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The global food chain — from farm to fork — faces unique and complex social responsibility challenges. Issues such as food safety, traceability, fair trade, labour conditions in agriculture, environmental impact of food production, and consumer health are all part of a landscape where the stakes could not be higher. ISO/TS 26030:2019 addresses this need by providing sector-specific guidance on applying the principles of ISO 26000:2010 — the international benchmark for social responsibility — to organizations operating in the food chain.
ISO 26000:2010 defines social responsibility as “the responsibility of an organization for the impacts of its decisions and activities on society and the environment, through transparent and ethical behaviour.” ISO/TS 26030 translates this into practical, actionable guidance for food chain organizations of all sizes and types — from smallholder farms to multinational food processors and retailers.
Good governance is the foundation upon which all other social responsibility practices are built. For food chain organizations, this means:
The food chain presents particular human rights challenges, especially in agricultural supply chains that span multiple countries with different legal frameworks. Key issues include:
Due diligence: Organizations must identify, prevent, and mitigate actual and potential human rights impacts throughout their supply chains. This is particularly challenging in complex, multi-tier agricultural supply chains.
Vulnerable groups: Migrant farm workers, smallholder farmers, women in agriculture, and children are especially vulnerable to human rights violations. The standard emphasizes the need for special attention to these groups.
Fundamental labour rights: Freedom of association, collective bargaining, elimination of forced labour, abolition of child labour, and non-discrimination in employment are non-negotiable principles.
Food production and processing are among the most labour-intensive industries. ISO/TS 26030 addresses five key areas:
| Issue | Food Chain Challenges | Recommended Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Employment relationships | Seasonal work, casual labour, contract farming | Fair contracts, equal treatment of temporary and permanent workers |
| Working conditions | Long hours in processing plants, extreme heat/cold in agriculture | Fair wages, reasonable hours, adequate breaks, social protection |
| Social dialogue | Weak unionization in many food sectors | Encourage worker representation, regular consultation |
| Occupational health and safety | Machinery hazards, chemical exposure, ergonomic strain, biological risks | Comprehensive OHS management, training, PPE provision |
| Human development | Limited career progression for seasonal/ migrant workers | Skills training, career pathways, literacy programmes |
The food chain is both a major contributor to environmental challenges and highly vulnerable to their impacts. The standard addresses:
Pollution prevention: Minimizing agricultural runoff (nitrates, phosphates, pesticides), food processing wastes, packaging waste, and food loss across the supply chain. The “food loss and waste” issue receives particular attention — approximately one-third of all food produced globally is lost or wasted.
Sustainable resource use: Water stewardship in agriculture (which accounts for 70% of global freshwater withdrawals), soil conservation, energy efficiency in processing and cold chains, and sustainable sourcing of raw materials.
Climate change: Both mitigation (reducing GHG emissions from agriculture, transportation, and processing) and adaptation (building resilience in supply chains facing changing weather patterns).
Biodiversity: Protecting ecosystems from conversion for agriculture, promoting agroecological practices, and avoiding sourcing from areas of high conservation value.
Fair operating practices (4.6): Anti-corruption, responsible political involvement, fair competition, promoting social responsibility in the value chain, and respect for property rights. The standard particularly emphasizes fair contracting with smallholder farmers and transparent pricing mechanisms.
Consumer issues (4.7): Fair marketing and factual information, protecting consumer health and safety (food safety), sustainable consumption, consumer service and complaint resolution, data protection, access to essential services, and consumer education about nutrition and sustainable food choices.
Community involvement (4.8): Local community engagement, education and culture support, employment creation (especially in rural areas), technology development and access, wealth and income creation, community health initiatives, and social investment in producing regions.
ISO/TS 26030 is not a certification standard — like ISO 26000, it is guidance only. However, it provides a robust framework for organizations to move from good intentions to measurable, reportable good practices. The standard includes annexes with examples of good practices from across the food chain (Annex A), a stakeholder mapping tool (Annex B), and a correlation table linking the standard’s provisions to the SDGs (Annex C).