What
is Organic Food?
Using the label "organic" to distinguish one tomato from
another is a big stretch from the word's original meaning, for until
the middle of the twentieth century it simply meant something living
or derived from living matter. In that sense, the idea of an "inorganic
tomato" is a contradiction in terms, unless it is, say, a tomato-shaped
glass ornament. With very few exceptions -- salt is one -- all our
food is "organic" no matter how it is produced.
The specific sense of "organic" we use when we speak
of "organic food" today traces back to 1942, when J. I.
Rodale launched a magazine called Organic Gardening. Nowadays Rodale
is hailed as a pioneer, but then he was often derided as a crank
and a throwback to obsolete ways of farming. He advocated maintaining
soil fertility and stability by putting organic matter -- animal
manure or compost -- back into the soil rather than relying on the
"inorganic," or synthetic, fertilizers that were then
widely seen as the modern way to go. So in Rodale's usage, it was
the fertilizers, and from them, the farming methods, rather than
the food, that were organic, and the concern was primarily with
the soil, not with issues like biodiversity or animal welfare. But
the meaning of "organic farming" soon parted company from
Rodale's original narrow distinction between fertilizers. Varying
definitions spun out of control as different associations of "organic
farmers" tried to set standards in accordance with their own
values. Some wanted to stick with a narrow definition in terms of
what you could and could not put on the soil, the crops, or the
animals. Others wanted to include an entire way of life, including
healthy living, an equitable form of distribution, concern for wildlife,
and so on. Among organizations of organic farmers around the world,
the broader view prevailed. The International Federation of Organic
Agriculture Movements settled on this definition:
Organic agriculture is an agricultural system that promotes environmentally,
socially, and economically sound production of food, fiber, timber,
etc. In this system, soil fertility is seen as the key to successful
production. Working with the natural properties of plants, animals,
and the landscape, organic farmers aim to optimize quality in all
aspects of agriculture and the environment.
Such a definition does not, however, lend itself to being reduced
to a label that can be put on products to show that they were produced
organically. Without specific standards that could be encapsulated
in a label, consumers were often unsure what the various "organic"
labels used by different associations and producers really meant.
In 1990, the U.S. Congress decided to clear up the confusion by
authorizing the Department of Agriculture to establish legally enforceable
"USDA Organic" standards and a certification scheme so
that consumers could be confident that their food really had been
produced in accordance with the standards. That led, in 2002, to
a set of standards that most people in organic farming considered
a reasonable compromise among the various views of what organic
farming is all about. Crops must be grown without the use of synthetic
fertilizers, and most synthetic pesticides and all herbicides are
also banned, although biological and botanical methods of control
can be used. Soil fertility is to be maintained by the use of animal
and plant waste (but not sewage sludge, which can contain toxic
heavy metals), crop rotation, and growing "cover crops"
like clover between other crops. (Cover crops are plowed into the
soil to restore nitrogen and organic matter.) Animals used for meat,
eggs, or milk must eat organic grains or other organic food and
must not be given growth hormones or antibiotics. (Sick or injured
animals may be treated with antibiotics, but then their meat, milk,
or eggs cannot be sold as organic.) Organically raised animals must
have access to the outdoors, including access to pasture for ruminants.
Neither plants nor animals can be the product of genetic engineering,
and organic food cannot be irradiated.
Reprinted from: The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter by
Peter Singer and Jim Mason © 2006 Peter Singer and Jim Mason.
(May 2006; $25.95US/$34.95CAN; 1-57954-889-X) Permission granted
by Rodale, Inc., Emmaus, PA 18098. Available wherever books are
sold or directly from the publisher by calling (800) 848-4735 or
visit their website at www.rodalestore.com.
Credited by Peter Singer And Jim Mason |