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GM Watch – Organic Research in 2007 January 9, 2008

Posted by organicresearcher in Food, Organic, Research, farming, organic farming, organic food.
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Below is a totally brilliant round up of the breakthroughs in organic research (and policy) during 2007.  This work is that of the GM watch team, so all the credit must go to them, I just want to pass on and recommend it.   

 

2. ORGANIC RESEARCH

 

+ ORGANIC FARMING CAN FEED THE WORLD – STUDY

Organic farming can yield up to three times as much food on individual farms in developing countries, as low-intensive methods on the same land – according to new findings which refute the long-standing claim that organic farming methods cannot produce enough food to feed the global population. “My hope is that we can finally put a nail in the coffin of the idea that you can’t produce enough food through organic agriculture,” said Ivette Perfecto, professor at University of Michigan’s School of Natural Resources and Environment, and one of the study’s principal investigators.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8107

 

+ ORGANIC FARMING COMBATS GLOBAL WARMING…

Big time, according to data from the Rodale Institute’s long-running comparison of organic and conventional cropping systems. Converting the US’s corn and soybean acres to organic production would sequester enough carbon to satisfy 73 percent of the Kyoto targets for CO2 reduction in the US.

http://www.newfarm.org/depts/NFfield_trials/1003/carbonsequest.shtml

 

+ ORGANIC FARMING BEATS NO-TILL

Organic farming can build up soil organic matter better than conventional no-till farming, according to a long-term study by US Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists. Organic farming, despite its emphasis on building organic matter, was previously thought by some to endanger soil because it relies on tillage and cultivation – instead of herbicides – to kill weeds. But Teasdale’s study showed that organic farming’s addition of organic matter in manure and cover crops more than offset losses from tillage.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8094

 

+ UN’s FOOD AND AG ORG SUPPORTS ORGANIC

The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) has come out in favour of organic agriculture. Its report, “Organic Agriculture and Food Security” states that organic agriculture can address local and global food security challenges.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8268

 

+ ORGANIC FOOD BETTER

Important new research has shown up to 40% more beneficial compounds in organic vegetable crops and up to 90% more in organic milk. It has also found high levels of minerals such as iron and zinc in organic produce.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8430

 

+ IT’S OFFICIAL: ORGANIC REALLY IS BETTER FOR YOU

A 10-year study comparing organic and non-organic tomatoes has found that the organic ones have almost twice the quantity of antioxidants (called flavonoids) that help to prevent high blood pressure, thus reducing the likelihood of heart disease and strokes.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/wine/main.jhtml?xml=/wine/2007/07/14/edorganic114.xml

 

+ GROWERS CAN MAKE MORE MONEY BY GOING ORGANIC

Minnesota grain farmers could make more money by switching from conventional to organic grain crops, shows a four-year study announced at the American Agricultural Economics Association’s annual meeting in Long Beach, Calif. The study, by David W. Archer, an Agricultural Research Service (ARS) economist, and Hillarius Kludze, an ARS soil scientist, analyzed both economic risks and transition effects of switching to organic farming.

http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=8094

Organic Statistics 2007 and 2008 November 1, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in 746, Organic, Research, organic farming, organic food, statistics.
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I was amazed to find an earlier post at about no.6 in a google listing for the search term ‘organic statistics’. That post was a snapshot not a guide, so here is a better guide.

For the US & North America – try the USDA and the Organic Trade Association.

If you are looking for the UK try site, which has some great links.

These sites are update on a regular basis and are worth visiting on a regular basis if you need stats.

The “O” market October 15, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Organic, Research, organic food, supermarkets.
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Chews wise have a well informed and suitably sceptical discussion on the market for organic goods in the US, with useful links to find even more information.

One of the problems with all of these market research studies is that they assume that we purchase food, in the same way that we buy anything else and also that we are seeking organic food as if it were again any other product. There is a frequent mismatch between those conducting marketing and social scientists studying organic consumers because of this fundamental difference. Many people are chosing an organic product from amoungst a group of peer products but at the same time many are not, and are deciding long before they got to the shop that they are going to buy an organic product because it is not like any other product. They are deciding to purchase it because of their feelings about the environment, the need to support organic alternatives and a desire to change their and our relationship to food more widely. The social processes behind these decisions are not about brand selection, but about wider social aspirations that will not be captured in most market research.

Organic.org July 16, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Food, Organic, Research.
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About Organic.org

Our mission is to educate people on the benefits of organic agriculture, food and products. With an increasingly crowded marketplace of organic goods, it is crucial to understand what the word ‘organic’ means, what type of products are available, the significance of purchasing them, and finally, how someone with little knowledge about organics can begin to take steps towards an organic lifestyle. Organic.org strives to make organic education easy—and fun!

Organic.org – About Organic.org

Organic Food in China April 18, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Food, Organic, Research, farming, organic farming.
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A useful resource on the development of organic food and farming in China

Nestle’s Food Research April 18, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Food, Food Porn, GM food, News, Organic, Research, fast food, medicine, organic food.
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A fascinating insight into how a big food company thinks about the future of food with this interview.

Organic Food is good for you – the proof? April 3, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Food, Organic, Research, organic farming, organic food, vegetarian.
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This article appears to round a up a raft of smaller articles appearing in the UK about the benefits of organic food on health.

I have always been a sceptic about the importance of this approach to diet, but at the same time it is useful to see that the differences can and are being measured.

RIP Jean Baudrillard March 8, 2007

Posted by organicresearcher in Research, philosophy.
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The french philsopher and sociologist has moved on, you can read a decent obituary here and a little more of a or what the media think is ironic piece here.

“This hero of the polo-necked, pointy-spectacled classes made it his life’s work to argue that, under the weight of our relentless consumption of objects and media, simulated experiences had come to replace the real thing and reality and fantasy had blurred into one impenetrable edifice called “hyper-reality”.

Is one of the annoying sentences in the latter piece, but he it does go on to make the rather acute point about Baudrillard’s style.

His method of rhetorical exaggeration in order to make a point could always be relied on to wind up the stuffed shirts.

If you haven’t read Baudrillard, go out and do so, you’ll see things differently afterwards.