Credit: Jim Wehtje/Photolibrary
I love my local organic food store. From the moment I enter, I enjoy the aromas that greet me and the folksy look of the place. But is organic food really any better for me? The perceived wisdom is that it's more 'pure' and 'natural', devoid of disease-causing pesticides; that organic farming "generates healthy soils" and "doesn't poison ecosystems with toxic chemicals".
Organic food is riding a surge in popularity; across the globe, sales of organic food are burgeoning. The global market in 2006 was estimated at close to an impressive US$40 billion (A$47.9 billion) by Organic Monitor, an industry research body, and growing 20 per cent annually in the U.S. and Canada.
And where consumers go, the multinational food companies follow: everyone from Uncle Tobys to Kraft, Heinz, Kelloggs and even Coca-Cola has jumped on the bandwagon. And developing countries are joining in too: China's organic exports grew 200-fold in a decade to reach US$200 million in 2004. Australia is also a major exporter, and plans to increase its organic produce by 50 per cent by 2012.
But is this belief in organic food based on faith, or evidence?
THE SURPRISING FACT IS that this mass migration to organic food has not been on the back of scientific evidence. In fact, you'd be hard pressed to find comprehensive evidence that organic food is healthier – either for us or the planet. Nevertheless, in the public consciousness, organic farming is unquestioningly bundled with the reigning moral imperatives of sustainability, protecting the environment and reducing greenhouse gases.
Certainly there are historical reasons for concern. In the 1950s and 1960s, the pesticide DDT was blamed for the widespread thinning of bird eggs across North America, and the rapid decline of the bald eagle and peregrine falcon. Over-intensive grain farming in the U.S. Midwest led to fertiliser run-off into the Mississippi River that ultimately created a 20,000 square kilometre dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, as algal blooms sucked up available oxygen. Soils that were tilled for decades without crop rotation or replacing organic matter led to dust storms that wreaked havoc across Australia in the 1960s and the American and Canadian prairies in the 1930s, the latter so vividly depicted in John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath.
These days, modern farming techniques have evolved after decades of pressure from the environmental movement and decades of work by a generation of scientists inspired by environmental awareness. In fact, conventional farming is starting to look a lot like organic farming.
The earthworm-rich soils, so prized by organic farmers, are being achieved through contemporary no-till (or no-plough) techniques. In Australia, most farmers use rotation to get crops out of synchronisation with weeds and to return nutrients to the soil. Natural predators are being used to control pests, and companies such as Dow Chemical are producing safe, short-acting pesticides. In fact Dow's latest pesticide, Spinosad, is also happily used by organic farmers because it is naturally produced by bacteria.
"There's been a quiet revolution in Australian farming over the last decade," says Mark Peoples, the assistant chief of the Division of Plant Industry at Australia's national research agency CSIRO.
ON THE OTHER HAND, organic farmers are bound to an ideology that demands they only use natural techniques. In some cases, such purism gets in the way of practices that are better for the environment and more sustainable for farmers. For example, organic farmers will use litres of BT spray (BT is a 'natural' pesticide made by the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis), yet they often demonise the genetically modified (GM) cotton crops that carry an inbuilt supply of BT, and which therefore require less spraying.
However, these GM varieties spare farmers – and the environment – from the risks of pesticide overuse. For instance, according to Richard Roush, the Dean of land and food resources at the University of Melbourne, cotton farmers in India have reduced their use of pesticides and accidental poisonings by 80 per cent since the introduction of genetically modified BT cotton.
The ultimate test of sustainability is whether organic farming could feed the planet. Scott Kinnear, president of Australia's Organic Farmers Federation, believes "it is imperative that the world moves over to organic farming as soon as possible".
Yet many agricultural scientists estimate that if the world were to go completely organic, not only would the remaining forests have to be cleared to provide the organic manure needed for farming, the world's current population would likely starve.
Norman Ernest Borlaug, the American plant geneticist who won a Nobel Peace Prize for breeding the high-yield, disease-resistant wheat varieties (triggering agriculture's 'Green Revolution'), is despairing of the organic fad. "This shouldn't even be a debate. Even if you could use all the organic material you have – the animal manures, the human waste, the plant residues – and get them back on the soil, you couldn't feed more than four billion people."


reply to mel
Hello,
I mean no disrespect, but I don't understand what you're saying. What is your argument? Your sentences were incomprehensible.
FAO Report says organic farming fights hunger, climate change..
It's great to have a debate on this topic. I gave up selling pesticides fifteen years back because of what I saw in the field. For me, this article is one sided and only tries to say there is no truth in what the organic sector claims. We have come a long way now and there is large scale acceptance to the fact that organic farming is the way to go. I am sure, an organization like FAO carefully reviewed all the research before preparing a positive report on organic farming. This recent report says it all. http://www.i-sis.org.uk/FAOPromotesOrganicAgriculture.php
I agree! More debate is
I agree! More debate is what we need. It is not only naive, but childish to think that this is a case of one philosophy or method over the other. (And for those of you who keep burping up the "show your evidence" without offering any of your own, you're not looking any better than the people you're insulting!!) The fact of the matter is, yes, there are safe ways to use certain pesticides and GMOs, but that the people developing them have no motivation to make sure those safe methods are used. Why? Because they're in it to make money!! It is a conflict of interest to have the same people selling this technology to be responsible for testing it. That is why we need support of alternative, such as organic techniques, to create more of a balance in what is available to farmers. It's not one or the other, it's a matter of giving people the opportunity to take the best of what's available. But I'll be damned if I'm going to a trust multi-billion dollar monopoly to tell me what's safe and what's not. So when reading a study, try to also keep in mind who's doing it and by whom they're getting paid. As a scientist I know exactly how easy it can be to manipulate results, so I can't help but be sceptical of a piece that praises GMOs, but happens to be written by a lab funded by Monsanto.
Wrong Test For Sustainability
"The ultimate test of sustainability is whether organic farming could feed the planet."
Wrong. The test of sustainability is whether or not you can do it indefinitely. You say we need synthetic fertilizer to produce enough food? Synthetic fertilizer is produced with fossil fuels. Is that sustainable? Obviously not. The supply of fossil fuel will run out.
A University of Michigan study says that organic farming CAN feed the world.
Apples and Oranges
"Historically, most food-related diseases are due to bacterial and fungal contamination..."
You're talking about acute illnesses like food poisoning that can easily be traced to something you ate recently. That's not really relevant to increased risk of cancer. If someone gets cancer are they likely to blame it on the one hundred jars of organic peanut butter they've consumed in their lifetime? Or all the conventionally grown wheat?
There's plenty of room for more research on long term health effects. What if a synthetic chemical or GMO only causes damage to reproductive cells, so it only shows up in your kids?
The burden of proof is on the new technologies to demonstrate that they are not harmful. Organic agriculture sticks to what we know is safe.
Personally, I'll take a case of food poisoning over cancer any day.
Agricultural Health Study
Amazingly, with only taking a few mintues to look up one claim the author makes, that there is no increased risk of cancer with those who work with pesticides, I found her claim to be untrue.
For those who subscribe to the authors claims, please take the time to actually read through the findings of the Agricultural Health Study.
One of the findings in this study showed that those who applied pesticides did have an elevated risk of lung cancer. That's one kind of cancer, and there is an elevated risk. How many cancers are there and how many did the study look at?
So if this one aspect is untrue, how many other claims she makes are not trueand not supported by her research.
Health Study is still underway
Amazingly, I read through it as well. What the author states is basically true. The population of applicators and their spouses had lower cancer rates than the general population. In cases where cancer rates were higher (prostate and immune/blood cancers) they were tied to specific agents (methyl bromide and alachlor respectively).
There was no indication of increases in lung cancer. Please go reread the study summary.
This study is not over yet. But it's nice to see that all the pesticide scare is basically a scare. Responsible pesticide use does not appear to be a problem to the farmer's health... And assuming they eat the same food we do, then consumers health as well.
Population
Just one thought - I don't think its too far off subject to suggest that if there weren't so many people in the world the subject of organic vs non-organic would be moot.
Humans all too many humans
Plague proportions will most likely lead, in time, to savage results, natural or not.
Local is more important than organic
I often purchase organic food, but I think a more important issue is where your food comes from. When I can, I would rather buy my food from a local farmer who uses some non-organic farming methods (but uses them responsibly) than from an organic factory farm on the other side of the country or planet. This means my food is fresher and has resulted in fewer emissions to get to my plate. Also, I hope that in supporting my local farmers, less farm and remnant forest land will be lost to urban sprawl--land that once lost, will never be reclaimed for agriculture or wildlife habitat for many generations. I live in Kentucky, USA, and it is depressing to see how many of our beautiful farm lands are being divyed up for building subdivisions and strip malls.