As
China’s pesticides industry relies heavily on exports, a listing of acetochlor
and phorate in the Rotterdam Convention will inevitably hurt the market. The
decision will likely be given at the next conference in April 2019.
The
herbicide acetochlor and insecticide phorate have been added to the list of
recommendation for the Rotterdam Convention. The final discussion on whether
they get added to the list will be held in April 2019 at the next Conference.
If those pesticides are added, the business of acetochlor in China will face a
setback, since international trade faces more regulation and challenges.
If
acetochlor and phorate are listed in the convention, it will have a significant
effect on China’s exports. For example, the importer has the right to get
materials regarding restrictions and limitations on those products.
Furthermore, the importer will use the materials in order to make decisions on
whether it will allow or ban the importation of acetochlor and phorate, and
then notify the Chinese government and the exports. This will not only
seriously limit the import and export businesses of acetochlor and phorate, but
it will also prolong the export cycle and increase export costs.
The
recommendation is being reviewed by more than 250 experts of chemicals, and
pesticides from all over the world. If accepted to the Rotterdam Convention,
the two pesticides will become regulated strictly by international law, which
will slow down the business significantly.
To
be noticed, chemicals listed in the Rotterdam Convention are not banned.
However, certain information must be exchanged between the exporting party and
importing part. Prior Informed Consent (PIC) Procedure must be followed.
At
present, many developing countries fully exercise their rights as provided by
the convention to keep out high-risk overseas pesticides.
According
to the China Crop Protection Industry Association, China's pesticide output was
1.33 million tonnes, accounting for 48.8% of the global use.
The Rotterdam
Convention
The
Rotterdam Convention is an organization dedicated to providing early warnings
on hazardous chemicals and agrochemicals. It is formally known as the Rotterdam
Convention on the Prior Informed Consent Procedure for Certain Hazardous Chemicals
and Pesticides in International Trade.
Such
a multilateral treaty organization is necessary for global chemical trade
observance since the dramatic growth in the worldwide chemical and agrochemical
production, as well as the trade of those, has skyrocketed in the past decades.
Single countries alone often don’t have the sufficient infrastructure to
monitor hazardous and toxic chemicals by themselves, hence depending on an
organization like the Rotterdam Convention.
The
convention promotes an open exchange of information and calls on exporters of
hazardous chemicals to use proper labelling, include directions on safe
handling, and inform purchasers of any known restrictions or bans.
Up
to today, the Convention has published a mandatory prior informed consent (PIC)
procedure to monitor and control the import and export of 33 pesticides and 14
industrial chemicals, and circulate nationally importing decisions to all
Parties to the Convention.
China,
as one of the members of the Rotterdam Convention, signed the Convention in
2004 and ratified it in 2005.
Prior Informed Consent
(PIC)
For
chemicals listed in Annex III, the Prior Informed Consent (PIC) Procedure must
be followed. Once a chemical is included in Annex III, a decision guidance
document containing information concerning the chemical and the regulatory
decisions to ban or severely restrict the chemical for health or environmental
reasons is circulated to all Parties.
Parties
have 9 months to prepare a response concerning the future import of the
chemical. The import response can consist of either a final decision on
allowing import of the chemical, not to allow import, or to allow import
subject to specified conditions, or an interim response.
The
import decisions are circulated via PIC circular every 6 months and exporting
country Parties are obligated under the Convention to take appropriate measure
to ensure that exporters within its jurisdiction comply with the decisions.
Acetochlor in China
Acetochlor
is a selective herbicide, which has been used on maize in Sahelian West African
countries. It poses a high risk to aquatic organisms as well as long-term risks
to herbivorous birds and to humans.
Some
acetochlor technical producers in China have suspended or even stopped
producing the product during this period. Besides the production level, the
domestic price and export volume of acetochlor products made in China witnessed
downtrends as well. It seems that the domestic acetochlor producers are encountering
a lot of difficulties.
According
to CCM, Nantong Jiangshan Agrochemical & Chemicals, Zhongnongfa Henan
Agrochemical, Jiangsu Changlong Agrochemicals, Shandong Zhongshi Pharmaceutical
Jiangsu Huaihe Chemical, Shandong Qiaochang Modern Agriculture, Shandong Vicome
Greenland, and Dalian Regar Pesticides. are the leading acetochlor producers in
China, which will be affected the most by listing this herbicide in the
Convention.
China
is a large acetochlor exporter, able to increase exports of this herbicide by
34% YoY in the first half of 2017. The top 3 export destinations have been
Thailand, Pakistan, and Argentina, accounting for 26.5%, 23.3%, and 19.3% of
the total export share respectively. As all three nations are members of the
Rotterdam Convention, a listing will affect the export from China
significantly.
What’s
more, acetochlor is also in the ninth rank in China’s best-selling herbicide
brands under the brand name Saihesi by Nantong Jiangshan Agrochemical and
Chemical.
Phorate in China
Phorate
is an insecticide that has been used for example in Brazil as an insecticide in
cotton, potato, coffee, beans and corn and is considered one of the most toxic
organophosphate AChE inhibitors.
In
China, the insecticide is on the list of pesticides under restricted use for
vegetables, fruit trees, tea trees, and Chinese medicinal herbs, due to the
high-toxic effects on human and animal health as well as a high-residue. It
will be completely banned from October 1, 2018.
Since
phorate does not have an important role in China’s pesticide market and will be
banned in the country by late 2018, the inclusion on the list of Rotterdam
Convention will not affect manufacturers as much as for acetochlor. However,
importers and exporters need to be aware of the changes and adapt
early on.
About CCM
CCM
is the leading market intelligence provider for China’s agriculture, chemicals,
food & ingredients and life science markets.
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