Sector News

Will Europe reform the value chain in the food industry?

March 5, 2018
Consumer Packaged Goods

Trade relations in the agricultural sector remain a source of tensions between large retailers and farmers, while a legislative proposal is expected at the European level. EURACTIV.fr reports.

Little progress has been made in rebalancing trade relations between farmers and large retailers, despite a draft law introduced by the French government in early February.

The European Commission will also address this issue and is working on a new regulation against unfair business practices, which will be presented in spring 2018.

By 2016, the Commission took action by setting up the “Agricultural Markets Task Force” made up of 12 experts. They released their final report in November 2016, advocating harmonised European legislation to tackle such practices, from which farmers suffer given their limited bargaining power, particularly with large retail outfits.

The Commission will take the recommendations of the task force to formulate its own proposals in the spring.

Among the recommendations, the experts suggest limiting payment periods to 30 days to avoid current delays, and to set the terms of the trade exchange (volumes, prices) by prohibiting any unilateral change without the farmer’s agreement.

Groundless accusations

While these recommendations were well received by member states, they were criticised by large retailers.

In letters addressed to the Commission and carried by the website retaildetail.be, several of the large retailers argued that “the claim that supermarkets abuse their power is incorrect. The accusations of unfair trade practices are anecdotal and lack factual evidence”.

Retailers are concerned about the implementation of new regulatory requirements, in addition to the ones already existing at national level in 20 member states.

They also stress the existence of effective informal tools in the area, such as the Supply Chain Initiative, launched in 2013 by food industry players who voluntarily commit to respecting principles of good business practices.

Ineffective enforcement

According to Paolo Gouveia, director of general affairs at Copa-Cogeca (the EU food producers association), these arguments remain insufficient, the real issue being the effective implementation of legislations and not their existence.

“Several countries, such as Portugal, have legislation against unfair trading practices but their enforcement is ineffective. The same is true of European legislation on late payment. Provisions have been adopted but such practices still exist.”

A European supervisory authority

Gouveia, therefore, calls for the implementation of binding European legislation. This legislation should be based on “a system of penalties and joint verifications through an independent authority at the European level.”

On the other hand, the group of experts advocate in their report the implementation of such authorities at the national level of each member state.

For Gouveia, a European authority would hold the advantage of “also monitoring agricultural trade between buyers and sellers located in different European countries”.

By Claire Guyot

Source: EurActiv

comments closed

Related News

April 26, 2024

Haleon names new Finance Chief and new CHRO

Consumer Packaged Goods

Consumer healthcare firm Haleon has appointed Tate & Lyle executive Dawn Allen as its new chief financial officer, effective 1 November 2024. Allen will succeed Tobias Hestler, who has decided to step down from the role, citing a long-term health condition, the company said.

April 26, 2024

Campari to double Aperol production capacity with €75m investment

Consumer Packaged Goods

The group said that the bottling line, which adds 6,500 square metres to the existing 60,700-square-metre site, is the next necessary stage in the company’s international development. The leading brand in Campari Group’s global sales, demand for the Italian bitter apéritif has grown by 500% in the last decade.

April 26, 2024

Coca-Cola enters $1.1bn strategic partnership with Microsoft

Consumer Packaged Goods

The partnership will see Coca-Cola adopt new technology to foster innovation and productivity globally. Through the deal, Coca-Cola has made a $1.1 billion commitment to the Microsoft Cloud and its generative AI capabilities.

How can we help you?

We're easy to reach