1. Global strategies
  2. Promoting organic food

Promoting organic food

Context

The UK Soil Association provides these ten reasons to eat organic food: (1) It's healthy – organic food tends to contain higher levels of vitamin C, cancer-fighting antioxidants, and essential minerals such as calcium, magnesium, iron and chromium; (2) No nasty additives – organic food doesn't contain food additives that can cause health problems such as heart disease, osteoporosis, migraines and hyperactivity; (3) Avoids pesticides – more than 400 chemical pesticides are routinely used in conventional farming and residues are often present in non-organic food; (4) No genetic modification – under organic standards, genetically modified (GM) crops and ingredients are not allowed; (5) No reliance on drugs – organic farming standards prohibit the routine use of antibiotics and growth hormones in farm animals; (6) No hidden costs – as taxpayers, we pay for chemicals to be removed from our drinking water – including the pesticide runoff from conventional farms; (7) High standards – organic food comes from trusted sources that are inspected to ensure compliance to organic standards; (8) Organic methods provide for animals – animal welfare is taken very seriously under organic standards; (9) It's good for wildlife and the environment – the UK government has said that organic farming is better for wildlife, causes lower pollution from sprays, produces less carbon dioxide – the main global warming gas – and less dangerous wastes; (10) It's flavorful – many people prefer organic food because they say it tastes better.

Implementation

The demand for organic produce in Europe has lead to a market driven expansion in organic farming. Austria, which had 200 organic farms in 1980 now has over 20,000. In 1998 it grew 24% of its food organically; 50% of its food exports were organic. In France the organic market in 1997 was worth US $700 million and is growing at 20 percent annually. Demand far outstrips supply. According to the French Ministry of Agriculture, Europe's organic market could be worth $25 billion by 2000.

In 1999 supermarkets in the United Kingdom reported organic foodstuffs fast entering the mainstream in customers' buying habits, causing a sudden demand for supermarkets to improve home-grown supplies of organic foodstuffs, which currently provide less than 30% of food on the market. Sales may reach 500m pounds a year by 2000 and supermarkets and organics campaigners hope that will double by 2002, taking 7%-8% of the total market. They have set a 10% target for 2005.

Broader

Narrower

Facilitates

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #2: Zero Hunger

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(E) Emanations of other strategies
Subject
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
1A4N
J6146
DOCID
12061460
D7NID
214598
Editing link
Official link
Last update
Dec 5, 2022