Brazil Joins Organic Bandwagon

The Brazilian market for organic food has been steadily growing at 30% a year. That works out to a market worth around US$ 200 million which has become an internatioanal gold standard for its quality, especially in soybeans, coffee and sugar.

On September 8 and 9, for the second straight year, Brazil will host the BioFach Latin America in Rio de Janeiro, which is a version of the European Union organic product fair which takes place annually in Nuremberg.


It is expected that the Rio event will generate business worth US$ 2.7 million (8 million reais), double last year’s fair.

Alvaro Werneck, of Planeta Orgânico, the organization which is running the Rio fair, says that although the production of organic food is rising at over 20% a year, it still is only 0.2% of all agricultural production in Brazil. And it has many benefits: better quality of life for consumers, reduction of soil erosion, better water quality and more jobs.

Wernck admits that organic food prices in Brazil are high, but says that as production expands the tendency is for prices to fall.

Brazil is South America’s biggest consumer of organic products and the biggest supplier for the European market. Exports of organic goods total US$ 30 million and have been rising around 30% annually.


The country has 15 exporters with quality certificates. Brazil will be highlighted at the 2005 Biofach in Nuremburg as the world’s “organic food breadbasket.”


Governor of Rio de Janeiro, Rosinha Matheus underscored that Rio de Janeiro is the first state in Brazil to adopt a policy of incentives for agriculture without the use of pesticides.


The state’s Cultivate Organic Program offers farmers a specific credit line with annual interest rates of 2% and a 60-month repayment period.

Craus remarked that, among Latin American countries, Brazil has made the greatest progress in measures aimed at the cultivation and commercialization of organic products, which should lower production costs and, consequently, consumer prices.


She pointed out, however, that producers still find it difficult to market what they produce. According to her, the lack of information about organic products also hampers sales.

The purpose of the Biofach is to support developing markets through the provision of technical, scientific, and management information to the organic sector in Latin America.


In last year’s edition, the fair exceeded the organizers’ expectations, attracting over a thousand participants.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

In Brazil, the white foe is black himself

Brazilians are far more dishonest about race than Americans. The “whites” who are the ...

How Muslins Found a Home and Thrived in Brazil

Those interested in the history of Arab immigration to Brazil have just been provided ...

Crime and Impunity

Many in Brazil felt impunity had taken a major hit back in 1992, when ...

Economists Expecting Brazil’s GDP to Grow 7.55% This Year

Brazil’s Central Bank survey of the Brazilian market (the Focus report) found financial consultant’s ...

For UN LatAm’s Had Worst Export Decline Since 1937. Brazil’s Drop: 22%

Latin America and the Caribbean exports should decrease by 24% in 2009 compared with ...

Brazil Reaches Oil Self-Sufficiency by Year’s End

Brazilian petroleum output should be enough by the end of 2005 to meet the ...

Brazilians Affected by Dams Hold a Week of Protests

Brazil's Movement of Those Affected by Dams (MAB – Movimento dos Atingidos por Barragens) ...

Brazil Starts New Phase as Petroleum Power Producing Extra Heavy Oil

Petrobras, Brazil's government-controlled oil multinational, announced that its first oil rig designed to produce ...

Dollar Gets a Three-Year High in Brazil

Despite interventions by Brazil's Central Bank, the BC, which for three times tried to ...

Embargo and All, Brazilian Honey Exports Break Records

Despite the European embargo against Brazilian honey, which was put in place in March ...