COG at Organic Summit in Copenhagen

From August 18th-22nd 2025, Canadian Organic Growers’ Director of Policy and Research, Katie Fettes, traveled to Copenhagen, Denmark with Eva-Lena Lang, Executive Director of Organic BC, and Gillian Flies, Executive Director of the New Farm Centre, to attend the Organic Summit

Hosted in Denmark during its Presidency of the Council of the European Union, the Summit was co-hosted by a wide range of Danish stakeholders including Organic Denmark in close cooperation with the Danish Government. It brought together policymakers, farmers, businesses, researchers, and organic leaders from around the world to share strategies for expanding organic farming, growing markets, and advancing food system sustainability.

Denmark is widely recognized as a global leader in organic food and farming. More than 98% of Danes recognize the Danish Organic label, and 65.5% purchase organic weekly. The Summit provided an opportunity to learn directly about the policies and partnerships that have helped Denmark build one of the world’s strongest organic production sectors and markets, including the country’s goal of reaching 25% organic farmland by 2030 as part of broader EU targets.

Summit sessions highlighted the Danish model, including strong public policy, retail engagement, and partnerships including collaboration among farm organizations. Successful levers in Denmark offer ideas for Canada, including: 

Katie also spoke in the session on “National & Regional Policies Upscaling Organic Farming and Markets”, sharing recent work on evidence-based policy development and coalition-building through the Canadian Organic Alliance, alongside speakers from Tanzania, Denmark, The Netherlands and Scotland. 

Caption: Katie Fettes (at the podium) presents alongside (left to right) Dr. Nic Lampkin, Researcher, Thünen Institute​; Mwatima Juma, Chairperson, Tanzania Organic Agriculture Movement (TOAM); Michael Wilde, Founder, The Organic Embassy; Paul Holmbeck, World Board Member, IFOAM – Organics International; David McKay, Co-Director, Soil Association Scotland

Throughout the Summit, participants explored how the organic movement is evolving, including alignment with regenerative, agroecological and food sovereignty approaches, and new work on measuring outcomes and impacts by the Sustainable Food Trust, IFOAM Organics Europe and others. There was also discussion on Denmark’s new Green Tripartite Agreement – a historic agreement among government, farmers, and conservation to align land use, nature restoration, and food production.

While in Denmark, the Canadian delegation also visited a multigenerational mixed organic farm, a retailer with a growing commitment to organics (MENY Danmark), Northern Europe’s largest vocational college for the hospitality industry advancing organic and sustainable gastronomy (Hotel Og Restaurantskolen), and a public kitchen preparing 6,000 fresh school meals daily with 90% organic ingredients under Copenhagen’s 90% organic public procurement policy (EAT Copenhagen).

As Denmark’s Finance Minister Nicolai Wammen said in closing the Organic Summit: “We recognize organic as more than a production method – it’s about delivering for the public good. The world needs more organic!”

The Summit showed what is possible when governments, farmers, businesses, and citizens work together with a long-term vision. Canada has significant potential to grow organic production and markets as part of a resilient, competitive, and regenerative food system. Thanks Denmark for the inspiration and hospitality!