Sustainability Performance of Certified and Non-certified Food

Authors

  • Valentin Bellassen CESAER & AgroSup Dijon & INRAE & Université Bourgogne
  • Filippo Arfini University of Parma
  • Frederico Antonioli University of Parma
  • Antonio Bodini University of Parma
  • Michael Boehm ECOZEPT
  • Ružica Brečić Department of Agricultural Marketing, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Zagreb
  • Sara Chiussi University of Parma
  • Peter Csillag Department of Agribusiness, Corvinus University of Budapest
  • Michele Donati University of Parma
  • Liesbeth Dries Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University
  • Marion Drut CESAER & AgroSup Dijon & INRAE & Université Bourgogne
  • Matthieu Duboys de Labarre CESAER & AgroSup Dijon & INRAE & Université Bourgogne
  • Hugo Ferrer CREDA, Centre for Agro-Food Economy & Development, Catalonia Polytechnic University
  • Jelena Filipović Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Belgrade
  • Lisa Gauvrit ECOZEPT
  • José M. Gil CREDA, Centre for Agro-Food Economy & Development, Catalonia Polytechnic University
  • Matthew Gorton University of Newcastle
  • Viet Hoàng University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City
  • Mohamed Hilal CESAER & AgroSup Dijon & INRAE & Université Bourgogne
  • Kamilla Knutsen Steinnes Consumption Research Norway (SIFO), Oslo Metropolitan University
  • Apichaya Lilavanichakul Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Faculty of Economics, Kasetsart University
  • Agata Malak-Rawlikowska Institute of Economics and Finance / SGGW, Warsaw University of Life Sciences
  • Edward Majewski Institute of Economics and Finance / SGGW, Warsaw University of Life Sciences
  • Sylvette Monier-Dilhan US ODR, INRAE
  • Paul Muller BETA, University of Lorraine & University of Strasbourg & CNRS
  • Orachos Napasintuwong Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Faculty of Economics, Kasetsart University
  • Kalliroi Nikolau Department of Agricultural Economics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
  • Mai Nguyen University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City
  • An Nguyễn Quỳnh University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City
  • Iohannis Papadopoulos Department of Agricultural Economics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
  • Jack Peerlings Department of Social Sciences, Wageningen University
  • Aron Török Department of Agribusiness, Corvinus University of Budapest
  • Thomas Poméon US ODR, INRAE
  • Bojan Ristic Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Belgrade
  • Burkhard Schaer ECOZEPT
  • Zaklina Stojanovic Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Belgrade
  • Barbara Tocco University of Newcastle
  • Marina Tomic Maksan Department of Agricultural Marketing, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Zagreb
  • Mario Veneziani University of Parma
  • Gunnar Vitterso SIFO, Oslo Metropolitan University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1163/24523666-bja10009

Keywords:

sustainability performance, economic performance, environmental performance, social performance, certified food, protected designation of origin, protected geographical indication, organic farming

Abstract

The dataset Sustainability performance of certified and non-certified food (https://www.doi.org/10.15454/OP51SJ) contains 25 indicators of economic, environmental, and social performance, estimated for 27 certified food value chains and their 27 conventional reference products. The indicators are estimated at different levels of the value chain: farm level, processing level, and retail level. It also contains the raw data based on which the indicators are estimated, its source, and the completed spreadsheet calculators for the following indicators: carbon footprint and food miles. This article describes the common method and indicators used to collect data for the twenty-seven certified products and their conventional counterparts. It presents the assumptions and choices, the process of data collection, and the indicator estimation methods designed to assess the three sustainability dimensions within a reasonable time constraint. That is: three person-months for each food quality scheme and its noncertified reference product. Several prioritisations were set regarding data collection (indicator, variable, value chain level) together with a level of representativeness specific to each variable and product type (country and sector). Technical details on how relatively common variables (e.g., number of animals per hectare) are combined into indicators (e.g., carbon footprint) are provided in the full documentation of the dataset.

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Published

2021-12-13

Issue

Section

Data Papers

How to Cite

Sustainability Performance of Certified and Non-certified Food. (2021). Research Data Journal for the Humanities and Social Sciences, 6, 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1163/24523666-bja10009