Asia Regional Organic Standard


Asia Regional Organic Standard is a common regional standard for organic production in East, South-East and South Asia. AROS results from a process intended to harmonize existing organic standards in that region and to promote new ones. It was launched by the Global Organic Market Access project, sponsored by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements, and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.

History

In 2002 FAO, IFOAM and UNCTAD began a partnership to promote trade in organic produce by harmonizing the many different organic standards and technical regulations. The partnership created the International Task Force on Harmonization and Equivalence in Organic Agriculture, which in 2008 issued a set of recommendations to facilitate organic trade. ITF also produced two practical tools to aid in assessing equivalence: the Guide for Assessing Equivalence of Organic Standards and Technical Regulations, concerned with standards for organic production and processing; and the International Requirements for Organic Certification Bodies, concerned with criteria for good practice in organic certification bodies.
In 2009 the three partner organizations set up the Global Organic Market Access project, to follow up on the work of the ITF. GOMA’s work up to 2012 included setting up regional initiatives for harmonization and trade, including one for East, South-East and South Asia. GOMA organized a Working Group for Cooperation on Organic Labeling and Trade for Asia, which initiated the Asia Regional Organic Standard and developed it through a public-private partnership of stakeholders.
A subgroup of the Working Group, known as the Asia Organic Standards Drafting Group, coordinated development of the Standard. The Working Group approved the final draft at its meeting in Nuremberg, Germany in February 2012.
A task force from ASEAN countries in 2013 agreed to use AROS as a working document to develop an ‘ASEAN Standard for Organic Agriculture’, to work towards equivalence among the five out of 10 member states that had by then established national organic standards, as well as for adoption by the remaining countries. ASOA was finally adopted in late 2014, and incorporates most of the content of AROS.

The AROS standard

The standard states general requirements under the headings of:
The standard does not cover procedures for verification, such as inspection or certification of products.
Major sources for the standards include: