Rice is a crucial staple food globally, but its cultivation demands significant land and water resources and contributes to over 10 percent of human-induced methane emissions. Sustainable rice production using climate-smart practices can mitigate environmental impacts and enhance the livelihoods of rice farmers. Implementing these practices could reduce methane emissions by at least 30 percent from 2020 levels by 2030. The Sustainable Rice Platform (SRP), established in 2011, aims to transform the global rice sector by developing tools and mobilizing stakeholders to adopt sustainable practices. The SRP, a multistakeholder roundtable with over 100 institutional members, operates a sustainable rice standards system that includes documents defining sustainable farming practices, field verification, and organizational governance. The International Finance Corporation (IFC) seeks to finance and support companies in sustainable rice supply chains, adhering to the IFC Performance Standards on Environmental and Social Sustainability, which require sustainable management of natural resources.
Authors
- Citation
- “ International Finance Corporation . 2024 . Assessment of the Sustainable Rice Platform: A Benchmark Analysis against the IFC Performance Standards, Good Practice for Standards Systems Assurance and Governance, and Selected Elements of Other Standards Systems . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42449 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO . ”
- Collection(s)
- Other papers
- Identifier externaldocumentum
- 34425883
- Identifier internaldocumentum
- 34425883
- Pages
- 52
- Published in
- United States of America
- Report
- 195044
- Rights
- CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO
- Rights Holder
- World Bank
- Rights URI
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo
- UNIT
- MAS Global - Agri & Forestry (CMGAF)
- URI
- https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42449
- date disclosure
- 2024-11-21
- region geographical
- World
Files
Table of Contents
- Table of Contents 3
- Acronyms 3
- Executive Summary 3
- 1. Introduction 3
- 2. Comparison of the SRP Standard with the IFC PS 3
- 3. SRP Standards System Assurance 3
- 4. SRP Standards System Governance 3
- 5. Comparison of SRP with Other Agribusiness Sustainability 4
- Standards Systems 4
- 6. Conclusion 4
- References 4
- Acronyms 5
- Benchmarking the Sustainable Rice Platform SRP Standards System 6
- Executive Summary 6
- Determine Show Inform 6
- The SRP Farm Standard is aligned with the IFC Performance Standards but its requirements are less extensive 7
- Topics not covered by the SRP Farm Standard may not always be material 7
- The SRP is a farm standard and doesnt include first processing 7
- The SRP is designed to encourage continuous improvement 8
- Group verification allows smallholder access to verification 8
- Third-party verification includes in-house approval of conformity assessment bodies by the SRP 8
- Traceability and supply chain control are available throughout the supply chain 8
- As an ISEAL community member the SRP is working towards good practice on governance 9
- The SRP is a multistakeholder association with open membership 9
- There are opportunities for broader stakeholder participation in standard-setting 9
- The SRP only makes limited data on verification available to the public 10
- Compared to peers the SRP is an underfunded voluntary standard with limited market penetration 10
- 1. Introduction 13
- 1.1 Scope of this document 13
- 1.2 Scope and limitations of the SRP Standards System 13
- FARMER GROUP 14
- INDIVIDUAL FARMER MILL PROCESSING 14
- Working toward sustainable rice cultivation 14
- Sustainably cultivated rice 14
- Climate action 16
- Life on 16
- Social 16
- Resource-use 16
- Labor 16
- Improved livelihood 16
- Consumer 16
- 2. Comparison of the SRP Standard with the IFC PS 18
- 2.1 Summary of findings of IFC PS comparison 18
- 2.2 Methodology 20
- 2.3 22
- PS 1 Assessment and Management of Environmental and Social Risks and Impacts 22
- 2.4 23
- PS 2 Labor and Working Conditions 23
- 2.5 25
- PS 3 Resource Efficiency and Pollution Prevention 25
- 2.6 26
- PS 4 Community Health Safety and Security 26
- 2.7 27
- PS 5 Land Acquisition and Involuntary Resettlement 27
- 2.8 27
- PS 6 Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Natural Resource Management 27
- 2.9 28
- PS 7 Indigenous Peoples 28
- 2.10 29
- PS 8 Cultural Heritage 29
- 3. SRP Standards System Assurance 30
- 3.1 Summary of findings on assurance 30
- 3.2 Verification 31
- 3.3 Accreditation 33
- 3.4 Chain of custody 33
- 3.5 Claims 34
- 4. SRP Standards System Governance 35
- 4.1 Summary of findings on governance 35
- 4.2 ISEAL 36
- 4.3 Multistakeholder participation 37
- 4.4 Standard-setting process 39
- 4.5 Complaints and grievances 41
- 4.6 Public information 41
- 5.1 Other voluntary standards systems 42
- 5.2 Legal structure and founders 42
- 5.3 Membership categories and fees 43
- 5.4 Operating budget 46
- 5.5 Verification 47
- 6. Conclusion 49