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Feature - print

Organic food exposed


It’s a booming trend, driven by public perception that food produced minus pesticides and fertilisers is healthier and better for the planet. We examine the science to see if the evidence stacks up.


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Organic food exposed

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."

Readers' comments

"Organic" food... laff...

"Organic" food is the new snake oil. The problem is, this nostrum is being wholeheartedly embraced not just by the pretty people and ivory tower elitists, but by governments, and little inconsequentials like actual facts are clearly not going to stand in the way of Politically Correct "progress".

If these whack-jobs have their way, within our lifetimes, we will once again be living in 14th-Century serfdom, complete with a super-privileged ruling class and rampant poverty, death and disease for everyone else. They won't come out and say it, but the fact remains, this IS the earthy-people's long-term goal.

Hoorah to you for adding another voice in the wilderness, and keep up the good work!

BadKarma Reader - have you actually done any real research?

There are the blind, the dumb and then there is the downright stupid! Hey BadKarma reader have you actually ever done any real research or indeed ever even been to the wilderness from which you say you cry?

Perhaps if you care to stop your blubber for long enough to visit www.i-sis.org.uk (and perhaps Ms Finkel could research a bit more non Monsanto backed data to refer to next time) and read...
"Dozens of prominent scientists from seven countries, spanning the disciplines of agroecology, agronomy, biomathematics, botany, chemical medicine, ecology, histopathology, microbial ecology, molecular genetics, nutritional biochemistry, physiology, toxicology and virology, joined forces to launch themselves as an Independent Science Panel on GM at a public conference, attended by UK environment minister Michael Meacher and 200 other participants, in London on 10 May 2003.

The conference coincided with the publication of a draft report, The Case for a GM-free Sustainable World, calling for a ban on GM crops to make way for all forms of sustainable agriculture. This authoritative report, billed as "the strongest, most complete dossier of evidence" ever compiled on the problems and hazards of GM crops as well as the manifold benefits of sustainable agriculture, is being finalised for release 15 June 2003."
Are all these scientists 'earthy-people' too? Funny that, I thought we all lived on this one earth... maybe you are from a different planet!

GM food

I totally agree, the proof that GM food is bad in many ways are there and we have to open our eyes and do something. That dossier of evidence, where scientist and authority worked on, is the proof that GM free food is the way to go and that we are working against our own good. To produce more is great, but what when our health is at stake. Quality over quantity they said? I'm pretty much certain that is we worked as hard to find ways to solve current agricultural problems in an ecological way, we would have less pollution, better global health and probably a lot less problems with new disease popping "out of nowhere"!
Just my 2 cents..
Ramen noodles forever,
Vivi Peterson

How about some of the 'actual facts' on GM?

Interesting that the first comment listed here is such a strong advocate of the article...hmm? Have you ever even looked into the 'actual facts' that you speak of? I found a very informative pod cast from Bob Phelps of Gene Ethics on wonderfulworldmedia.net. Check it out and then get back to me! The panels on lifting GM bans are sitting right now in Australia - do you even care about what you eat or are you a Mackers consumer? If they lift the ban on GM in Australia in Feb 2008, eventually no one will even have the choice of eating clean non-GM contaminated food and articles like this one are a travesty of mis-reporting.

A rather disappointing effort from a magazine that I had thought would know better.

Organic vegetables, beef, chicken, milk?

I don't agree with the last comment. Even if i respect your opinion, there was no way in the past to see if that snake oil was actually working. But today, scientists from all over the world proved that antibiotics and growth hormones will be bad for us in the long term. Think about kraft dinner and doritos, that just can't be good for out health ;) If we eat modified vegetables, beef, chicken, even milk, it's for only one reason, it's because right now we're putting money before health. Big corporation don't have enough opposition right now, so they do what they want.
Patty's chicken recipes

Organic food

The cafeteria at Monsanto has banned genetically engineered food at the insistence of Monsanto employees. That's a pip, eh? The Bt plants that are so lauded in the article are responsible for the deaths of thousands of sheep , goats and cattle in India after they grazed on Bt cotton.Dr Finkel speaks of Australian farmers and 'modern farming techniques w/ safer pesticides that allow for living soil. Perhaps that is true in Australia, but my first hand experience is that you can't grow healthy food in sick soil. And you cannot have healthy soil by dumping tons of petro chemical additives, be it fertiliser(what?) or synthetic pesticides.As for the good Doctor's assertion that organic farming cannot feed the world,I refer her and anyone else interested to the recent University of Michigan study which shows not only can organic supply enough food to feed the world, but that it is the preferrable model for poor and developing countries.

Petro Additives: Say what it is, Urea

I used to work at a Urea Plant.

Urea is an organic chemical, same stuff you piss out every day in the process of eliminating Nitrogen from your system. It is highly soluble, and actually was the founding of organic chemistry when it was first produced from non-organic chemicals in 1828.

It is put on the soil in a dilted form, but chemically is not any different then your own, naturally produced kidney juice.

We are not putting oil on the ground. We are not putting anything on the ground as fertizer that is not naturally produced by every living organism.

One is just far more pure, clean, and easy to control.

The other is crap.

Josh

Dr. Phage

Nosmokes; how intersting that you comment and complain about the Bt plants "that are so lauded in the article" as you put it, but say nothing about the fact that organic farmers use Bt spray to control pests. Seems hypocritical to me...
What the article didn't report, but should have, is the fact that organic farmers (at least in the US) are allowed to use synthetic pesticides if no natural ones exist.
I find this whole debate to be illogical. Apparently, it is ok for organic supporters to identify the problems with conventional foods. But, how dare anyone to identify the problems with organic foods!!!

organics reply Dr Phage

Yes, Bt spray is allowed for organic farmers, but here's the quirk, when you put the Bt gene into the cotton plant or any other plant, you change the whole sequence of DNA, so you aren't just dealing with simple Bt anymore and simple cotton (or whatever) any longer, you now have a brand new player that is neither plant nor Bt.

Monsanto Cafe

I think you should check with a Monsanto employee before ranting over rumored information of them banning gmo foods - GMO products are safe, sustainable, and healthy for consumers - and we serve food like any other cafeteria!