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Are brands ready for new USDA organic food rules?

2024-03-22 Ingredients Network

Tag: Clean Label

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US food manufacturers are gearing up for the Strengthening Organic Enforcement (SOE) final rule, which will come into force on the 19th March 2024. “This rule is necessary to better protect consumers by preventing fraud in the organic supply chain and is part of our continuous improvement of the organic standards,” a USDA spokesperson told Ingredients Network.

A significant milestone in organic law

The new organic rule aims to improve the management and enforcement of producing, handling, and selling organic agricultural products. It is designed to strengthen organic control systems, improve farm-to-market traceability, and enable robust application of the USDA organic regulations. The USDA hopes the rule amendment will protect integrity in the organic supply chain and build consumer and industry trust in the USDA organic label.

“With the new provisions under SOE, we will be able to oversee the supply chain and act more quickly to keep fraud out of the market. This means that, under the new rule, most businesses in organic trade will need to be certified organic,” added the USDA spokesperson.

The new regulation represents “the biggest change to organic regulations since the creation of USDA’s National Organic Program (NOP),” said the Organic Trade Association (OTA). With the Department’s National Organic Program dating back to The Organic Foods Production Act of 1990 (OFPA), the updat marks a significant milestone in the organic regulatory landscape.

OTA, a business group for organic agriculture and products in North America, welcomes the new rule as “a major accomplishment” and actively confirms it advocated and engaged with the industry to help make it a reality. “This regulation will have significant and far-reaching impacts on the organic sector and will do much to deter and detect organic fraud and protect organic integrity throughout the supply chain,” it said in a January 2024 statement.

The rule strives to solidify existing laws surrounding organic products, bridges current regulatory gaps, and builds consistent certification practices. Together, these work to avoid fraud and improve organic products’ transparency and traceability.

Pursuing organic certification

USDA’s NOP published the SOE final rule on 19th January 2023. “Since the rule was published last year, many operations have already taken steps to get certified,” says the USDA spokesperson.

Many operations have enrolled in the USDA’s SOE training in the Organic Integrity Learning Center, its spokesperson says. The Learning Center allows users to create accounts and self-enrol in the NOP-350 Strengthening Organic Enforcement (SOE) Final Rule Core Course. Since the rule was published, USDA NOP has been actively providing outreach by offering webinars, training, and attending industry events highlighting the rule’s requirements to help the industry prepare for implementation.

The spokesperson says the USDA cannot respond to business-specific questions or scenarios because businesses are so different. However, they were able to comment: “The rule is written to help businesses analyse their activities to assess the need for certification and how to implement its requirements.”

For example, the rule can help businesses ascertain whether a facility must be certified, which depends highly on the type of activities and products it handles. Businesses looking for specialised support in implementing rule requirements can work with a consultant or contact a USDA Accredited Certifying Agent, the spokesperson adds.

Impact on organic growers and producers

The new organic rules will affect organic food and drink brands. “It will offer a more robust endorsement for those who state their products are organic,” Vhari Russell, founder of the Food Marketing Experts, told Ingredients Network.

The cost consequences of the new organic rule are a concern in the fragile and uncertain financial landscape. “Unfortunately, it may impact price as there will inevitably be more administration for the grower and producer,” says Russell. “Brands are facing challenging times with rising costs, which could be another layer of red tape that doesn’t help them trade,” Russell added.

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