Organic
vegetables at a farmers' market in Argentina.
Organic
foods are made according to certain production standards.
The use of conventional non-organic pesticides, insecticides
and herbicides is greatly restricted and avoided as a last resort.
However, contrary to popular belief, certain non-organic fertilisers
are still used. If livestock are involved, they must be reared
without the routine use of antibiotics and without the use of
growth hormones, and generally fed a healthy diet. In most countries,
organic produce may not be genetically modified.
Organic
food production is a heavily regulated industry, distinct from
private gardening. Currently, the European Union, the United
States, Canada, Japan and many other countries require producers
to obtain special certification in order to market food as "organic"
within their borders. Most certifications allow some chemicals
and pesticides to be used, so consumers should be aware of the
standards for qualifying as "organic" in their respective locales.
Historically,
organic farms have been relatively small family-run farms —
which is why organic food was once only available in small stores
or farmers' markets. However, since the early 1990s organic
food production has had growth rates of around 20% a year, far
ahead of the rest of the food industry, in both developed and
developing nations. As of April 2008, organic food accounts
for 1-2% of food sales worldwide.
Meaning
and origin of the term
In 1939,
Lord Northbourne coined the term organic farming in his
book Look to the Land (written in 1939, but published
in 1940), out of his conception of "the farm as organism", to
describe a holistic, ecologically-balanced approach to farming
-- in contrast to what he called chemical farming, which
relied on "imported fertility" and "cannot be self-sufficient
nor an organic whole". This is different than the classic use
of the term "organic", to refer to a class of molecules that
contain carbon, especially those involved in the chemistry of
life.
Identifying
organic food
Mixed
organic bean sprouts
Processed
organic food usually contains only organic ingredients. If non-organic
ingredients are present, at least a certain percentage of the
food's total plant and animal ingredients must be organic (95%
in the United States and Australia) and any non-organically
produced ingredients are subject to various agricultural requirements.
Foods claiming to be organic must be free of artificial food
additives, and are often processed with fewer artificial methods,
materials and conditions, such as chemical ripening, food irradiation,
and genetically modified ingredients.
They may
also be required to be produced using energy-saving technologies
and packaged using recyclable or biodegradable materials when
possible.
Early consumers
interested in organic food would look for non-chemically treated,
fresh or minimally processed food. They mostly had to buy directly
from growers: "Know your farmer, know your food" was the motto.
Personal definitions of what constituted "organic" were developed
through firsthand experience: by talking to farmers, seeing
farm conditions, and farming activities. Small farms grew vegetables
(and raised livestock) using organic farming practices, with
or without certification, and the individual consumer monitored.
As demand for organic foods continues to increase, high volume
sales through mass outlets such as supermarkets are rapidly
replacing the direct farmer connection. However, for supermarket
consumers, food production is not easily observable, and product
labeling, like "certified organic", is relied on. Government
regulations and third-party inspectors are looked to for assurance.
A "certified organic" label is usually the only way for consumers
to know that a processed product is "organic".
Legal
definition
The National
Organic Program (run by the USDA) is in charge of the legal
definition of organic in the United States and does
organic certification.
To be
certified organic, products must be grown and manufactured
in a manner that adheres to standards set by the country they
are sold in:
- Australia:
NASAA Organic Standard
- Canada:
Canada Gazette, Government of Canada
- European
Union: EU-Eco-regulation
- Sweden:
KRAV
- United
Kingdom: Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
(DEFRA)
- India:
NPOP, (National Program for Organic Production)
- Japan:
JAS Standards.
- United
States: National Organic Program (NOP) Standards
Environmental
impact
Several
surveys and studies have attempted to examine and compare conventional
and organic systems of farming. The general consensus across
these surveys is that organic farming is less damaging for the
following reasons:
- Organic
farms do not consume or release synthetic pesticides into
the environment — some of which have the potential to harm
soil, water and local terrestrial and aquatic wildlife.
- Organic
farms are better than conventional farms at sustaining diverse
ecosystems, i.e., populations of plants and insects,
as well as animals.
- When
calculated either per unit area or per unit of yield, organic
farms use less energy and produce less waste, e.g.,
waste such as packaging materials for chemicals.
However,
some critics of organic farming methods believe that organic
farms require more land to produce the same amount of food as
conventional farms (see 'Yield' section, below). They argue
that if this is true, organic farms could potentially destroy
the rainforests and wipe out many ecosystems.
A 2003 investigation
by the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs in
the UK found, similar to other reports, that organic farming
"can produce positive environmental benefits", but that some
of the benefits were decreased or lost when comparisons are
made on "the basis of unit production rather than area".
Yield
One study
found a 20% smaller yield from organic farms using 50% less
fertilizer and 97% less pesticide. Studies comparing yields
have had mixed results. Supporters claim that organically managed
soil has a higher quality and higher water retention. This may
help increase yields for organic farms in drought years.
One study
from the Danish Environmental Protection Agency found that,
area-for-area, organic farms of potatoes, sugar beet and seed
grass produce as little as half the output of conventional farming.
Findings like these, and the dependence of organic food on manure
from low-yield cattle, has prompted criticism from scientists
that organic farming is environmentally unsound and incapable
of feeding the world population. Among these critics are Norman
Borlaug, father of the "green revolution," and winner of the
Nobel Peace Prize, who asserts that organic farming practices
can at most feed 4 billion people, after expanding cropland
dramatically and destroying ecosystems in the process.
Michael Pollan responds to this by pointing out that
average yield of world agriculture is substantially lower than
modern sustainable farming yields. Bringing average world yields
up to modern organic levels could increase the worlds food supply
by 50 %.
A 2007 study
compiling research from 293 different comparisons into a single
study to assess the overall efficiency of the two agricultural
systems has concluded that
organic
methods could produce enough food on a global per capita basis
to sustain the current human population, and potentially an
even larger population, without increasing the agricultural
land base (from the abstract)
The researchers
also found that while in developed countries, organic systems
on average produce 92% of the yield produced by conventional
agriculture, organic systems produce 80% more than conventional
farms in developing countries, because the materials needed
for organic farming are more accessible than synthetic farming
materials to farmers in some poor countries. On the other hand,
communities that lack sufficient manure to replenish soils would
struggle with organic farming, and the soil would degrade rapidly.
Energy
Efficiency
Some studies
are also consistent in showing that organic farms are more energy
efficient.
Pesticides
and farmers
There are
studies detailing the effects and side effects of pesticides
upon the health of farm workers. Even when pesticides are used
correctly, they still end up in the air and bodies of farm workers.
Through these studies, organophosphate pesticides have become
associated with acute health problems such as abdominal pain,
dizziness, headaches, nausea, vomiting, as well as skin and
eye problems. In addition, there have been many other studies
that have found pesticide exposure is associated with more severe
health problems such as respiratory problems, memory disorders,
dermatologic conditions, cancer, depression, neurologic deficits,
miscarriages, and birth defects. Summaries of peer-reviewed
research have examined the link between pesticide exposure and
neurological outcomes and cancer in organophosphate-exposed
workers.
Imported
fruits and vegetables from South America are more likely to
contain high level of pesticides, even pesticides banned for
use in the United States.
Migratory birds, such as Swainson's hawks, have wintering
grounds in Argentina where thousands of them were found dead
from monocrotophos insecticide poisoning.
Pesticide
residue
A study
published in 2002 showed that "Organically grown foods consistently
had about one-third as many residues as conventionally grown
foods."
Monitoring
of pesticide residues in the United States is carried out by
the Pesticide Data Program (part of USDA, which was created
in 1990. It has since tested over 60 different types of food
for over 400 different types of pesticides - with samples collected
close to the point of consumption. Their most recent results
found in 2005 that:
| “ |
These
data indicate that 29.5 percent of all samples tested contained
no detectable pesticides [parent compound and metabolite(s)
combined], 30 percent contained 1 pesticide, and slightly
over 40 percent contained more than 1 pesticide. |
” |
|
—USDA,
Pesticide Data Program
|
Several
studies corroborate this finding by having found that while
77 percent of conventional food carries synthetic pesticide
residues, only about 25 percent of organic food does.
A study
published by the National Research Council in 1993 determined
that for infants and children, the major source of exposure
to pesticides is through diet. A recent study in 2006 measured
the levels of organophosphorus pesticide exposure in 23 schoolchildren
before and after replacing their diet with organic food. In
this study it was found that levels of organophosphorus pesticide
exposure dropped dramatically and immediately when the children
switched to an organic diet. Food residue limits established
by law are set specifically with children in mind and consider
a child's lifetime ingestion of each pesticide.
There are
controversial data on the health implications of certain pesticides.
For example, the herbicide Atrazine has been shown in some experiments
to be a teratogen, causing demasculinization in male frogs exposed
to small concentrations. Under the effects of Atrazine, male
frogs were found to have greatly increased occurrences of either
malformed gonads, or testicular gonads which contain non-degenerate
eggs. Effects were however significantly reduced in high concentrations,
as is consistent with other teratogens affecting the endocrine
system, such as estradiol.
Organic
farming standards do not allow the use of synthetic pesticides,
but they do allow the use of specific pesticides derived from
plants. The most common organic pesticides, accepted for restricted
use by most organic standards, include Bt, pyrethrum, and rotenone.
Some organic pesticides, such as rotenone, have high toxicity
to fish and aquatic creatures with some toxicity to mammals.
It causes Parkinson's disease if injected into rats.
The United
States Environmental Protection Agency and state agencies periodically
review the licensing of suspect pesticides, but the process
of de-listing is slow. One example of this slow process is exemplified
by the pesticide Dichlorvos, or DDVP, which as recently as the
year 2006 the EPA proposed its continued sale. The EPA has almost
banned this pesticide on several occasions since the 1970s,
but it never did so despite considerable evidence that suggests
DDVP is not only carcinogenic but dangerous to the human nervous
system — especially in children. The EPA "has determined that
risks do not exceed levels of concern," a study of longterm
exposure to DDVP in rats showed no toxic effects.
These concerns
over the particular impact of pesticides on children have not
gone unheeded. Fio360, an eco early-care center in Atlanta,
GA, has even gone so far as to prepare organic foods for its
clients' children.
The Environmental
Working Group (EWG), a non-profit research and advocacy group,
released a list of the pesticide residues for 44 fruits and
vegetables in 2007. The list was compiled from data obtained
between 2000 and 2005 from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA). The FDA tested nearly 43,000 samples. Peaches and apples
contain the most pesticides and onions and avacodos contain
the least amounts of pesticide residue. The following are ranked
from the most pesticide load to least pesticide load. The pesticide
scores range from 100 being the highest pesticide load to 1
being the lowest pesticide load.
Pesticide
Load in Fruits and Vegetables
| RANK |
FRUIT/VEGETABLE |
PESTICIDE
LOAD |
| 1
(worst) |
Peach |
100
(highest) |
| 2 |
Apple |
93 |
| 3 |
Sweet
Bell Pepper |
83 |
| 4 |
Celery |
82 |
| 5 |
Nectarine |
81 |
| 6 |
Strawberries |
80 |
| 7 |
Cherries |
73 |
| 8 |
Kale |
69 |
| 9 |
Lettuce |
67 |
| 10 |
Grapes-Imported |
66 |
| 11 |
Carrot |
63 |
| 12 |
Pear |
63 |
| 13 |
Collard
Green |
60 |
| 14 |
Spinach |
58 |
| 15 |
Potato |
56 |
| 16 |
Green
Beans |
53 |
| 17 |
Summer
Squash |
53 |
| 18 |
Pepper |
51 |
| 19 |
Cucumber |
50 |
| 20 |
Raspberries |
46 |
| 21 |
Grapes-Domestic |
44 |
| 22 |
Plum |
44 |
| 23 |
Orange |
44 |
| 24 |
Cauliflower |
39 |
| 25 |
Tangerine |
37 |
| 26 |
Mushrooms |
36 |
| 27 |
Banana |
34 |
| 28 |
Winter
Squash |
34 |
| 29 |
Cantelope |
33 |
| 30 |
Cranberries |
33 |
| 31 |
Honeydew
Melon |
30 |
| 32 |
Grapefruit |
29 |
| 33 |
Sweet
Potato |
29 |
| 34 |
Tomato |
29 |
| 35 |
Broccoli |
28 |
| 36 |
Watermelon |
26 |
| 37 |
Papaya |
20 |
| 38 |
Eggplant |
20 |
| 39 |
Cabbage |
17 |
| 40 |
Kiwi |
13 |
| 41 |
Sweet
Peas-Frozen |
10 |
| 42 |
Asparagus |
10 |
| 43 |
Mango |
9 |
| 44 |
Pineapple |
7 |
| 45 |
Sweet
Corn-Frozen |
2 |
| 46 |
Avocado |
1 |
| 47
(best) |
Onion |
1
(lowest) |
Taste
and nutritional value
Some studies
have shown higher nutrient levels in organic fruit and vegetables
compared with conventionally grown products.
The most
important study of organic food to date was completed in 2007
and found that organic fruit and vegetables contain up to 40%
more antioxidants than conventional equivalents, and that the
figure was 60% for organic milk. The 4-year study was funded
by the European Union and was the largest of its kind ever undertaken.
A 2001 study
by researchers at Washington State University concluded, under
judgement by a panel of tasters, that organic apples were sweeter.
Along with taste and sweetness, the texture as well as firmness
of the apples were also rated higher than those grown conventionally.
These differences are attributed to the greater soil quality
resulting from organic farming techniques compared to those
of conventional farming.
However
in 2002 a meta-analysis (a review of all prior studies on the
subject) had found no proof that organic food offered greater
nutritional values, more consumer safety or any distinguishable
difference in taste.
Cost
Organic
products typically cost 10 to 40% more than similar conventionally
produced products. Processed organic foods vary in price when
compared to their conventional counterparts. An Australian study
by Choice magazine in 2004 found processed organic foods in
supermarkets to be 65% more expensive, but noted this was not
consistent. Prices may be higher because organic produce is
produced on a smaller scale, and may need to be milled or processed
separately. Furthermore, there is an increase in shipping costs
from more centralized production in otherwise regional markets.
In the case of dairy and eggs, the animal's requirements such
as the number of animals that can be raised per acre, or the
breed of animal and its feed conversion ratio affects the cost.
Related
movements
Community-supported
agriculture (CSA) is an approach where members prepurchase "shares"
in a season's harvest, and pick up their weekly portions from
distribution sites. Thus, consumers provide direct financing
for farms, participate in the risks and rewards of annual growing
conditions, and distribute food directly from the farm.
Local food
is buying food that was produced geographicly closer to the
consumer. Local food is seen as a way to get fresher food and
invest in one's own community.
The fair
trade movement, based on the principle that social and environmental
sustainability are inextricably interdependent, is often linked
to organic food.
Biodynamic
agriculture, a method of organic farming, is closely related
to the organic food movement.
Beyond
Organic
Beyond Organic
is a concept aligned with the idea of creating sustainable and
ecological systems of food production capable of transcending
the standards currently affixed to foods and processes now categorized
by the term "organic". Since the organic food movement has been
increasingly industrialized and often forced to undergo processes
similar to those of conventional agriculture (such as monocultural
plantings on massive scales) due to market pressures, many members
of the what was originally the organic food movement are demanding
that new standards be established for sustainable organic foods.
Many ardent supporters of organic foods are frustrated that
the integrity of what constitutes "organic" foods and farming
methods have been compromised by FDA legislation that allows
for synthetics to be introduced into organic processed foods
and other unsustainable industrial attributes associated with
"organic" foods.
Facts
and statistics
| Organic
Seals |

International |

United States |

France |

Australia |
While organic
food accounts for 1–2% of total food sales worldwide, the organic
food market is growing rapidly, far ahead of the rest of the
food industry, in both developed and developing nations.
- World
organic food sales jumped from US $23 billion in 2002 to $40
billion in 2006.
- The world
organic market has been growing by 20% a year since the early
1990s, with future growth estimates ranging from 10%-50% annually
depending on the country.
North
America
- United
States:
- Organic
food is the fastest growing sector of the American food
marketplace.
- Organic
food sales have grown by 17 to 20 percent a year for the
past few years while sales of conventional food have grown
at only about 2 to 3 percent a year.
-
- In
2003 organic products were available in nearly 20,000
natural food stores and 73% of conventional grocery stores.
- Organic
products account for 2.6% of total food sales in the year
2005.
-
- Two
thirds of organic milk and cream and half of organic cheese
and yogurt are sold through conventional supermarkets.
- Canada:
- Organic
food sales surpassed $1 billion in 2006, accounting for
0.9% of food sales in Canada.
- Organic
food sales by grocery stores were 28% higher in 2006 than
in 2005.
- British
Columbians account for 13% of the Canadian population,
but purchased 26% of the organic food sold in Canada in
2006.
Europe
In the European
Union (EU25) 3.9% of the total utilized agricultural area is
used for organic production. The countries with the highest
proportion of organic land are Austria (11%) and Italy (8.4),
followed by Czech Republic and Greece (both 7.2%). The lowest
figures are shown for Malta (0.1%), Poland (0.6%) and Ireland
(0.8%).
- Austria:
- 11.6%
of all farmers produced organically in 2007. The government
has created incentives to increase the figure to 20% by
2010.
-
- 4.9%
of all food products sold in Austrian supermarkets (including
discount stores) in 2006 were organic. 8000 different
organic products were available in the same year.
- Italy:
- Since
2005 all school lunches must be organic by law.
- Poland:
- In
2005 168,000 ha of land were under organic management.
7 percent of Polish consumers buy food that was produced
according to the EU-Eco-regulation. The value of the organic
market is estimated at 50 million Euros (2006).
- UK:
- Organic
food sales increased from just over £100 million in 1993/94
to £1.21 billion in 2004 (an 11% increase on 2003).
Caribbean
- Cuba:
- After
the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, agricultural
inputs that had previously been purchased from Eastern
bloc countries were no longer available in Cuba, and many
Cuban farms converted to organic methods out of necessity.
Consequently, organic agriculture is a mainstream
practice in Cuba, while it remains an alternative practice
in most other countries. Although some products called
organic in Cuba would not satisfy certification requirements
in other countries (crops may be genetically modified,
for example, Cuba exports organic citrus and citrus juices
to EU markets that meet EU organic standards. Cuba's forced
conversion to organic methods may position the country
to be a global supplier of organic products.
Organics
Olympiad
- Organics
Olympiad 2007 awarded gold, silver and bronze medals to countries
based on twelve measures of organic leadership.
The gold medal winners were:
- Australia
with 11.8 million organic hectares.
- Mexico
with 83,174 organic farms.
- Romania
with 15.9 million certified wild organic hectares.
- China
with 135 thousand tonnes of organic wild harvest produce.
- Denmark
with 1805 organic research publications recorded.
- Germany
with 69 members of IFOAM.
- China
with an increase of 1,998,705 organic hectares.
- Liechtenstein
with 27.9% of its agricultural land certified organic.
- Mali
with an 8488% annual increase in its organic hectares.
- Latvia
with an annual 3.01% increase in its organic share of
agricultural land.
- Liechtenstein
with a 10.9% 4-yearly increment of the organic share of
its total agriculture.
- Switzerland
with a per capita annual spend on organic produce of 103
Euros.