Business, trade and market intelligence: Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) database

Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) Forum 2024

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12 September 2024

View the full recording of the live streamed event

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Bern, Eventforum

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PE-SJ3331
Overview

<p>The 2024 edition of the International Trade Centre’s (ITC) flagship event, the Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) Forum, was<strong> </strong>co-organized with the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) on 12 September 2024 at the Eventforum Bern and streamed online.</p><p>This hybrid event contextualized<strong> </strong>the evolving needs of small businesses in contributing to the sustainable development amidst the current geopolitical and regulatory challenges. The wide range of stakeholders present<strong> </strong>discussed<strong> </strong>various solutions including capacity building, private sector engagement and global public goods to foster concerted action towards a sustainable future.</p>

Good Trade Summit / T4SD Forum

Overview

The Trade for Sustainable Development Forum (T4SD Forum) is ITC’s leading global event on sustainable supply chains, bringing together key stakeholders including policymakers, business support organizations, sustainability standard groups, and the private sector including small businesses.

Next event

Date: 12 September 2024
Location: Bern, Switzerland
Partners: Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO)

The 2024 edition of the International Trade Centre’s (ITC) flagship event, the Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) Forum, will be co-organized with the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO) on 12 September 2024 at the Eventforum Bern and streamed online.

This hybrid event will contextualize the evolving needs of small businesses in contributing to the sustainable development amidst the current geopolitical and regulatory challenges. The wide range of stakeholders present will discuss various solutions including capacity building, private sector engagement and global public goods to foster concerted action towards a sustainable future.

Call to Action

At the Good Trade Summit, ITC will launch a Call to Action: ‘Uniting Sustainable Actions. This Call to Action stands as a distinctive and comprehensive initiative, uniting small businesses and diverse actors under a shared commitment to drive sustainable trade practices. Its holistic approach, focus on empowerment, collaboration, and digital transparency which sets it apart, making it a catalyst for tangible, positive change across global value chains.

Past events

ITC is organizing the Good Trade Summit 2023, jointly with BCIU, on 20 September 2023, in New York, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly. The event will explore the theme of Global Cooperation: Working Together to Build Sustainable & Inclusive Supply Chains. 

2023 marks the midpoint for the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the 2030 Agenda. At this crucial juncture, the Summit will engage key stakeholders, from governments, multilateral organizations, and the private sector, including small businesses, brands and retailers. The event will focus on amplifying the voice of small businesses as active contributors to the SDGs in setting the policy agenda.

From factory collapses to dam failures and mine disasters – the past two decades have seen a string of tragedies exposing the life-threatening risks in supply chains. Such incidents not only revealed the dire conditions faced by upstream workers, but also shined a light on the need for better risk monitoring in value chains.

Along with social concerns, environmental challenges have further strained supply chains, with climate change amplifying cross-cutting issues.

Policymakers around the globe responded with a patchwork of new laws, often at national levels, to prevent such incidents from re-occuring. However, there was a pressing need to develop international frameworks and enforcement mechanisms to streamline the national policies that were fragmented at best.

In light of these challenges, a growing movement emerged to safeguard human rights and protect the environment in the global economy. On a supranational level, in February 2022, the EU adopted its proposal on corporate sustainability due diligence, which aims to foster sustainable and responsible corporate behaviour throughout global value chains.

The 2022 edition of the T4SD Forum delved into corporate sustainability governance and took a critical look at how the evolving regulatory landscape affects small-business owners, especially the upstream players in developing countries.

Read more about the event

View the programme

Watch the forum

 

Woman speaks at podium
Executive Director Pamela Coke-Hamilton delivered the Opening Keynote Remarks at the T4SD Forum 2022.
Photo by ITC
Three people in red chairs speak on stage at a conference
Ana Yaluff from ADM, moderator Stacey Vanek Smith from NPR, and Emi-Beth Aku Quantson from Kawa Moka Coffee Company speak at the T4SD Forum 2022.
Photo by ITC

 

Forty years ago, consumers thought very little about their products. Coffee was “just coffee”, and shoppers didn’t care much about where it came from, what variety it was, and even less about how it was produced.

Over time, however, NGO-led initiatives lifted the curtain on production conditions, exposing the steep environmental and social costs of unsustainable sourcing. New sustainability concerns led to the emergence of Voluntary Sustainability Standards to monitor production practices and communicate sustainability efforts.

In 2020, the eruption of COVID on the world stage profoundly altered the sustainability landscape. Suddenly, audits for voluntary standards had to be conducted remotely, companies had to reconfigure their supply chains, and small businesses had to adjust and innovate at lightning speed – all against the backdrop of an impending climate crisis.

In light of these burning new challenges, has sustainability taken a back seat? Has the pandemic slowed the rise of these standards? How can small businesses, governments, and the financial sector make sense of the increasingly complex sustainability landscape? And what is the role of sustainability standards in post-COVID recovery?

To address these questions, ITC brought together its network of partners and experts, and leverages 10 years of insight as the only global, neutral institution to map these standards.

See more about the event

ITC hosted a novel, virtual summit in a year that saw most major events cancelled or postponed.

The summit responded to the interconnected trade and development challenges brought to the forefront by the COVID-19 crisis and merged SheTrades Global, the premier global event linking women entrepreneurs with buyers and partners, with the Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) Forum, one of the leading global events on sustainable value chains.

The crisis exposed the frailty of our value chains and has disproportionally
affected women. The discussions considered:

How can we use this moment to hit the reset button and build more resilient, inclusive and sustainable value chains? How can we ensure that ‘good trade’ for positive and inclusive economic, environmental and social impact is the way forward in a post-COVID world?

See the summit's first and second days.

As the world spins faster and faster towards a climate emergency, maintaining the status quo is no longer an option. And in a shifting global context where multilateralism is under threat, the need for swift, collaborative action has never been greater.

The sixth edition of the Trade for Sustainable Development Forum focused on sustainability mainstreaming – the process of embedding sustainability into the DNA of every organization and every business. The three-day event looked at sustainability mainstreaming from every angle: from its policy implications to its implementation on the ground, from its environmental dimension to its social dimension, from SMEs to large corporations.

Photos from Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3

Videos from the 2019 Forum

 

The fifth T4SD Forum discussed Sustainable Development Goal 12: Responsible Consumption and Production and its relationship with sustainable trade in global value chains.

SDG 12 aims at “doing more and better with less”, by promoting a more resource efficient economy and encouraging industries, companies and consumers to move towards more sustainable patterns of consumption. For global value chains, shifting towards greener production practices demands collaboration among all actors from producers to final consumers.

The 2018 T4SD Forum aimed to:

  • Provide a unique platform to discuss sustainable trade practices and identify innovative best practices - vis-à-vis the implementation of SDG 12.
  • Identify challenges and opportunities for SMEs arising from a shift to a greener economy for the implementation of SDG 12.
  • Leverage ITC’s contribution to the Global Goals through support to SME international competitiveness for inclusive and sustainable growth through value addition, trade, investment and global partnerships.

Videos on sustainable farming and commercial diplomacy

Photos from the panel sessions, the Project Lab and Partner's Day, and the High-level sessions

 

The event explored key themes around partnerships:

  • Why are some models more successful in achieving sustainability objectives?
  • What are common elements of success when standards organizations, policy makers and private companies work well together?
  • What can we expect from successful collaboration?
  • What issues should we consider when engaging in new partnerships?

Photos from the opening day, Partner's Day and Open House, the high-level panel at the WTO Public Forum, and the Photo Booth.

Video from the Forum

Connecting communities in policy and business, trade and sustainability, this Forum challenged thought leaders to bridge the gap between debates on sustainability standards, supply chains, and international trade to work towards achieving the UN Global Goals for Sustainable Development (SDGs).
The focus was on the importance of data-driven decision making in sustainable value chains. The sessions brought out candid exchanges of views, with the latest industry and policy insights and experience.
The Forum highlighted why sustainability information and data matter and how to make smarter decisions as a business leader, a policymaker, or a consumer.

Photos from sessions on Connecting the unconnected, How the future will look, the Keynote on making the most of sustainable value chain data, Leveraging the digital revolution, the opening addess, a signing ceremony, a side event on sustainable consumption and production, and the Opening session at the WTO.

Videos from the Opening session, the first session and the second session.

The second T4SD Forum featured leaders in international trade who took an innovative approach to supply chain management, to ensure that small-scale producers have a voice in the global market.
The Forum featured representatives from multinational corporations, governments, international organizations academia, and non-government organizations.

Photos from sessions on:

Driving innovation

Setting the foundation for the forum

Innovative solutions for sustainable supply chains

How to make continual improvements

Closing remarks.

Video from the sessions on innovation solutions for sustainable supply chains, new initiatives and thinking about sustainability.

At the inaugural forum, ITC launched a charter to bring transparency and harmonization of standards among major buyers, certification bodies and policymakers.
Standards protect workers, the environment and consumers, while offering producers a door to access new markets. Public procurement increasingly reflects the influence of these private initiatives, blurring the line between public and private standards.
While standards address consumer concerns about environmental, labour and social issues, it is challenging for producers to comply with so many different, overlapping standards. Dialogue among policymakers, suppliers and buyers during this event aimed to contribute to transparent, harmonized standards that contribute to sustainable development goals.

Photos from sessions on

The supplier perspective - implementing sustainability standards

The buyer perspective - sustainable sourcing and SME integration into supply chains

Linking supply and demand

Towards core principles for sustainable trade

Closing remarks

Networking session

 

 

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Business, trade and market intelligence: Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) database
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Context

Your roadmap to sustainable production, consumption and trade 

The Trade for Sustainable Development (T4SD) Programme at the International Trade Centre is a partnership-based programme which empowers and equips micro, small and medium- sized enterprises (MSMEs) to improve their sustainability performance for better efficiency and international competitiveness.  

The Programme does this through providing a global sustainability platform (scale), impactful partnerships (reach) and direct trade-related assistance to MSMEs (transformation) along two main intervention pillars: sustainability standards and social responsibility. 

With our help, farmers are now able to certify their products as organic, and companies are learning how to become sustainable and can apply for green finance. Our resources also provide tools for businesses to assess their compliance against sustainability standards and potentially access preferential bank loans based on their sustainability score. 

Accelerating the transition to sustainable and inclusive trade
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Assisting my farmers to become organic certified was greatly facilitated using Standards Map.
Coffee Cooperative owner from Costa Rica
Assisting my farmers to become organic certified was greatly facilitated using Standards Map.
Daniela
Coffee Cooperative owner from Costa Rica
Advising companies to become more sustainable is now made easy leveraging the Sustainability Gateway solutions.
Board member of Sustain4ever, Ghana
Advising companies to become more sustainable is now made easy leveraging the Sustainability Gateway solutions.
Louisa
Board member of Sustain4ever, Ghana
By implementing more sustainable production, many companies have turned greener and have obtained access to green finance.
Vietnamese Ministry of Trade
By implementing more sustainable production, many companies have turned greener and have obtained access to green finance.
Thui
Vietnamese Ministry of Trade, Trade Officer
Lacoste is leveraging the Sustainability Map platform to build the transparency of its global value chain.
Claire - Quality director
Lacoste is leveraging the Sustainability Map platform to build the transparency of its global value chain.
Claire
Quality Director, Lacoste

T4SD video

T4SD

T4SD 2 12 November 2021

Resources

Sustainable Development Goals

This project contributes to the following Sustainable Development Goals, as defined by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

<p><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><span lang="EN-GB">T4SD has become recognized as the go-to source of information on voluntary sustainability standards (VSS), with unique, detailed and user-friendly action oriented tools. VSS will continue to be the primary vehicle underpinning the shift towards sustainable value chains for private sector players, and the new sustainability regulation and legislative actions planned by governments will inevitably rely on these existing VSS/private initiatives. In</span> 2021 T4SD launched its 2022-2025 strategy which is aligned with ITC&apos;s new corporate strategy and as such contributes to ITC&apos;s objectives on trade and environmental sustainability. The T4SD strategy and programme approach is based on &apos;projects, platforms and partnerships&apos; and aims to enable T4SD to become the global reference for trade and improved sustainability performance of SMEs. To achieve this, the T4SD programme will:</span></p><ul><li><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">Contribute to more supportive business ecosystem by providing cutting-edge knowledge on trade-related value chain sustainability requirements</span></li><li><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">Empower MSMEs to meet sustainability requirements</span></li><li><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">Drive VSS convergence and harmonization and optimize solutions with market partners; and&nbsp;</span></li><li><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">Influence international trade and sustainability frameworks</span></li></ul><p><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">Underpinning these efforts is the &apos;core&apos; of the T4SD programme, the T4SD global VSS database (Standards Map) as well as the online market linkages platform (Sustainability Map) that power the above four intervention areas. This project supports the maintenance, updating and further development of these Global Public Goods fulfilling ITC&apos;s commitment to provide transparency on VSS, as well as the related awareness-raising and capacity-building activities.</span></p><p><span style="color: rgb(97, 189, 109);">In 2023, T4SD activities under the project will be condensed, with a more prominent focus on the Global Public Goods, to reflect available resources. First, T4SD will continue implementing activities to ensure the continuity and quality of relevant standards data, the database, and its public interface. In addition, the project will increase awareness of VSS and drive convergence in VSS through publications, online tools, and enabling market partners and BSOs to support MSMEs.&nbsp;</span></p><p><span style="color: rgb(41, 105, 176);">In 2024, T4SD will focus on implementing the recommendations that spring from the recently-completed T4SD database evaluation. &nbsp;At the same time, T4SD will continue to ensure the continuity and quality of relevant standards data, the database, and its public interface. In addition, the project will increase awareness of VSS and drive convergence in VSS through publications, online tools, and enabling market partners and BSOs to support MSMEs.&nbsp;</span><span style="color: rgb(41, 105, 176);">T4SD will also build on the Standards Map and its industry networks to develop the &quot;Sustainability Compact&quot; in light of the changing sustainability landscape with the growing complexity of mandatory/regulatory sustainability measures. &nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p><p>The project&apos;s outcome is ultimately to support MSMEs to become more internationally competitive through adoption of sustainable practices and accessing new business opportunities. This will be achieved through four outputs, which are aligned with all four intermediate outcomes of the ITC&apos;s 2022-2025 strategic framework.</p>

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External ID
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