Wednesday, March 26, 2014

GMO Series 1: Why, No GMOs, Go Organics!






There is an ongoing debate about the health effects of GMOs (genetically modified organisms) and benefits of organic products everyday.  Many research studies suggest that use of GMOs in agriculture is leading to negative consequences.  Dr. Alan Green (Organic Trade Association), Bob Scowcroft (Organic Farming Research Foundation), and Sylvia Tawse (Fresh Ideas Group) gave the following 10 reasons we should support organic food. 

“Top 10 Reasons to Support Organic in the 21st Century

1. Reduce The Toxic Load: Keep Chemicals Out of the Air, Water, Soil and our Bodies
Buying organic food promotes a less toxic environment for all living things. With only 0.5 percent of crop and pasture land in organic, according to USDA that leaves 99.5 percent of farm acres in the U.S. at risk of exposure to noxious agricultural chemicals.

2. Reduce if Not Eliminate Off Farm Pollution
Industrial agriculture doesn’t singularly pollute farmland and farm workers; it also wreaks havoc on the environment downstream. Pesticide drift affects non-farm communities with odorless and invisible poisons. Synthetic fertilizer drifting downstream is the main culprit for dead zones in delicate ocean environments, such as the Gulf of Mexico, where its dead zone is now larger than 22,000 square kilometers, an area larger than New Jersey, according to Science magazine, August, 2002.

3. Protect Future Generations
Before a mother first nurses her newborn, the toxic risk from pesticides has already begun. Studies show that infants are exposed to hundreds of harmful chemicals in utero. In fact, our nation is now reaping the results of four generations of exposure to agricultural and industrial chemicals, whose safety was deemed on adult tolerance levels, not on children’s. According to the National Academy of Science, “neurological and behavioral effects may result from low-level exposure to pesticides.” Numerous studies show that pesticides can adversely affect the nervous system, increase the risk of cancer, and decrease fertility.

4. Build Healthy Soil
Mono-cropping and chemical fertilizer dependency has taken a toll with a loss of topsoil estimated at a cost of $40 billion per year in the U.S., according to David Pimentel of Cornell University. Add to this an equally disturbing loss of micronutrients and minerals in fruits and vegetables. Feeding the soil with organic matter instead of ammonia and other synthetic fertilizers has proven to increase nutrients in produce, with higher levels of vitamins and minerals found in organic food, according to the 2005 study, “Elevating Antioxidant levels in food through organic farming and food processing,” Organic Center State of Science Review (1.05)

5. Taste Better and Truer Flavor
Scientists now know what we eaters have known all along: organic food often tastes better. It makes sense that strawberries taste yummier when raised in harmony with nature, but researchers at Washington State University just proved this as fact in lab taste trials where the organic berries were consistently judged as sweeter. Plus, new research verifies that some organic produce is often lower in nitrates and higher in antioxidants than conventional food. Let the organic feasting begin!

6. Assist Family Farmers of all Sizes
According to Organic Farming Research Foundation, as of 2006 there are approximately 10,000 certified organic producers in the U.S. compared to 2500 to 3,000 tracked in 1994. Measured against the two million farms estimated in the U.S. today, organic is still tiny. Family farms that are certified organic farms have a double economic benefit: they are profitable and they farm in harmony with their surrounding environment. Whether the farm is a 4-acre orchard or a 4,000-acre wheat farm, organic is a beneficial practice that is genuinely family-friendly.

7. Avoid Hasty and Poor Science in Your Food
Cloned food. GMOs and rBGH. Oh my! Interesting how swiftly these food technologies were rushed to market, when organic fought for 13 years to become federal law. Eleven years ago, genetically modified food was not part of our food supply; today an astounding 30 percent of our cropland is planted in GMOs. Organic is the only de facto seal of reassurance against these and other modern, lab-produced additions to our food supply, and the only food term with built in inspections and federal regulatory teeth.

8. Eating with a Sense of Place
Whether it is local fruit, imported coffee or artisan cheese, organic can demonstrate a reverence for the land and its people. No matter the zip code, organic has proven to use less energy (on average, about 30 percent less), is beneficial to soil, water and local habitat, and is safer for the people who harvest our food. Eat more seasonably by supporting your local farmers market while also supporting a global organic economy year round. It will make your taste buds happy.

9. Promote Biodiversity
Visit an organic farm and you’ll notice something: a buzz of animal, bird and insect activity. These organic oases are thriving, diverse habitats. Native plants, birds and hawks return usually after the first season of organic practices; beneficial insects allow for a greater balance, and indigenous animals find these farms a safe haven. As best said by Aldo Leopold, “A good farm must be one where the native flora and fauna have lost acreage without losing their existence.” An organic farm is the equivalent of reforestation. Industrial farms are the equivalent of clear cutting of native habitat with a focus on high farm yields.

10. Celebrate the Culture of Agriculture
Food is a ‘language’ spoken in every culture. Making this language organic allows for an important cultural revolution whereby diversity and biodiversity are embraced and chemical toxins and environmental harm are radically reduced, if not eliminated. The simple act of saving one heirloom seed from extinction, for example, is an act of biological and cultural conservation. Organic is not necessarily the most efficient farming system in the short run. It is slower, harder, more complex and more labor-intensive. But for the sake of culture everywhere, from perm culture to human culture, organic should be celebrated at every table.”

Considering the risks and harm towards human health and the environment, we should avoid purchase of products made by companies who are opposed to mandatory GMO labeling.  While many states are trying to mandate labeling of GMOs, currently the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) agency does not require companies to label GMOs. 

In 2013, many companies spent a lot of money against the GMO labeling in Washington State even though some of these companies sell organic products.  According to the Organic Consumer Association, The Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) is the largest donor to the NO on I-522 campaign, which wants desperately to defeat I-522, Washington’s citizens’ initiative to label GMOs”. Numerous companies including Monsanto, Dupont, Horizon, Kash, Bayel, Bask, Gerber, and more (see photos) were opposed to the I-522 Bill in Washington state last year.  Starbucks, Target and Safeway, owner of the O Organics™ brand, are also GMA members. In addition, some large chemical companies such as DuPont, Bayer Cropsciences, and Dow Agrisciences, who are dues-paying members of GMA, were against mandatory GMO labeling in Washington last year.

In California, PepsiCo, owner of the Naked Juice brandspent $2.5 million to defeat that state’s GMO labeling law in 2013.  Last year, legislation requiring mandatory GMO labeling failed to pass in California and Washington states.  This year, the state of Oregon will vote on GMO labeling in November.  In New Jersey, Bill No. 91 was introduced in the Senate in January 2014.  Voluntary labeling is not strong enough to protect consumers from the unknown health risks from GMOs. Many consumers are beginning to recognize the environmental and health consequences of having GMOs in their food.   Therefore, we should not purchase products from companies who are working against GMO labeling but instead support the sustainable values of the organic food movement as described by Alan Green, Bob Scowcroft, and Sylvia Tawse.

Resources:

http://www.cornucopia.org/2013/10/unveiled-gmo-labeling-opponents-come-shadows/

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