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Pesticides use, pesticides trade and pesticides indicators

Global, regional and country trends, 1990–2020











FAO. 2022. Pesticides use, pesticides trade and pesticides indicators – Global, regional and country trends, 1990–2020. FAOSTAT Analytical Briefs, no. 46. Rome.



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    Booklet
    Pesticides use and trade, 1990–2021 2023
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    Pesticides are a key agricultural input needed to protect seeds and safeguard crops from unwanted plants, insects, bacteria, fungi and rodents. At the same time, pesticides can have negative health and environmental impacts through contamination of soil, water and non-target plants and animals, which can decrease biodiversity and harm living organisms including humans. Statistics of pesticides use and trade are relevant for monitoring the sustainability of agriculture. In particular, they can help assess the global movement of pesticides and identify possible shortcomings in access to markets. The FAOSTAT Pesticides Use database contains data on pesticides use by country, in active ingredients and by major pesticide category, currently for the period 1990-2021.
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    Booklet
    Pesticides use, pesticides trade and pesticides indicators 1990-2019 2021
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    This analytical brief reports the main results and changes over time in pesticides use and trade, with a special focus on total trade of hazardous pesticides, and with details at the global, regional and country levels during the period 1990–2019.
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    Trade reforms and Food Security. Country Case Studies and Synthesis 2006
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    Between 1999 and 2002 FAO undertook a series of 23 country case studies to evaluate the impact of the WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) on agricultural trade and food security in developing countries. The objectives of these studies were to assess the extent to which the AoA commitments had led to changes in domestic agricultural policy, to evaluate the impact on trade flows (imports and exports) of developing countries and to assess whether implementing the AoA commitments had had any impact o n food security. An important finding was that for most of the countries in the sample, the implementation of AoA commitments did not imply any major change to domestic agricultural policy, including trade policy. The main reason was that most of the countries had implemented during the 1980s and early 1990s unilateral reforms including the liberalization of international trade, often as part of the conditionality of adjustment loans. Some of these were bound as part of their multilateral commit ments in Uruguay Round. In other cases, commitments were made in terms of ceiling bindings or reduction from bound rates which diverged considerably from existing applied levels. It became clear that in order to make a realistic assessment of the impact of trade-related policy reforms on food security, it was necessary to extend the analysis over a period that included the implementation of substantial unilateral reforms.

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