18 reasons for a Dutch agricultural policy with an international perspective
Our manifesto "The Dutch Agriculture Agreement reaches further than the Netherlands: offer prospects for sustainable farmers and consumers worldwide" has now been signed by over 70 civil society organisations, agricultural organisations and companies, environmental organisations and scientists from around the world. Below, a few of them give their personal motivation why they support the manifesto.
Andrew Adem, ESAFF Uganda: 'We know that the Netherlands is the world's second-largest exporter of agricultural products and is partnering with many governments, especially in the global south in agriculture and food. Because of that major global influence, the Netherlands should support an agricultural development model that promotes climate justice, enables local food producers and the development of local markets, and that reduces inequality worldwide.'
Bert van Ruitenbeek, Stichting Demeter: 'Biological dynamic agriculture is essentially about creating a living agrarian culture. Local, connected to the earth, the plants, the animals and the people in the surroundings and the landscape. Without chemicals. Marketed as much as possible locally and with minimum dependence on inputs from the agro-industry. The Netherlands has a responsibility to see agriculture in that broad international perspective and to promote food security at local level everywhere in the world. That's why we are supporting this manifesto.'
Eva Lia Colombo, WO=MEN: ' WO=MEN Dutch Gender Platform believes that it is essential for Dutch agricultural policy to be gender responsive and to leave no one behind – especially women and girls in all their diversity – in line with the Netherlands' objective to pursue a Feminist Foreign Policy.'
Foodwatch Nederland: 'We urgently need to move towards a fair agricultural policy that is good for farmers, animals, consumers and the environment, both in the Netherlands and elsewhere in the world. That's why Foodwatch has undersigned this manifesto.'
Guus Geurts, Food Justice Working Group & core team Voedsel Anders NL: 'It is urgent for farmers in the Netherlands, the EU and in the Global South that the current neoliberal WTO rules are abandoned and that the European Common Agricultural Policy based on them is radically reformed. The reintroduction of EU and global market regulation can not only ensure fair prices for farmers producing environmentally friendly products but also stop dumping and reduce the burden on scarce resources in the Global South.'
Hilke Jansen, The Hunger Project: 'Dutch agriculture has an enormous impact on the rest of the world: in a positive sense through our knowledge and know-how, but unfortunately also negatively through its excessively large footprint on nature and food security. The Hunger Project believes that must be changed and can be by implementing the eight concrete steps proposed in this manifesto.'
Janneke Hoekstra, Land van Ons: 'Stop importing cattle feed; that will have a positive impact in two ways: lower demand for crops from other countries and continents and thereby less deforestation, and a reduction in intensive cattle-breeding.'
Juan Lovera, HandelAnders!: 'By adopting the proposals in this manifesto, the government can take an important step towards worldwide policy coherence, not only on agriculture, but also on trade and climate.'
Karin van Boxtel, Both ENDS: 'Farmers in many countries outside Europe are suffering the consequences of trade agreements between their countries and the Netherlands or the EU. These agreements contain clauses limiting the use of and trade in indigenous seeds. This restricts the opportunities of small-scale farmers to adapt seeds and plants to quickly changing weather conditions and thus to ensure the supply of sufficient food.'
Kirsten Haanraads, WNF: 'Nature and agriculture are closely linked. That link can be used in a such way that nature and agriculture strengthen rather than work against each other. As an important player in the glob al food system, the Netherlands can make a significant contribution to achieving this aim.'
Maarten van Nieuw Amerongen, Woord en Daad: 'Farmers in both the Netherlands and the Global South are part of the same global food production system and face similar problems. Let the Agriculture Agreement contribute to a fairer distribution of income, knowledge and power in the sector.'
Maria Inckmann van Gaalen, Biodynamische Vereniging: 'Genuinely healthy agriculture is based on local cycles, with food from local sources and much attention to biodiversity – that applies not only to the Netherlands, but also to the countries that currently grow 'our' cattle feed.'
Nelleke Don, Slow Food Nederland: 'The Netherlands must change its role in the international food system, so that food becomes 'good, clean & fair' for everybody.'
Nout van der Vaart, Oxfam Novib: 'Dutch agriculture and our role in the worldwide food system have an enormous impact on farmers, the climate, food security, market development and the environment in the Global South.'
Paul van den Berg, Cordaid: 'Agricultural systems are responsible for around a third of global emissions of greenhouse gases, which are causing unprecedented periods of drought, flooding, rising sea levels and sedimentation. Small farmers in the Horn of Africa, the Sahel, Afghanistan, Bangladesh and other low-income countries are bearing the brunt of these catastrophic changes. As one of the largest exporters of agricultural products, the Netherlands is making no small contribution to this problem.'
Tessa Terpstra, Save the Children: 'Dutch agricultural policy must take account of the affects it is having on children around the world. Children are especially hard hit if local food production is disrupted by the import of non-sustainably produced food from Western countries. And they suffer most if their families cannot sell their sustainable agricultural products because they cannot compete with cheaper products from the Netherlands. There is then not enough money for their education and a greater risk of them falling prey to child labour. Moreover, the stress they experience if their families are experiencing difficulties can lead to mental health problems.'
Violet Matiru, MCDI Kenya: 'We see the Netherlands applying double standards. They want to increase food security here, but at the same time they promote trade that does not benefit farmers and consumers in Kenya. A good example is the flower sector, in which the Netherlands is a leading actor. In a country like Kenya, where people are dying of hunger, flowers are being produced on a large scale that are non-edible and do not contribute to food security.'
Volkert Engelsman, EOSTA: 'Feeding the world is about a fairer distribution of prosperity; that does not improve if we make the third (and second) worlds more dependent on artificial fertilisers and pesticides from the first world that have a destructive impact on soil fertility and biodiversity, and therefore on the prosperity of local farmers.'
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Press release / 21 April 2023Manifesto: The Netherlands can reduce its international footprint with new Agricultural Agreement
The Dutch Agriculture Agreement, which is currently under development, is too much focused solely on the Netherlands. That is the opinion of a broad coalition of more than sixty NGOs, farmers' organisations, scientists and companies that have today sent an urgent letter to agriculture minister Piet Adema and foreign trade and development minister Liesje Schreinemacher. The government's agricultural policy should also aim to reduce the Netherlands' enormous agrarian footprint beyond our borders, by taking food security and the preservation of biodiversity as its starting points. The coalition has published a manifesto in which it sets out how reform of the Netherlands' foreign agricultural policy could be given shape.
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Publication / 24 April 2023
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News / 14 December 2023The Netherlands can radically reduce its agrarian footprint
In the weeks following the elections, Both ENDS is looking at how Dutch foreign policy can be influenced in the coming years to reduce our footprint abroad and to work in the interests of people and planet. We will be doing that in four double interviews, each with an in-house expert and someone from outside the organisation.
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Publication / 1 September 2017
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News / 28 September 2017Both ENDS at UNCCD COP13: don’t forget about the people
This September, Both ENDS participated at the 13th Conference of the Parties of the UNCCD in Ordos, Inner Mongolia in China. We were part of the Drynet delegation, a network of CSOs, to bring local realities to the international UNCCD discussions.
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Publication / 1 September 2017
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News / 21 February 2025Cabinet turns its back on international cooperation and solidarity with callous policy letter
Foreign Trade and Development Minister Klever's published policy letter is coldhearted and callous. It places the Netherlands in international isolation and abandons the most vulnerable people worldwide, including many women, farmers, indigenous peoples and youth.
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Blog / 18 November 2024The global rise of authoritarian regimes demands global strategies
The global funding landscape for civil society movements is changing, and is increasingly faced with policies that restrict funding streams, limit philanthropic work, and silence critical voices. These are not incidental shifts but part of a broader pattern that erodes the support for those international networks and movements under the guise ‘necessary financial cuts’, ‘aid reform’ or ‘efficiency’.
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Press release / 11 November 2024Both ENDS's response to government letter on future cooperation with civil society organisations
DEN HAAG, 11 November 2024 - Today, the Dutch government published its policy on future cooperation with development organisations, both in the Netherlands and abroad. PVV minister Reinette Klever is putting the axe to this funding: she has decided to cut the budget for aid to international civil society by more than two-thirds: from roughly €1.4 billion to €0.4 billion in the period 2026 to 2030. This has major implications for critical voices at home and abroad, at a time when civic space for organisations around the world is already shrinking. Karin van Boxtel, director of environmental and human rights organisation Both ENDS: ‘This is an unprecedented step in exactly the wrong direction. Civil society organisations are essential for sustainable and social change worldwide. International movements fulfil multiple, indispensable roles: as a watchdog of the rule of law, as a driver of change, and as a counterforce against authoritarian tendencies. The weakening of support for these roles is a telling signal.’
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News / 16 November 2023Voting with a worldwide impact
Disposable fashion items continue to flood into the country, the nitrogen crisis has brought construction to a standstill and energy poverty is on the rise, but Dutch politicians are contemplating their navels. These are problems that we can never solve on our own. The clothes we wear, the food on our plates, and the electricity that comes out of our wall sockets – they are all produced in global trade and production chains. With far-reaching consequences, both in our own country and far, very far beyond our borders. It would be naive to think that we can solve all these problems through domestic policies alone. And vice versa: we would be evading our responsibilities if we continued to believe that the Netherlands only plays a humble role on the global stage. Latest figures show that the Netherlands is the fourth largest exporter and the seventh largest importer of products worldwide. With the elections on the way, it is time to look beyond our own small country. Because it is also important to vote with a worldwide impact.
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Publication / 30 October 2023
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Blog / 16 February 2021The Netherlands can contribute much to making agriculture sustainable – nationally and internationally
If the Netherlands wants to make its agriculture and livestock industry sustainable and to ensure that farmers get a fair price for their products, it will also have to look beyond its own borders. The Netherlands is the world's second largest exporter of agricultural products. We have a great impact because, through our trade relations, we uphold a system of intensive agriculture that destroys ecosystems and undermines local production. Partly due to our trade in agricultural products, the Dutch economy is has a large, and growing, footprint. That should and can be different: the Netherlands is in a good position to lead the required transition in agriculture. Fortunately, the party manifestos for the coming elections offer sufficient opportunities to set that in motion. A new coalition can thus take decisive new steps.
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Publication / 7 November 2022
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Publication / 2 November 2021
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News / 21 December 2023The Netherlands is certainly not more Catholic than the Pope
The Netherlands is well on its way with the energy transition at home, but our country continues to encourage Dutch investments in fossil projects elsewhere. This is obviously not in line with the climate goals and, moreover, these kinds of projects cause major problems in the countries where they take place. What can a new cabinet do to reduce the Dutch footprint abroad? Ellen Mangnus discussed this with several experts: today part 2.
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News / 18 December 2023Recommendations for Dutch foreign policy that works for people and planet, everywhere
The parliamentary elections in the Netherlands are over, and the dust has somewhat settled. No matter what government emerges from the process, one thing is clear: in the Netherlands the main focus is on the Netherlands. Foreign affairs were hardly mentioned during the elections and the same applies to the process of forming a new coalition. More alarmingly, some of the winners in the elections want to cut themselves off even further from the world around us. -
Event / 28 September 2023, 16:00 - 17:30The Future We See - Food Systems
What does a food system look like that serves the well-being of people and the planet?
While agriculture and livestock food production in the world have become increasingly large-scale, industrial and ever more efficient for decades, the damage and inequality this food system causes is also becoming increasingly clear. Across the world, more and more people are therefore engaged in alternative, sustainable food production that ensures many generations to come to still have access to fertile, healthy land and clean water.
In this talkshow, we highlight some of these examples and hope to fuel the dialogue about this topic.
Speakers:
- Rosinah Mbenya - PELUM Kenya (via Zoom)
- Matt Canfield - University of Leiden
- Ida Simonsen - Dutch UN Youth Representative Biodiversity and Food
- John Arink - Ekoboerderij Arink (biodynamic farmer)
Moderator
Farid Tabarki - Studio Zeitgeist
Inspired? Join our 'The Future We See' - talkshow on September 28th! You can either attend live or online, quietly listen or actively participate in the discussion - or during the drinks afterwards. We hope to see you there!
Also take a look at our previous session
To get a glimpse of the atmosphere, see a short video of our last session (about economic systems): https://youtu.be/AUNGcROovnc
And to dive in a little deeper, watch this compilation: https://youtu.be/nzuwIREeiNo
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Dossier /Finance for agroecology
The lion's share of public budgets for climate, agriculture and development still goes to conventional agroindustrial projects that contribute to the current climate, food and biodiversity crises. Both ENDS and our partners are calling for a transition to agroecological practices that are people- and environment-friendly.
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News / 21 January 2016Letter to Dutch Parliament: Sustainable agriculture is the future
Today, 800 million (almost 1 billion!) people around the world suffer from acute hunger. Add to that the almost two billion people who do not have access to even a minimum of healthy and nutritious food, and the way in which food production currently causes deforestation, erosion, pollution and climate change, and it’s clear why it’s time to do things differently! The Dutch government has set itself the goal of tackling this problem thoroughly and food security is one of the focus areas of the Netherlands’ development cooperation policy. Both ENDS shares that ambition, but feels that the government’s approach could be much better and more future-proof.
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News / 5 November 2025Interview: Both ENDS at COP30 for Climate Justice and Systemic Change
Both ENDS is present at COP30 to advocate for genuine access to climate finance for locally led, gender-just climate solutions and the mechanisms that facilitate this, including those for farmer-led restoration. Furthermore, the organisation participates to ensure the crucial connection between the climate negotiations and the trade and investment frameworks that shape them.
Learn more about the Both ENDS team at COP30 below, and find all the activities and side-events in which Both ENDS will participate.
