中国农业组织如何看待可持续发展认证体系?探索性分析

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Xiaorui Wang, Shen Hu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

文献中对中国促进农业可持续发展的措施记载甚少。初步调查表明,中国农业认证计划的运作方式与欧洲和美国的此类计划有很大不同。我们调查了农民、加工商、政府工作人员和中国农业的其他利益相关者对可持续发展认证计划(SCS)的看法。我们研究了三种类型的认证:农产品出口的可持续发展标准;国内市场的有机标签;以及生态实践认证。我们于 2013-14 年采访了 16 位利益相关者,了解他们的经历和对认证的看法。我们对访谈进行了转录和编码,以得出主题和解释。对农产品进行认证符合中国出口商的最佳利益。一些农业公司有专门的农场,负责确保标准得到遵守:而他们为国内市场生产的农场则以不同的方式运作。有机产品认证的系统性较差,各种标签层出不穷,目的是让国内消费者相信贴有这些标签的食品是安全的。没有使用统一的标准。农民担心有机生产成本高昂,但他们无法得到反映这些成本的价格。在中国,利益相关者认为中央政府应制定和监督标准。在中国,利益相关者认为中央政府应制定和监督标准,而认证则不被视为私营企业能够甚至应该制定的标准。这种认识转化为对中央政府的依赖,即由中央政府协调和监管所有追求社会和环境可持续发展的集体行动,为市场主导的倡议留下了极小的发展空间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How do organizations in Chinese agriculture perceive sustainability certification schemes? An exploratory analysis

Motivation

Initiatives to promote sustainable practices in agriculture in China have been little documented in the literature. Preliminary investigations suggested that the way agricultural certification schemes worked in China differed considerably from such schemes in Europe and the United States.

Purpose

We investigated how sustainability certification schemes (SCSs) were perceived by farmers, processors, government staff, and other stakeholders in Chinese agriculture.

We examine three types of certification: sustainability standards for agricultural exports; organic labelling for the domestic market; and certification of ecological practices.

Methods and approach

We interviewed 16 stakeholders in 2013–2014 about their experiences and perceptions of certification. The interviews were transcribed and coded to derive themes and interpretations.

Findings

Certification was rigorous for agricultural exports because importers, mainly in high-income countries, demanded high standards—and were prepared to pay a premium for those standards. It was in the best interests of Chinese exporters to certify their produce. Some farming companies had specific farms that were run to make sure the standards were upheld, whereas their farms producing for the domestic market operated differently.

Organic certification of produce was less systematic, with proliferation of labels used to try to convince domestic consumers that the food so labelled was safe. No single standard was used. Farmers were concerned that organic production was costly but that they would not get a price to reflect those costs. Most actors expected the state to set standards and police them.

A public scheme intended as payment for environmental services also certified land managers; but the scheme as applied operated to pay farmers on low incomes often in marginal lands an income supplement—payments were not necessarily linked to environmental objectives.

Policy implications

In China, the perception of stakeholders was that the central government should establish and monitor standards. Certification was not seen as something that private enterprise could or even should establish. This appreciation translated into dependence on central government to co-ordinate and regulate all collective action for pursuing social and environmental sustainability, leaving little space for market-led initiatives to flourish.

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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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