Learn How the Horticulture Industry Is Committed to Long-Term Plant Health and Biosecurity

A recent International Association of Horticultural Producers (AIPH) Plant Health Survey shows the promise of a bio-secure future for the ornamental horticulture industry.

The survey was initiated and conducted by AIPH in early 2021 as part of the International Year of Plant Health 2020 and in response to growing concerns about biosecurity worldwide and the ornamental horticulture industry’s duty to sustainability. International travel and trade have tripled in volume in the last decade and has the potential to quickly spread pests and diseases around the world, causing significant damage to native plants and the environment.

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The survey aimed to explore how industry organizations work to enhance plant biosecurity in their regions and share information on voluntary systems to improve biosecurity within businesses and across supply chains. The plant health industry support programs have the capacity to enable healthy production systems, cost-effective and reliable movement of low-risk plant material within global supply chains, and traceability in the event of a biosecurity threat.

Through the report, AIPH concluded:

  • Voluntary standards are increasingly relied upon by industry and regulators to reduce the risk posed by plant pests for national or international trade. Eleven voluntary standards for plant health management were identified from around the world. The highest perceived level of threat from plant pests and diseases in a respondent’s country or region was trade in live plants and cut flowers, with the second-highest level being identified as ‘growing systems.
  • There is a basis for creating an international equivalence framework between standards.
  • Voluntary standards and associated schemes co-designed by industry and the competent (designated) authority for a country can augment phytosanitary measures and regulatory systems.

A systems approach for plant biosecurity for nursery production systems and supply chain management was a key concept that emerged from the survey. More than three quarters of those surveyed indicated a need for a voluntary international plant health and biosecurity standard. Systems approaches are proactive, aiming to reduce the risk of infestation by promoting the use of safe nursery practices for all pests, and are a fundamental aspect of voluntary standards as the requirements represent policies, procedures, and practices that are integrated into a business’s day-to-day operations.

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“The report establishes the value of voluntary Plant Health Management schemes,” says Tim Edwards, Vice President of AIPH, and Chair of the AIPH Ornamentals Production Committee. “We must now ask: How can the industry broaden uptake of such schemes? What must be done to allow schemes to each recognize and integrate with others? This report starts to identify areas in which ornamental horticultural trade associations around the globe can work collaboratively to strengthen biosecurity.”

The recommendations highlight the need for further work to develop systems that integrate voluntary industry standards for plant health with national regulations that control the movement of plants across national and regional borders. This application can be achieved by close collaboration between leaders in the industry and national plant protection authorities (NPPOs). AIPH aims to set up a global plant health forum to facilitate information sharing and the development of consistency across supply chains.

“The AIPH Plant Health survey is an important commitment of the global ornamental horticultural industry to contribute to the sustainability of its future in supporting plant health,” says Ralf Lopian, Chair of International Steering Committee, International Year of Plant Health 2020, and Deputy Chief Plant Health Officer and coordinator of international phytosanitary affairs at Finland’s Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry. “It is particularly essential to consider that prevention is a key aspect and more cost-effective than dealing with full-blown plant health emergencies. Plant pests and diseases do not respect national borders and do not show passports. Plant health capacities and collaboration must be increased on all levels because phytosanitary ambitions succeed or fail with the capacity of the weakest link. The recommendations contained in this report offer a promising roadmap for improved public-private collaboration.”

At AIPH’s International Plant Health Conference, held in March 2021, the survey results were presented by Dr Audrey Timm, Technical Advisor to AIPH, in collaboration with Mr Alistair Yeomans, Plant Health Alliance. Watch the presentation at aiph.org/event/planthealthconference/.

The full report from AIPH is available to download here.

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