The Organic Revolution
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“You are what you eat”, or so they say. In todays supermarkets, organic foods are everywhere. Not only are there organic fruits and vegetables, but there are also organic dairy products, organic meats, organic convenience foods, organic wine, beer, coffee, tea and even clothes made with organic cotton. All of these choices have made organic foods the “fastest-growing segment of the grocery industry.” The Organic Trade Association (OTA), in its “Business Facts” fact sheet available at www.ota.com, cites Natural Foods Merchandiser, a trade magazine, as measuring organic industry growth at 20 percent or greater for the past nine years. Approximately two percent of the U.S. food supply is grown using organic methods. In 2001, retail sales of organic food were projected to be $9.3 billion (Organic Trade Association [OTA], 2001). That is nearly triple the $3.5 billion in sales in 1998 (Biocycle; Nov. 2004, Vol. 45 Issue 11, p27). Organic foods can be found at natural food stores such as Whole Foods Inc., Wild Oats Inc., major supermarkets, farmers markets as well as through “grower direct marketing” such as CSAs (Community Supported Agriculture) or Co-Ops.
Many restaurant chefs and culinary related professionals across the country are starting to use organic produce because they desire its superior quality and taste. Organic food, also gaining international acceptance, has become widespread in nations like Japan and Germany where the development of organic food markets has seen substantial growth (OTA, 2004)
People choose to “go organic” for different reasons but, the single most important reason to choose certified organic foods is because organic agriculture in its very essence preserves, protects and restores our environment in significant ways (United States Department of Agriculture. [USDA], 2002). Also, organic farming embraces the principle that agriculture must meet the needs of the present without compromising the needs of future generations, not to mention that organic foods are often the safest, freshest, most flavorful and most nutritious foods in the marketplace (European Journal of Nutrition 40: 289-292 (2001)). The USDA has tried to emphasize that organic food is no healthier, and adds no real benefits to a healthy lifestyle than regular foods. However, with the contamination present in plants treated with pesticides, pre and post-harvest, complications arise in our soil, lakes, rivers, groundwater and eventually in our own bodies (National Resource Defense Council [NRDC], 2002).
Many of the chemicals used to grow and process food today have greatly expedited the entire food production process. However, Researchers and Scientists in the past relied solely on the efficiency aspect of the process with little regard to any long-term health affects potentially resulting from the intake of such foods, especially with the younger population whose immune system is more prone to ailment.
One of the main principles of organic farming is the cultivation of products without the use of harmful chemicals and additives. This use of chemicals, both past and present, has led to “Factory Farming,” a popular term describing the mass quantities of food produced throughout the twentieth century. The rise of these factory-produced foods caused the decline of small scale and family owned farms. However, the more recent rise in awareness and waves of environmentalism, organic farms, small and large are back on top and often benefit local communities, land and especially the people who farm them (B.Wyland, Personal Communication, 1, March, 2005).
The word Organic itself describes a way of growing food. Its a form of agriculture that arose in the last century in response to the increasing use of synthetic and often toxic chemicals to grow food. The National Organic Standards Board (NOSB), a governmental advisory panel to the National Organic Program, wrote this condensed definition of organic farming in 1995:
“Organic agriculture is an ecological production management system that promotes and enhances biodiversity, biological cycles, and soil biological activity. It is based on minimal use of off-farm inputs and on management practices that restore, maintain and enhance ecological harmony.The principal guidelines for organic production are to use materials and practices that enhance the ecological balance of natural systems and that integrate the parts of the farming system into an ecological whole….The primary goal of organic agriculture is to optimize the health and productivity of interdependent communities of soil life, plants, animals and people”(OTA, 2001).
Buddhists say that “a butterfly can flutter its wings in China and cause a tidal wave halfway across the world” (Wyland, 2005). That means that every action matters and all living things are interdependent. This theory is also known as the butterfly affect. The exact same principle is embraced by organic farmers. Practices establishing and retaining health and diversity will benefit all life on the farm. This is especially true without the use of chemicals. Production enhancing chemicals may spawn more yields, but it destroys the homeostasis of the soil, making it harder and harder for the soil to fulfill its ecological niche in not only supporting the growth of plants but also supporting the growth of surrounding wildlife (Wyland, 2005).
Organic food differs from conventionally produced food mainly in the way that it is grown, but also in the ways that it is handled and processed. Production and farming operates on many levels, and has brought new ways of food production that are quickly gaining popularity. Each and every stage in the organic food production process must be controlled and monitored to ensure that the organic standards are maintained all the way from the farm to the consumer. Levels of production include: production, post-harvest processing, and packaging.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has established a set of national specifications that foods labeled “organic” must meet, whether it is grown locally, in the United States or imported from other countries. “After October 21, 2002, when you buy food labeled “organic,” you can be sure that it was produced using the highest organic production and handling standards in the world” (USDA, 2002).
In 1990, the US Congress passed the Organic Foods Production Act (OFPA) (Biocycle, 2004). The OFPA required the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to establish an advisory board to set national specifications to regulate organically produced agricultural products, assuring consumers that agricultural products marketed as “organic”