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African Manager
3 days ago
- African Manager
Policy briefs' to safeguard agriculture in Tunisia!
The use of alternative pest control methods instead of conventional pesticides is now recognized in Tunisia as a key driver for food security, consumer health, and environmental protection. Tunisian authorities also promote preventive control methods in order to reduce the harmful effects of pesticides. The aim is to promote the agroecological approach and integrated pest management to ensure sustainable agriculture, replacing, as much as possible, external inputs with natural regulatory processes that should be encouraged. In this context, the WWF North Africa office plans to develop two policy briefs relating to the revision of standards for the use of chemical inputs in agriculture and the reform of the agricultural subsidy system. A call for applications has therefore been launched to select a consulting firm that will be responsible for drafting these policy briefs, which will propose ideas for reflection or action, with the ultimate goal of ensuring the sustainable use of natural resources. The objective is also to promote biological inputs and to integrate ecological and social criteria into the system for granting agricultural subsidies. 'These two instruments are considered structuring tools because they shape the technical and economic choices of agricultural producers, influence the health of ecosystems, and determine the direction of public investments.' Harmful effects of current practices According to WWF, the persistence of current practices, undifferentiated subsidies, extensive use of chemical inputs, lack of environmental targeting, increases pressures on biodiversity and undermines Tunisia's international commitments, particularly within the framework of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. Given the urgency of the transition, these policy briefs are seen as a decisive lever for awareness-raising and advocacy, particularly with political decision-makers, Parliament, sectoral ministries (Agriculture, Finance, Environment), donors, and technical partners. These documents should present a clear, well-argued, and feasible vision of the reforms to be undertaken, based on the results of collective work from national workshops, the results of online consultations, national regulatory frameworks, international commitments, and best practices from comparable experiences. As part of its commitment to biodiversity, WWF North Africa has implemented the 'BIODEV 2030' project, which is an experimental approach to biodiversity mainstreaming carried out in 15 pilot countries with diverse socioeconomic, environmental, and geographic contexts, including Tunisia. Through a process centered on multi-stakeholder dialogue based on science, the project aims to contribute to the implementation of the Kunming-Montreal agreement in these countries by encouraging the adoption of productive practices that reconcile biodiversity and development. In truth, the agricultural use of pesticides is a necessary evil… Their harmful impacts on human health and the environment are well-known disadvantages. Moreover, in all their varieties, whether insecticides, fungicides, herbicides, or others, their role is to secure harvests, preserve crop quality, and protect crops against biological aggressors. Without action, there would be no agricultural products, no way to safeguard harvests or protect crops from biological attackers such as pests and parasitic insects.


African Manager
09-08-2025
- African Manager
Tunisia banks on African economic cooperation to open new markets
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Migration, and Tunisians Abroad, Mohamed Ali Nafti, reaffirmed Tunisia's commitment to supporting economic opportunities abroad and assisting Tunisian businesspeople, during a reception organized by the Tunisia-Africa Business Council (TABC) in honor of the heads of Tunisia's diplomatic missions abroad. He stressed the need for an innovative approach to strengthen African economic cooperation, leveraging the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). He highlighted the importance of promoting Tunisian investments, tourism, and exports, stating that this effort requires effective tools to support the national economy and open new markets. TABC President Anis Jaziri praised the continued support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Tunisian diplomatic missions, particularly their contribution to organizing the annual 'Financing Investment & Trade in Africa' (FITA) conference. The event featured the presentation of the 'Tunisian Consortium for African Development' (TUCAD), an initiative bringing together several Tunisian institutions specializing in infrastructure, energy, and transport. This consortium aims to access African markets through an action program coordinated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and its diplomatic missions. Trade exchanges remain weak Although Tunisian exports to the African market, particularly Sub-Saharan Africa, remain low in volume due to a structural orientation toward the European Union, 'Made in Tunisia' is nonetheless starting to gain a foothold in several countries on the continent. Despite persistent logistical obstacles—the true Achilles' heel of Tunisian trade, the State has shown a clear determination to diversify its export outlets, with a strategic focus on Sub-Saharan markets. Tunisia's accession to the COMESA free trade area in 2018, followed by its accession to the AfCFTA, is part of this dynamic. While the results remain modest for now, COMESA membership has started to show signs of a shift toward East Africa, a region still largely unexplored by Tunisian operators. In 2024, trade between Tunisia and Sub-Saharan Africa reached 1.6 million dinars, according to Mourad Ben Hassine, CEO of the Export Promotion Center (CEPEX). Trade between Tunisia and Sub-Saharan African countries generates a trade surplus for Tunisia, with export revenues amounting to about 1.3 million dinars, he added, while presenting the first edition of the 'Africa Business Partnership Days' (ABPD 2025), an event aimed at developing partnerships between Tunisia and Sub-Saharan African countries.


Babnet
07-08-2025
- Babnet
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