In focus:

sustainability standards

A closer look at the sustainability standards

in the sectors we spotlight in this summary report,

covering key commodities and forestry.

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OVERVIEW

Better Cotton Initiative Read Now →

Bonsucro Read Now →

Cotton Made In Africa Read Now →

Forest Stewardship Council Read Now →

GLOBALG.A.P. Read Now →

4C Read Now →

Fairtrade International Read Now →

IFOAM ‒ Organics International Read Now →

Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification Read Now →

ProTerra Foundation Read Now →

Rainforest Alliance Read Now →

Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil Read Now →

Round Table on Responsible Soy Association Read Now →

UTZ Read Now →

TOTAL AREA CERTIFIED

2021


Organic covered the largest variety of agricultural products and the largest area certified: 76.4 million hectares, 1.6% of all agricultural land worldwide.

2017–2021


The area of all sustainability standards expanded by double digits, except RTRS and CmiA only grew by about 5% while 4C Services, ProTerra and UTZ declined by 48%, 19% and 13%, respectively.

2020–2021


ProTerra, Rainforest Alliance, Bonsucro and Better Cotton all grew by more than 20%. Fairtrade, Global G.A.P., RSPO, CmiA and organic experienced growth between 2% and 6%, while 4C, RTRS and UTZ experienced a decline in area certified.

Total area (hectares) certified by sustainability standard, 2021

Note: This figure shows the total area certified by VSSs, including all commodities each VSS certifies, hence going beyond the eight commodities examined in this report. For organic, the reported number also includes permanent grazing areas, which account for more than two-thirds of the total area certified.

RANKING STANDARDS BY NUMBER OF PRODUCERS

2021: Organic has the most producers: 3.7 million.

However, Fairtrade, BCI and Rainforest Alliance, which certified significantly smaller areas than organic, also had relatively high numbers of producers.

Note: Most sustainability standards presented in this report focus on the Global South, where smallholders prevail. Organic is prominent globally, including countries where large farms dominate, such as Australia and the United States. In addition, producer data for organic are incomplete for many countries.

Area certified and producers by agricultural standard, 2021

Note: This table shows the total area certified by VSS, including all commodities each VSS certifies, hence going beyond the eight commodities examined in this report. For organic, the reported number also includes permanent grazing areas, which account for over two-thirds of the total area certified.

References & Sources →

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SECTOR TRENDS

Forestry: PEFC outpaces FSC

2021


As in previous years, PEFC’s certified forest area exceeded that of FSC.

2021


Number of chain-of-custody (CoC) certificate holders: FSC, 50,185; PEFC 12,671.

Certified forest area and CoC certificate holders by forestry standard, 2021

References & Sources →

SINGLE-SECTOR STANDARDS DOMINATE

Standards that target mainstream adoption within a specific sector largely drive growth and market uptake. Single-commodity standards (coffee, cotton, forestry, oil palm, sugarcane and soy) have the largest area for their specific crops.

Multiple-commodity standards may have lower coverage because of their wider scope, particularly for organic agriculture. Multiple-commodity standards are gaining importance in coffee, sugarcane and soybeans. UTZ remained the most important certifier in the cocoa sector and Rainforest Alliance in tea, where no single-commodity standards have been developed. As Rainforest Alliance and UTZ merged in 2018, they may dominate not only cocoa and tea, but also coffee in the future.

Area harvested by agricultural standard and commodity, 2021

Note: This figure shows the area certified by VSS for the eight selected agricultural commodities.

Area harvested by agricultural standard and commodity, 2021

References & Sources →

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