Alert! Will the Real Organic Please Stand Up?
http://www.foodpolitics.com/2012/02/the-endless-controversy-over-organics/ A perspective on what many Libertarians are worried have become the bizarre battles to marginalize the movement for life-extending health and natural food and cunningly ’re-define organics away’ by crony capitalists allied with rule-touting officials vs. real issues of studying economic and health claims scientifically …Food Politics
by Marion Nestle
The endless controversy over organics
I am a big fan of the Perishable Pundit, Jim Prevor, whose opinions on the produce industry I think are always worth reading whether I agree with them or not. I check his site regularly.
I am also a big fan of organics. I think research shows that organic production methods are kinder to soil, climate, and animals than industrial production methods.
So I was interested to read Perishable Pundit’s interview with Dr. Steve Savage, an agricultural consultant in San Diego.
Q: Your detailed analysis of U.S. organic crops rattles the generally accepted notions about the size and potential growth of the organic market. Based on the latest USDA-NASS data, you make four key points:
- Organic is a very small part of US agriculture.
- Organic is significantly less productive on a per area basis.
- Organic acreage, and to a greater extent, organic production, is skewed to the dry, Western states.
- Farmers are paid higher prices for organic commodities, but when combined with lower productivity, gross income per acre is not always much higher and even sometimes lower.
Dr. Savage backs up these statements with additional data in a slide show from USDA. You can look up both links and decide for yourself if you agree with his conclusions.
What impresses me about research on organic productivity is that its interpretation can be predicted by who is doing the interpreting. I’ve seen, and review in my book What to Eat, plenty of research demonstrating that organics are only slightly less productive than industrial agriculture and at much lower cost to soil and the environment.
The USDA has long been an uncomfortable host for the National Organic Program. This agency’s job is to support industrial agriculture and organics are indeed small in comparison.
But organic production is an explicit critique of industrial agricultural systems. Organics get higher prices. And their sales are increasing.
No wonder USDA and representatives of industrial systems don’t like organics much and do everything they can to find fault with it.
Sure there are faults to find:
- Weak and inadequately enforced standards
- Endless pressure to add industrial chemicals to the approved list and further weaken the standards
- Expenses that few small farmers can afford
- Inadequate protection from contamination with genetically modified crops
- Suspicions about the equivalency of standards for imported organic foods
- Bad apples who make things difficult for farmers who are doing things right
USDA ought to be doing all it can to work with organic producers to fix these problems. To its credit, USDA recruited undersecretary Kathleen Merrigan to try.
She just announced an agreement between the U.S. and the E.U. to recognize each other’s organic standards, thereby opening the European market to American organics. USDA reports that the organic industry is delighted with the opportunity for new market possibilities.
Experts can argue whether organics are slightly or substantially less productive but they are demonstrably better for soil and the environment. I think that matters.
Comments are welcome.



Comments
“This agency’s job is to support industrial agriculture and organics are indeed small in comparison.”
Is this literally true? I realize the USDA often acts like it is an arm of big business, but I was not aware it was actually a formal part of their mission.
Considering that the USDA gives massive subsidies to industrial agribusiness for the growing for GMO corn and soy, while essentially fining organic producers (not to mention drowning them in bureaucratic record-keeping) for having the audacity to do things the right way……I’m pretty sure they do see their job as support for industrial agriculture.
As far as this article goes, the UN has already admitted that small mixed farms are significantly more productive per acre than industrial monocultures. Not to mention the environmental and health risks associated with “conventional” agriculture. Kind of funny that we call it that, seeing as organic was the only way we could farm for thousands of years. I’m not sure why we’re still having this conversation.
Organics are also better for the people that grow them. Pesticide poisoning of farm workers is not discussed enough in the pro organic movement..
multicrop small scale permaculture farms are producing much higher yields per acre than mono crop organic. but this is a huge paradigm shift for many farmers. bottom line is, it is gonna take more farmers to make organic affordable and available to more people.
more people are gonna have to leave their cubicles and apartments to work and live off the country. that is what it is gonna take.
I agree with this and could not have said it better —
“Experts can argue whether organics are slightly or substantially less productive but they are demonstrably better for soil and the environment. I think that matters.”
I fear that government is going to get in the way. No one ever said the goal of organic farming is to yield the highest production. As a home organic backyard gardener I learned firsthand the sad fact of how much work and space it takes to yield eatable produce. Yet I still choose to have a home organic garden.
I hope that government regulations don’t overburden organic farmers so that they are run out of business.
Why is it always “big bad industrial” v. little organic? There are multitudes of farmers around the country who use incorporate both conventional practices and organic. Once again, the farmer of the middle is absent from the discussion. Painting farmers as either one or the other is harmful really.
Last weeks dairy paper had an article about the organic milk companies buying from multi-thousand cow organic dairies in the west, while showing the consumers photos of happy little family farms in the east.
Be careful while selecting your food. Caz taking too much calories is often harmful….

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Although the roots of the organic food movement were a response to industrial agriculture, I don’t think these two things are truly on the opposite end of a spectrum anymore, and organic can still be industrial in scale, with many of the side effects. Like most things that are controversial these days, it can be extremely difficult to really compare apples to apples.
Some of the organic system’s faults you list are the result of failures by USDA and other government agencies: weak & inadequately enforced standards and inadequate protection from GMO crops in particular. Established practices are entrenched and comfortable for a lot of companies, agencies, and individuals. Change will be slow in coming, but Kathleen Merrigan gives one hope!
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