Skip to content
We Are Bio
· By We Are Bio

EU Organic Farming and Sustainability — What Buyers Should Know

How the EU Common Agricultural Policy, the Euro-leaf logo, and organic certification work — a short guide for buyers and retailers sourcing from Europe.

· certifications· organic· EU· sustainability

Environmental sustainability and the future of farming have long been on the European agenda — for both domestic supply and export markets. Within the European Union, sustainability policy for producers and farmers is governed through the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), developed by the European Commission. Its stated goal is to ensure the social, economic, and environmental sustainability of agriculture and forestry in the EU, treating the three pillars as interconnected.

This combined approach — rooted in the latest research, knowledge, and innovation — is aimed at building a competitive and environmentally responsible future for European farming.

Key actions under EU sustainability policy

The Common Agricultural Policy rests on several central pillars:

  • A biodiversity strategy aimed at protecting Europe's ecosystems
  • Climate measures targeting net-zero harmful emissions by 2050
  • A forestry strategy to protect and regenerate EU forests
  • A zero-pollution action plan for soil, water, and air

What organic farming actually requires

Organic farming demands a responsible approach to energy and resource use, active support of biodiversity, ecological balance, soil fertility, and water quality. It is not simply the absence of synthetic inputs — it is a farming model that requires active stewardship of the land.

The Euro-leaf — certification you can verify

To mark certified organic products, the EU uses the Euro-leaf logo. This small green symbol is a legal marker that a product meets strict conditions throughout production, transport, and storage. The Euro-leaf is not decorative — it is governed by Regulation (EU) 2018/848 and verified by accredited certifying bodies.

Organic production, as defined under EU law, prohibits the use of GMOs and ionizing radiation, restricts synthetic fertilisers, herbicides, and pesticides, bans hormones in livestock, and sharply limits the use of antibiotics.

Why this matters for buyers

For distributors, wholesalers, and retailers sourcing from Europe, understanding the EU organic framework is essential. It is not a loose marketing claim — it is a legal, verifiable standard. When a supplier carries the Euro-leaf, there is a certification code behind it, an accredited body that audits it, and documentation that traces compliance from field to jar.

At We Are Bio, every certified product carries its full certification reference, the issuing body, and current validity dates. If you are building an organic range for your store, ask your suppliers the same question: "Can I verify your certification code?" A professional supplier will answer yes — without hesitation. You can see how we handle certifications as one concrete example of what transparent disclosure looks like.

Interested in sourcing organic Spanish food? Request our trade catalogue and samples.

Request Catalogue

We use cookies to understand how visitors use our site and to improve your experience. We use Google Analytics for anonymous usage data. No advertising cookies. Cookie Policy