More Expensive than Organic Food - But it Poisons You
Posted By
Dr. Mercola |
October 08 2011
By Ronnie Cummins
Organic Consumers Association
After four decades of hard work, the organic community has
built up a $25 billion "certified organic" food, farming, and
green products sector. This consumer-driven movement, under
steady attack by the biotech and Big Food lobby, with little or
no help from government, has managed to create a healthy and
sustainable alternative to America's disastrous, chemical and
energy-intensive system of industrial agriculture.
Conscious of the health hazards of Big Food Inc., a critical
mass of organic consumers are now demanding food and other
products that are certified organic, as well as locally or
regionally produced, minimally processed, and packaged.
The Organic Alternative: A Matter of Survival
The Organic Alternative, in turn, is bolstered by an
additional $50 billion in annual spending by consumers on
products marketed as "natural," or "sustainable." This
rapidly expanding organic/green products sector--organic (4% of
total retail sales) and natural (8%)--now constitutes more than
12% of total retail grocery sales, with an annual growth rate of
10-15%.
Dr. Mercola Recommends...
Even taking into account what appears to be a permanent
economic recession and a lower rate of growth than that seen
over the past 20 years, the organic and natural market will
likely constitute 31-56% of grocery sales in 2020.
Sales statistics and polls underline the positive fact that a
vast army of organic consumers, more than 75 million Americans,
despite an economic recession, are willing to pay a premium
price for organic and green products. These consumers are
willing to pay a premium because they firmly believe that
organic and natural products are healthier, climate stabilizing,
environmentally sustainable, humane for animals, as well as more
equitable for family farmers, farmworkers, and workers
throughout the supply chain.
Organic Food is Not as "Costly" as You've Been Led to Believe
Many of the most committed organic consumers are conscious of
the fact that organic food and other products are actually
"cheaper" in real terms than conventional food and other
items-since industrial agriculture's so-called "cheap" products
carry hidden costs, including billions of dollars in annual tax
subsidies, and hundreds of billions of dollars in damage to our
health, the environment, and climate.
Strengthening the argument for organic food and farming,
scientists now tell us that it will take a massive conversion to
organic agriculture (as well as renewable energy, sustainable
housing and transportation) to drastically reduce
climate-destabilizing greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to 350
parts per million and to cope with the advent of "Peak Oil," the
impending decline in petroleum and natural gas supplies.
Organic food and a healthy diet and lifestyle are obviously
key factors in preventing chronic disease, restoring public
health, and reducing out-of-control health care costs. While in
1970, U.S. health care spending appeared somewhat sustainable,
totaling $75 billion, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services project that by 2016, health care spending will soar to
over $4.1 trillion, or $12,782 per resident.
Pay Now, or Pay a LOT More Later...
Millions of health-minded Americans, especially parents of
young children, now understand that cheap, non-organic,
industrial food is hazardous. Not only does chemical and
energy-intensive factory farming destroy the environment,
impoverish rural communities, exploit farm workers, inflict
unnecessary cruelty on farm animals, and contaminate the water
supply; but the end product itself is inevitably contaminated.
Routinely contained in nearly every bite or swallow of
non-organic industrial food are pesticides, antibiotics and
other animal drug residues, pathogens, feces, hormone disrupting
chemicals, toxic sludge, slaughterhouse waste, genetically
modified organisms, chemical additives and preservatives,
irradiation-derived radiolytic chemical by-products, and a host
of other hazardous allergens and toxins. Eighty million cases of
food poisoning every year in the US, and an epidemic of
food-related cancers, heart attacks, and obesity make for a
compelling case for the Organic Alternative.
Organic Agriculture is the Most Logical Answer to Save Our
Environment
Likewise millions of green-minded consumers understand that
industrial agriculture poses a terminal threat to the
environment and climate stability. A highly conscious and
passionate segment of the population are beginning to understand
that converting to non-chemical, energy-efficient,
carbon-sequestering organic farming practices, and drastically
reducing food miles by relocalizing the food chain, are
essential preconditions for stabilizing our out-of-control
climate and preparing our families and communities for Peak Oil
and future energy shortages.
Decades of research confirm that organic agriculture produces
crop yields that are comparable (under normal weather
conditions) or even 50-70% superior (during droughts or
excessive rain) to chemical farming.
Nutritional studies show that organic crops are qualitatively
higher in vitamin content and trace minerals, and that fresh
unprocessed organic foods boost the immune system and reduce
cancer risks. And, of course climate scientists emphasize that
organic agriculture substantially reduces greenhouse pollution.
Organic farms use, on the average, 50% or less petroleum inputs
than chemical farms, while generating drastically less
greenhouse gases such as methane and nitrous oxide. Moreover
diverse, multi-crop organic farms sequester enormous amounts of
CO2 in the soil. Agronomists point out that a return to
traditional organic farming practices across the globe could
reduce greenhouse gas pollution by 40%. In other words, America
and the world desperately need an Organic Revolution in food and
farming.
The Clock is Ticking--Swift Action is Required
Scientists, as well as common sense, warn us that a public
health Doomsday Clock is ticking. Within a decade, diet and
environment-related diseases, including obesity, diabetes, heart
disease, and cancer-heavily subsidized under our Big
Pharma/chemical/genetically engineered/factory farm system-will
likely bankrupt Medicare and the entire U.S. health care system.
Likewise, environmental chaos and oil shortages, unless we
act quickly, will soon severely disrupt industrial agriculture
and long-distance food transportation, leading to massive crop
failures, food shortages, famine, war, and pestilence.
In the food sector, we cannot continue to hand over 88% of
our consumer dollars to out-of-control, chemical-intensive,
energy-intensive, polluting corporations and "profit at any
cost" retail chains. The growth of the Organic Alternative is
literally a matter of survival. The question then becomes how
(and how quickly) can we move healthy, organic, and "natural"
products from a 12% market share, to becoming the dominant force
in American food and farming. This is a major undertaking, one
that will require a major transformation in public consciousness
and policy, but it is doable, and absolutely necessary.
Before we set our sights on making organic and "transition to
organic" the norm, rather than the alternative, we need to take
a closer, more critical look at the $50 billion annual natural
food and products industry. How natural is the so-called natural
food in our local market, coop, or grocery store? Is the
"natural" sector moving our nation toward an organic future, or
has it degenerated into a "green washed" marketing tool,
disguising unhealthy and unsustainable food and farming
practices as alternatives. Is "natural" just a marketing ploy to
sell conventional-unhealthy, energy-intensive, and
non-sustainable food and products at a premium price?
What Does 'USDA Certified Organic' Mean?
Walk into any Whole Foods Market, Trader Joe's, or browse the
wholesale catalogue of industry giant United Natural Foods
(UNFI) and look closely. What do you see? Row after row of
attractively displayed, but mostly non-organic "natural" (i.e.
conventional) foods and products.
What does certified organic or "USDA Organic" mean? This
means these products are certified 95-100% organic. Certified
organic means the farmer or producer has undergone a regular
inspection of its farm, facilities, ingredients, and practices
by an independent Third Party certifier, accredited by the USDA
National Organic Program (NOP). The producer has followed strict
NOP regulations and maintained detailed records. Synthetic
pesticides, animal drugs, sewage sludge, GMOs, irradiation, and
chemical fertilizers are prohibited. Farm animals, soil, and
crops have been managed organically; food can only be processed
with certain methods; only allowed ingredients can be used.
The Myth of Natural Food, Farming, and Products
On the other hand, what does "natural" really mean, in terms
of farming practices, ingredients, and its impact on the
environment and climate?
To put it bluntly, "natural," in the overwhelming majority of
cases is meaningless, even though most consumers do not fully
understand this. Natural, in other words, means conventional,
with a green veneer. Natural products are routinely produced
using pesticides, chemical fertilizer, hormones, genetic
engineering, and sewage sludge. Natural or conventional
products-whether produce, dairy, or canned or frozen goods are
typically produced on large industrial farms or in processing
plants that are highly polluting, chemical-intensive and
energy-intensive. "Natural," "all-natural," and "sustainable,"
products in most cases are neither backed up by rules and
regulations, nor a Third Party certifier. Natural and
sustainable are typically label claims that are neither policed
nor monitored. (For an evaluation of eco-labels see the
Consumers Union website http://www.eco-labels.org).
The USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service provides loose,
non-enforced guidelines for the use of the term "natural" on
meat--basically the products cannot contain artificial flavors,
coloring, or preservatives and cannot be more than minimally
processed.
On non-meat products, the term natural is typically pure
propaganda. Companies are simply telling us what we want to
hear, so that we pay an organic or premium price for a
conventional product. Perhaps this wouldn't matter that much if
we were living in normal times, with a relatively healthy
population and environment. Conventional products sold as
natural or "nearly organic" would be a simple matter of
chicanery or consumer fraud. But we are not living in normal
times. Pressuring natural and conventional products and
producers to make the transition to organic may be a matter of
life or death. And standing in the way of making this great
transition are not only Fortune 500 food and beverage
corporations, corporate agribusiness, as we would expect, but
the wholesale and retail giants in the organic and natural
products sector.
UNFI & Whole Foods
UNFI and Whole Foods Market are the acknowledged market and
wholesale distribution leaders in the $70 billion organic and
natural foods and products sector. Companies or brands that want
to distribute their products on more than just a local or
regional basis must deal with the near-monopoly wholesaler, and
giant retailer. Meanwhile retailers in markets dominated by
Whole Foods have little choice but to emulate the business
practices of selling as many conventional foods, green washed as
"natural," as possible.
Neither are leading the charge to double or triple organic
food and farming sales by exposing the myth of natural foods,
giving preference to organic producers and products, and
pressuring natural brands and companies to make the transition
to organic. Neither are the industry giants lobbying the
government to stop nickel and dime-ing organics and get serious
about making a societal transition to organic food and farming.
The reason for this is simple: it is far easier and
profitable for UNFI and WFM to sell conventional or so-called
natural foods at a premium price, than it is to pay a premium
price for organics and educate consumers as to why "cheap"
conventional/natural food is really more expensive than organic,
given the astronomical hidden costs of conventional agriculture
and food processing.
As a consequence more and more independently owned "natural"
grocery stores and coops are emulating this model, while a
number of brand name, formerly organic, companies are moving
away from organic ingredients or organic practices
altogether, while maintaining a misleading green profile in the
marketplace. Other companies, in the multi-billion dollar body
care sector for example, are simply labeling their
conventional/natural products as "organic" or trade-marking the
word "organic" or "organics" as part of their brand name.
The bottom line is that we must put our money and our
principles where our values lie. Buy Certified Organic, not
so-called natural products, today and every day. And tell your
retail grocer or coop how you feel.
Click here and please join thousands of others to demand
labeling of genetically engineered foods!
Your Action Plan
By educating the public about the risks of GM foods through a
massive education campaign, and
launching a ballot initiative in California for 2012 which
will require mandatory labeling of genetically engineered foods
and food ingredients, our plan is to generate a tipping point of
consumer rejection to make GMOs a thing of the past. Several
organizations, including Mercola.com, the Organic Consumers
Association, the Institute for Responsible Technology, and even
the Environmental Working Group (who produced the Dining in the
Dark video above) are getting actively involved. But we do need
your help.
Here's how you can get involved during this GMO Awareness
week:
- If you live in California, please volunteer to collect
petition signatures in early November for the California
Ballot Initiative. Sign up
here. Also remember to share this information with
family and friends in California!
- Whether you live in California or not, please make a
donation to the Organic Consumers Fund to further this
historic effort
- Talk to organic producers and stores and ask them to
actively support the California Ballot. It may be the only
chance we have to have to label genetically engineered
foods!
- For timely updates, please
join the Organic Consumers Association on Facebook, or
follow them on Twitter.
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