European Initiative for Sustainable Development in Agriculture explained

The European Initiative for Sustainable Development in Agriculture (EISA) e.V. is an organisation of national agricultural associations from seven Member States of the European Union as full members and six European organisations of the farm supply chain as associated members. EISA aims at the further development of integrated farming in Europe and at a growing implementation of integrated farming throughout European agriculture.

Organisation and Members

EISA e.V. was founded in Bonn, Germany, in 2001 according to German association law.

Member organisations include:

ECPA (European Crop Protection Association), ELO (European Landowners Organization), FEFAC (European Feed Manufacturers' Federation), Fertilizers Europe, IFAH-Europe (International Federation of Animal Health-Europe) as well as SAI-Platform (Sustainable Agriculture Initiative Platform) are associated EISA members.

Purpose

The purpose of the Association is:

The "EISA Integrated Farming Framework" is one focal point of the organisation's activities.[1] Further activities include intensive participation in European stakeholder dialogues and workshops as well as publicity measures on integrated farming on the European level.

EISA Integrated Farming Framework

A first working paper on such a European definition and characterisation of integrated farming was presented by EISA in July 2003. Following discussions with a wide range of European experts, a second draft was published in November 2005, and the fine-tuned full paper in September 2006. However, following EISA's understanding of integrated farming as an equally holistic and dynamic system, EISA members have decided to review and update the framework on a regular basis. Updated versions were since presented in September 2009 and in February 2012.

In this detailed guideline, integrated farming is characterised as sustainable production system which allows farmers to optimise their farm management, to raise further awareness and continually improve everyday practice on farm in order to meet future environmental, economic and social challenges and hence achieve parallel progress in all dimensions of sustainable development.

Publications

References

  1. http://www.sustainable-agriculture.org/integrated-farming/ EISA Integrated Farming Framework

External links