What’s new for Michigan Organic Growers for week of July 10-15

 

      
  

1. Demand for Organic Food   Outstrips Supply

  

 

  

2. Stop the commercial planting of genetically   engineered plums - the first temperate GE tree!

  

 

  

3. Grand Rapids  Farmers market returns

  

 

  

4. Second annual field day on   Enhancing Beneficial Insects with Native Plants –Aug 1, 2006

  

 

  

5.  Inconsistent Weed Control With Glycophosate Reported   

  

 

  

6.   Rust Movement   Remains Minuscule

  

 

  

7. Julberty’s Dairy has been    bought out by Dean's -the huge dairy conglomerate, of dubious fame.    

  

 

  

8.  Vegetable   Scouting Report for week of July 10-15-from Cornell University

  

 

  

9.  Take a look at this issue of New Ag Network

  

 

  

10.   Soil Building   and Organic Market Workshop

  

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1.  Published on Friday, July   7, 2006 by the Associated Press
  Demand for Organic
Food   Outstrips Supply
  
by Libby Quaid
  
America's   appetite for organic food is so strong that supply just can't keep
  up with demand. Organic products still have only a tiny slice, about 2.5
  percent, of the nation's food market. But the slice is expanding at a
  feverish pace.
  
  Growth in sales of organic food has been 15 percent to 21 percent each year,
  compared with 2 percent to 4 percent for total food sales.
  
  Organic means food is grown without bug killer, fertilizer, hormones,
  antibiotics or biotechnology.
  
  Mainstream supermarkets, eyeing the success of organic retailers such as
  Whole Foods, have rushed to meet demand. The Kroger Co., Safeway Inc. and
  SuperValu Inc., which owns Albertson's LLC, are among those selling their
  own organic brands. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said earlier this year it would
  double its organic offerings.
  
  The number of organic farms an estimated 10,000 is also increasing, but
  not fast enough. As a result, organic manufacturers are looking for
  ingredients outside the United States   in places like Europe, Bolivia,
Venezuela and South Africa.
  
  That is no surprise, said Barbara Robinson, head of the Agriculture
  Department's National Organic Program. The program provides the round, green
  "USDA Organic" seal for certified products.
  
  Her agency is just now starting to track organic data, but Robinson believes
  the United States   is importing far more organic food than it exports. That's
  true of conventional food, too.
  
  "That is how you stimulate growth, is imports generally," she said.   "Your
  own industry says we're tired of importing this; why should I pay for
  imports when I could start producing myself?"
  
  "We're doing a lot of scrambling," said Sheryl O'Loughlin, CEO of   Clif Bar
  Inc. "We have gotten to the point now where we know we can get a call   for
  any ingredient."
  
  The makers of the high-energy, eat-and-run Clif Bar needed 85,000 pounds of
  almonds, and they had to be organic. But the nation's organic almond crop
  was spoken for. Eventually, Clif Bar found the almonds in Spain. But more
  shortages have popped up: apricots and blueberries, cashews and hazelnuts,
  brown rice syrup and oats.
  
  Even Stonyfield Farm, an organic pioneer in the United States, is pursuing a
  foreign supplier; Stonyfield is working on a deal to import milk powder from
New Zealand.
  
  "I'm not suggesting we would be importing from all these places,"   said Gary
  Hirshberg, president and CEO of Stonyfield Farm Inc. "But for transition
  purposes, to help organic supply to keep up with the nation's growing
  hunger, these countries have to be considered."
  
  The dilemma of how to fill the gap between organic supply and demand is part
  of a long-running debate within America's booming organic   industry. For many
  enthusiasts, organic is about more than the food on their plates; it's a way
  to improve the environment where they live and help keep small-scale farmers
  in business.
  
  "If organic is something created in the image of sustainable   agriculture, we
  certainly haven't accomplished that yet," said Urvashi Rangan, a   scientist
  for Consumers Union. "What people do   have to understand is if that stuff
  comes in from overseas, and it's got an organic label on it, it had to meet
  USDA standards in order to get here."
  
  The issue causes mixed feelings for Travis Forgues, an organic dairy farmer
  in Vermont.
  
  "I don't like the idea of it coming in from out of this country, but I   don't
  want them to stop growing organic because of that," Forgues said.   "I want
  people to say, `Let's do that here, give a farmer another avenue to make a
  livable wage.'"
  
  A member of the farmer-owned Organic    Valley cooperative,   Forgues got his
  dairy farm certified nearly 10 years ago. Organic Valley   supplies milk to
  Stonyfield.
  
  Switching to organic is a difficult proposition. Vegetable grower Scott
  Woodard is learning through trial and error on his Putnam Valley, N.Y.,
  farm. One costly mistake: Conventional farmers can plant seeds when they
  want and use pesticides to kill hungry insect larvae. If Woodard had waited
  three weeks to plant, the bugs that ate his seeds would have hatched and
  left. Organic seeds can be double the price of conventional.
  
  "There's not a lot of information out there," Woodard said.   "We try to do
  the best we can. Sometimes it's too late, but then we learn for next   time."
  
  Stonyfield and Organic    Valley are working to   increase the number of organic
  farms, paying farmers to help them switch or boost production. Stonyfield,
  together with farmer-owned cooperative Organic Valley,   expects to spend
  around $2 million on incentives and technical help in 2006, Hirshberg said.
  
  Other companies offer similar help. And the industry's Organic Trade
  Association is trying to become more of a resource for individual farmers.
  
  Caren Wilcox, the group's executive director, described how an Illinois
  farmer showed up in May at an industry show in Chicago.
  
  "He said, `I want to get certified. Help me,'" Wilcox said.   "It was a smart
  thing to do, but the fact that he had to get into his car and go down to
McCormick Center says something about the   availability of information."
  
  In the meantime, manufacturers like Clif Bar and Stonyfield still prefer to
  buy organic ingredients, wherever they come from, instead of conventional
  crops in the U.S.
  
  "Anybody who's helping to take toxins out of the biosphere and use less
  poisonous chemicals in agriculture is a hero of mine," Hirshberg said.
  "There's enormous opportunity here for everybody to win, large and   small."
  
  Copyright © 2006 The Associated Press

  

 

  

 

  

2.    Stop the commercial planting of genetically engineered plums - the first   temperate GE tree!

  

 

  

The US   Department of Agriculture is accepting public comments between now and   Saturday, July 17, 2006 on a petition that would allow commercial growing and   marketing of the first genetically engineered (GE) plum trees. If approved, this would remove all   regulatory oversight of this GE variety by USDA, a virus-resistant plum   tree known as the Honey Sweet Pox Potyvirus Resistant plum. This would open   the door to GE varieties of many other related stone fruits, such as peaches,   apricots, cherries and almonds, that are susceptible to the same virus.   Ironically, this virus is not even found in the US today according to the USDA,   and is certainly not a significant agricultural problem here.

  

 

  

The USDA admits that this GE plum will   contaminate both organic and conventional non-genetically engineered plum   orchards if it is approved. Since all commercial plum trees are cultivars that   are relatively cross compatible within the same species, Prunus domestica,   contamination via GE plum pollen carried by bees and other insects will   infiltrate the plum orchards of organic and conventional growers. The   proposed buffer zones between GE plums and other plums will not prevent   genetic contamination from being spread by pollinating insects. Because this   GE plum tree is also the first genetically engineered temperate tree proposed   for commercial planting, it also opens the door to the commercialization of   GE varieties of other temperate trees such as poplars, pines, and walnuts.

  

 

  

The one GE fruit tree that has   previously been approved, a virus resistant Hawaiian papaya, has caused   extensive contamination of organic, conventional and wild papaya orchards on   most of the Hawaiian Islands in just a few   years. This contamination has spread far more quickly than the USDA predicted   in its initial assessment. Once native and cultivated plum varieties are   contaminated with transgenic pollen, and the resulting seeds are planted,   there is no calling it back.

  

 

  

This petition has implications for all   other GE tree species, as the USDA and the industry want to gauge what the   public's reaction will be. It is critical that all concerned about the threat   of GE foods and GE trees respond to this USDA petition. Several hundred field   trials of GE trees have been conducted already, many for forest trees, such   as Poplar, Loblolly Pine, and Sweetgum, that grow on millions of acres in   natural environments in the U.S.

  

 

  

[Sample   Comments to submit below.  Please add any additional comments of your   own, but remember to include the docket # at the top of your comments.]

  

 

  

The following comments are in reference   to Docket No. APHIS-2006-0084. I oppose the deregulation of genetically   engineered plum trees for the following reasons:

  

 

  

1. Genetic contamination is a serious   threat. Flowers and fruit in organic and conventional plum orchards will   become contaminated with GE plum genes via pollen transported by bees and   other insects that travel several miles in search of pollen. The result is   that organic and conventional plum growers will lose their markets for non-GE   plums as DNA testing confirms the contamination, as it has with GE papayas in   Hawaii. An   organic tree might remain organic itself, but the seeds will become   contaminated, and the trees planted from these seeds will have contaminated   fruit.

  

 

  

 2. The approval of GE plums would   be a precedent setting step by USDA, opening the floodgates for more GE trees   including fruit, nut, ornamental, paper-pulp, and timber species, as well as   trees engineered for soil remediation, and other traits. Approximately 80   species and varieties of trees are currently undergoing gene splicing   research and development for commercial use. Many of these are native species   important to ecosystems in much of the U.S.

  

 

  

3. There is a serious concern about the   genetic stability of the inserted genes in GE plum trees. USDA claims that   the plum pox viral resistance gene and other inserted genes are sufficiently   genetically stable, but the testing has only been performed over ten years   and not the entire pollen-producing life span of a plum tree.

  

 

  

 4. The plum pox virus is not   currently known to exist in the US as a problem for plum growers.   Thus there is no justification for exposing other trees, plants, insects and   people to the various hazards posed by GE plums.

  

 

  

 5.  The deregulatory petition   completely ignores potential effects on bees and other pollinator species.   Although unintended effects are common in GE crops there is very little   assessment of possible environmental impacts from unintended effects. There   are no studies that would allow us to evaluate the potential hazards of GE   tree pollen for a variety of insects, or for consumers of honey. We also do   not know how animals and insects that browse on plum leaves might be   affected.

  

 

  

6. The USDA's environmental assessment   admits that the GE plum readily hybridizes within its species. Thus, there   may be a significant potential for gene flow into native plum varieties. Wild   plum trees are perennial species living for several decades and populations   exist in dozens of states from coast to coast.  GE plum trees will be   long lived, and capable of contaminating orchards and native plum tree   populations for several decades. One GE plum tree will be able to produce   thousands of GE seeds and extensive quantities of GE pollen, and will be   capable of spreading fertile GE plum seeds and pollen into the environment   for many years. The petition did not adequately evaluate the relative fitness   of GE plum varieties as compared to native plums; it is possible that the GE   varieties would become more successful in natural settings, and out-compete   non-GE varieties. The USDA claim that contamination would be positive by   reducing potential reservoirs for harboring the plum pox virus in the wild is   unsupported by any data.

  

 

  

7. There has been no short-term or   long-term safety testing or feeding trials for toxicity and other adverse   effects of the genes inserted into the GE plum trees. GE plums have not been   tested on animals, birds or humans for safety.  Toxicity tests are   necessary since unintended genetic effects are known to occur with gene   splicing. USDA has ignored the need for scientific studies of gene splicing   and for comprehensive studies of the environmental consequences of GE   plantings.

  

 

  

The US   Department of Agriculture is accepting public comments between now and   Saturday, July 17, 2006 on the petition to formally deregulate and allow   commercial growing and marketing of GE plums.

  

We apologize for the inconvenient   process to submit your comments - the USDA is no longer accepting public   comment via email or fax.

  

  

  

To   submit a comment using the Internet, go to http://www.regulations.gov.

  

In the "Agency" box, select   "Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service" from the drop-down   menu; select "NOTICES" as the Document Type and APHIS-2006-0084 as   the "Keyword or ID." Then press "submit" to submit or   view public comments as well as the agency's supporting materials; click just   beneath "Add Comments" and scroll down to submit your letter.

  

 

  

To   submit your comments via mail, make sure your letter is postmarked no later   than Saturday, July 17th, and send an original and three copies with your   name and address to Docket No. APHIS-2006-0084, Regulatory Analysis and   Development, PPD, APHIS, Station 3A-03.8, 4700 River Road, Unit 118,   Riverdale, MD 20737-1238.

  

 

  

Feel free to copy and paste any or all   of the 7 points above, along with any comments of your own.  Please   forward this widely among your friends and other contacts.

  

 

  

 

      
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

  

 

      
  

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Vicki Morrone

Organic Vegetable and Crop Outreach Specialist

Michigan  State University

C.S. Mott Sustainable Food Systems

303 Natural Resources Bldg.

East Lansing,  MI 48824

517-353-3542

517-282-3557 (cell)

517-353-3834 (fax)

 

 

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