IFOAM Defends Organic Farming in Europe Against the New Fertilizer Plan
6 Articles
6 Articles
IFOAM advocates organic farming in Europe: The European Commission presented an Action Plan on Fertilizers to respond to the geopolitical crisis and price increases, with explicit support for European sustainable organic farming. The ecological sector values the recognition of this nutrient-efficient agricultural system, which reduces synthetic fertilizers, closes nutrient cycles, improves soils and strengthens current European productive resili…
The position of the Romanian Farmers' Club (CFRO) on the European Commission's Fertilizer Action Plan (EC) reflects the need for measures to address the structural vulnerabilities of the European market for fertilisers. The document proposes a framework for action aimed at increasing the availability and accessibility of fertilisers, strengthening the EU's strategic autonomy and improving the functioning of the supply chain. In this context, inc…
"All for this?", "insufficient," "no concrete solution," "not up to date"... The European Commission's Fertilizer Action Plan did not convince farmers.
Organic farming is set up as a resilient production system. This has been recognized by the Plan of Action on Fertilizers presented yesterday in the European Commission (EC), in the face of the consequences of the current geopolitical crisis, which is alarmingly increasing the prices of chemical fertilizers from oil. Photo given by Ecovalia. In this sense, the president of Ecovalia, Álvaro Barrera, maintains that “the ecological production syste…
The holder of Agriculture presided over a meeting of the Consultative Council on Agricultural Policy for Community Affairs in which he stressed the need for the new European plan announced yesterday by the European Commission to have "more concreteness and funding." "What is missing from the plan has already been put by the Government of Spain: 500 million euros to support farmers" with direct aid for the purchase of fertilizers, said Planas.
In order to reduce its dependence on imports and secure its food sovereignty, the European Commission adopted, on 19 May 2026, an action plan on fertilizers based on bio- and low-carbon fertilizers instead of chemical fertilizers. Here is what we need to know about this update and its implications for our country. The post Fertilizers: why the new European plan does not threaten Morocco appeared first on Media24 - Number one of Moroccan economic…
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