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Making trade safe by harmonizing electronic data exchange










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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Investing in plant health: better lives for all 2024
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    The International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) sets forth in its Strategic Framework 2020-2030, eight development agenda items to achieve its objectives. These agenda items are in various stages of implementation and include 1) harmonization of electronic data exchange; 2) commodity- and pathway-specific International Standards for Phytosanitary Measures (ISPMs); 3) management of e-commerce and postal and courier pathways; 4) developing guidance on the use of third-party entities; 5) strengthening Pest Outbreak Alert and Response Systems (POARS); 6) assessment and management of climate-change impacts on plant health; 7) global phytosanitary research coordination; and 8) diagnostic laboratory networking. Funding for these agenda items are needed to jumpstart or sustain ongoing work. This brochure serves to inform and engage current and potential donors to invest in IPPC's work through these eight development agenda items.
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    E-commerce
    A guide to managing the pest risk posed by goods ordered online and distributed through postal and courier pathways
    2023
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    This guide highlights some of the key challenges that national plant protection organizations (NPPOs) face in managing the pest risk associated with e-commerce trade, where small parcels containing plants, plant products and other regulated articles are ordered online and distributed internationally through postal and courier pathways. It provides practical guidance for improving cooperation and collaboration with key stakeholders involved in e-commerce supply chains, including national customs administrations, postal operators, courier services, e-commerce platforms and marketplaces, and the general public. The guide also highlights pre-border and border activities, including risk-based phytosanitary inspection that NPPOs may use to help mitigate pest risk on postal and courier pathways, how to identify and respond to non-compliance, and the importance of monitoring regulated articles moving on postal and courier pathways in order to respond to new technologies and trends. Case studies are provided from around the world, highlighting some of the risks to plant health associated with e-commerce trade and the innovative approaches being taken by NPPOs to address these risks.
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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Assessing and managing climate-change impacts on plant health 2024
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    The International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) sets forth in its Strategic Framework 2020-2030, eight development agenda items to achieve its objectives. One of these agenda items is assessing and managing the impacts of climate change on plant pests. Climate change has had an increasing impact on the health of plants and agricultural crops while rising temperatures have enabled plant pests to establish in previously uninhabitable areas. IPPC is working to raise awareness of these issues, as well as enhancing the evaluation and management of risks of climate change to plant health. IPPC is also working to enhance the recognition of phytosanitary matters in the international climate change debate. This brochure serves as a resource mobilization tool to sustain these initiatives and achieve the objectives of these development agenda items.

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