Image credit: Theo Crazzolara on Flickr (CC BY 2.0) |
FEFAC President Asbjørn Børsting says, 'The experience shows that FEFAC is fully delivering on its ambition to provide market transparency on the availability of conversion-free soy, with numerous schemes taking inspiration from the FEFAC Soy Sourcing Guidelines 2021 to amend or formulate new requirements in this aspect. With a view to the announced European Commission proposal for deforestation-free supply chains and the COP26 pledge to end deforestation by 2030, we have demonstrated that the soy supply chain is ready to deliver a mainstream market supply of responsible and conversion-free soy to the European feed sector. In the interest of effective sourcing strategies and cost-efficient logistical processes, we ask the European Commission and other policy makers to carefully consider the constructive role certification schemes and programmes can play to ascertain the conformity of conversion-free soy in a credible way that alleviates administrative burdens, as well as to maintain all existing chain of custody models (e.g. book & claim, area mass balance, mass balance & product segregation), which all serve their purpose to respond to market demand & product specifications'.
Compliance with the FEFAC Soy Sourcing Guidelines 2021 means that the schemes meet the criteria for responsible soy production that are included in the FEFAC Guidelines, which were developed in an effort to set a transparent 'comparison level' for European compound feed manufacturers requested to source responsible soy (see also this factsheet about the Guidelines). Several more schemes have applied in the meantime for benchmarking against the FEFAC Soy Sourcing Guidelines 2021, which is currently being executed by ITC.
For more information visit the FEFAC website, HERE.
The Aquaculturists
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