 2014
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
Australian cotton as Better Cotton
» Must be produced on myBMP certified farm
» Certified farm must nominate each year to participate
» Participating farm receive annual Farm ID code
» Farm ID code allows cotton to be entered onto the BCI
Tracer system and recognised as Better Cotton
» BCI tracks cotton through supply chain
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Best Practice and Australia Cotton
myBMP and Better Cotton
Cotton Merchants in Australia* * Merchants must be BCI members to enter cotton into BCI Tracer program
• Auscott Limited • Brighann Cotton • Cargill Cotton • CNCGE Australia • Ecom Commodities • Glencore Grain • L&H Cotton • Louis Dreyfus Commodities
• Namoi Cotton • Noble Resources Australia • Omni Cotton Australia • Plexus Cotton • Queensland Cotton • Reinhart Australia • S & G Cotton Australia • Twynam Agricultural Group
LEARN
Sourcing Better
Cotton through
Strategic Partners
» Sukran, IPUD
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IPUD – İYİ PAMUK UYGULAMALARI DERNEĞİ GOOD COTTON PRACTICES ASSOCIATION
IPUD – GOOD COTTON PRACTICES ASSOCIATION
MISSION
Improve cotton production in Turkey for the benefit of cotton farmers
for the environment where cotton is grown and
for the future of the sector Founded on 25 September 2013
IPUD – BOARD MEMBERS
UPK
National Cotton Council
TANMANLAR Agricultural Enterprises
TZOB
The Union of Turkish Agricultural Chambers
TARİŞ
Agricultural Sales Cooperatives Union
ÇUKOBİRLİK
Agricultural Sales Cooperatives Union
İTB
Izmir Commodity Exchange SPOT Textile
SANKO Textile
İHKİB
Istanbul Apparel Exporters Association
İTKİB
Istanbul Textile and Raw Material Exporters Association
TTSİS
Turkish Textile Employers Association
IPUD – MEMBERS
IPUD has grown to 43 members since its inception among these: • 25 Companies • 8 Exporters Unions • 4 Farmers Unions • 2 Commodity Exchanges • 1 Textile Industry Union • 1 Farmer • 1 Employers Union • 1 National Council
For the full list of members please e-mail: [email protected]
IPUD AS A BCI STRATEGIC PARTNER
BCI and IPUD are engaged in a long-term partnership with the objective of fostering the production of Better Cotton in Turkey. IPUD will provide leadership for the Better Cotton Standard in Turkey. The aims of this partnership are to reduce the impact of cotton production on Turkey’s environment, improve the livelihoods of cotton growing communities, and increase the availability and uptake of Better Cotton to BCI members.
2013 PRODUCTION NUMBERS
BETTER COTTON PRODUCTION AREA: 7,237 (he) BETTER COTTON LICENCED FARMERS: 278 PRODUCED SEED COTTON: 34,517 (kg) GINNED LINT BETTER COTTON: 9,200 (mt)
2013 REGIONS
2013 REGIONS & PRODUCER UNITS
EGE – (Aydın region) • TARIŞ • BIRPAŞ CUKUROVA – (Adana, K. Maraş, Hatay regions) • ADANA COMMODITY EXCHANGE • KIPAŞ • NALÇABASMAZ GAP – (G. Antep, Ş.Urfa, Mardin, Şırnak regions) • ŞAHIN
EGE 24%
CUKUROVA
19%
GAP 57%
REGIONAL DISTRıBUTION LINT COTTON PRODUCTION
PROJECTED 2014 PRODUCTION NUMBERS
BETTER COTTON PRODUCTION AREA: 14,450 (he) BETTER COTTON FARMERS: 594 EXPECTED SEED COTTON: 72,202 (kg) EXPECTED LINT BETTER COTTON: 27,437 (mt)
2014 REGIONS
2014 REGIONS & PRODUCER UNITS
EGE – (Aydın region) • TARİŞ • BIRPAŞ • AKASYA • CELEPLER • PÜTAŞ CUKUROVA – (Adana, K. Maraş, Hatay regions) • ADANA COMMODITY EXCHANGE • KIPAS • NALCABASMAZ • ÇUKOBİRLİK (also in GAP) • PROGEN GAP – (G. Antep, Ş.Urfa, Mardin, Şırnak regions) • SAHIN • AKKUCAK • YUSUFCAN
EGE 49%
ÇUKUROVA
29%
GAP 22%
REGIONAL DISTRıBUTION LINT COTTON PRODUCTION
IPUD CONTACTS:
Şükran Bayçura [email protected] +90 543 693 2454 www.iyipamuk.org.tr
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