by Ben Heron, Sustainable Herbs Manager, Pukka Herbs and Founder, Biolaya
Biolaya is a small organization focused on organically cultivating and/or sustainably harvesting endangered Himalayan medicinal plants in the Indian Himalayas. Ben Heron, founder of Biolaya, has generously allowed SHP to share content while their website is down. Here we have included his introduction to the use of internal control systems to ensure that so called sustainably sourced herbs are, in fact, sustainably sourced.
Good Agricultural and Collection Practices for Medicinal Plants (or GACP for short) are a set of guidelines developed in 2003 by the World Health Organisation (WHO), aimed at improving the safety, efficacy and sustainability of medicinal plant material being used in herbal medicines in the market.
The original guidelines are, to be frank, quite boring; made up of 80 pages of heavy text the document is very unlikely to be high up on any farmer’s reading list. However, as dull as they may be, the guidelines are very important and deserve to be known to everyone who grows, collects or processes medicinal herbs.
In very simple terms Good Agricultural and Collection Practices for Medicinal Plants have been developed because of the growing concern of the amount of medicinal plant material being produced using Bad Agricultural and Collection Practices. There are countless examples of ‘bad’ practices; it may be walking on the herbs, harvesting them at the wrong time of year or storing them in dirty sacks. The end result is a product that may be unsafe, ineffective or unsustainable.
In most cases the consequences of bad practices are not life-threatening, but in a few rare cases the consequences can be serious; herbs contaminated with heavy metals, for example, can lead to liver/kidney failure; a misidentified or adulterated species can be fatal.
In the last decade or two there have been several widely publicised cases of herbal medicines causing serious health problems (such as arsenic poisoning, or kidney damage caused by species adulteration). Although such cases are very rare, they have shone a spotlight on the less desirable elements of the herbal industry, putting governments under pressure to tighten regulations and provide consumers with greater safety and quality assurance.
This has led to some rather draconian legislation such as the THMPD in the EU, which may well have reduced the risk of consumer illness, but has also had the effect of significantly reducing the availability of herbal products in the market. One of the few positives that has come out of this is a greater emphasis on the need for GACP with more support for developing good practices on the ground.
I became aware of the GACP guidelines through Pukka Herbs, who distributed the guidelines to every supplier / potential supplier as soon as they were released in 2003. But it wasn’t until I actually started working part-time for Pukka in 2006 that I got involved in the nitty-gritty details. The job description they gave me was basically to help them embed GACP in their supply chain, which required working closely with their suppliers in India and Sri Lanka – something I have continued doing ever since.
As part of my GACP mission I started working with Surie to develop some basic training material – I would write the content and Surie would do the illustrations. We developed a series of simple booklets that were translated into the various different languages of Pukka’s suppliers.
Largely because of this work, in 2008 I was invited to work as a consultant for FAO India on a project called “Organic Production of Under-utilized Medicinal, Aromatic and Natural Dye Plants (MADP) Programme for Sustainable Livelihoods in South Asia”. One of the main objectives of the job was to develop a wider set of GACP training tools for farmers, which included a more detailed illustrated booklet, an online ‘cause-effect’ training tool and a training film. I have added most of these to the page on GACP Training Tools (to be linked once the Biolaya website is back online).
For us it was important for us to practice what we preached, and our projects at Biolaya were an opportunity to do that. Whether it was post-harvest processing of our kutki, or sustainable wild collection of oregano, they provided opportunities to experiment with implementing the standards, as well as valuable case-studies to share with others.
We did a lot of work on GACP, but in the bigger scheme of things we barely scratched the surface. The principles remain more or less the same regardless of region or species, but ‘good’ practices can vary enormously. There is a need for a much wider variety of farmer-friendly guidelines and technologies that can be adapted to the many different environmental and economic contexts in which herbs are grown.
If more producers start implementing GACP we will see the results in the quality of the finished products. Then hopefully the spotlight can be moved away from ‘what can go wrong’, and once again be shone on the incredible benefits of plant-based medicine.