10.
The Organic Myth
Pastoral ideals are getting trampled as organic food goes mass market
Next time you're in the supermarket, stop and take a look at Stonyfield Farm
yogurt. With its contented cow and green fields, the yellow container evokes a
bucolic existence, telegraphing what we've come to expect from organic food:
pure, pesticide-free, locally produced ingredients grown on a small family
farm.
So it may come as a surprise that Stonyfield's organic farm is long gone. Its
main facility is a state-of-the-art industrial plant just off the airport strip
in Londonderry, N.H., where it handles milk from other farms. And consider
this: Sometime soon a portion of the milk used to make that organic yogurt may
be taken from a chemical-free cow in New Zealand, powdered, and then shipped to
the U.S. True, Stonyfield still cleaves to its organic heritage. For Chairman
and CEO Gary Hirshberg, though, shipping milk powder 9,000 miles across the
planet is the price you pay to conquer the supermarket dairy aisle. "It
would be great to get all of our food within a 10-mile radius of our
house," he says. "But once you're in organic, you have to source
globally."
Hirshberg's
dilemma is that of the entire organic food business. Just as mainstream
consumers are growing hungry for untainted food that also nourishes their
social conscience; it is getting harder and harder to find organic ingredients.
There simply aren't enough organic cows in the U.S., never mind the organic
grain to feed them, to go around. Nor are there sufficient organic
strawberries, sugar, or apple pulp -- some of the other ingredients that go
into the world's best-selling organic yogurt.
Now
companies from Wal-Mart (WMT ) to General
Mills (GIS ) to Kellogg (K ) are wading into the organic
game, attracted by fat margins that old-fashioned food purveyors can only dream
of. What was once a cottage industry of family farms has become Big Business,
with all that that implies, including pressure from Wall Street to scale up and
boost profits. Hirshberg himself is under the gun because he has sold an 85%
stake in Stonyfield to the French food giant Groupe Danone. To retain
management control, he has to keep Stonyfield growing at double-digit rates.
Yet faced with a supply crunch, he has drastically cut the percentage of
organic products in his line. He also has scaled back annual sales growth, from
almost 40% to 20%. "They're all mad at me," he says.
As food companies scramble to find enough organically grown ingredients, they
are inevitably forsaking the pastoral ethos that has defined the organic
lifestyle. For some companies, it means keeping thousands of organic cows on
industrial-scale feedlots. For others, the scarcity of organic ingredients
means looking as far afield as China, Sierra Leone, and Brazil -- places where
standards may be hard to enforce, workers' wages and living conditions are a
worry, and, say critics, increased farmland sometimes comes at a cost to the
environment.
Everyone agrees on the basic definition of organic: food grown without the
assistance of man-made chemicals. Four years ago, under pressure from critics
fretting that the term "organic" was being misused, the U.S.
Agriculture Dept. issued rules. To be certified as organic, companies must
eschew most pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, synthetic fertilizers,
bioengineering, and radiation. But for purists, the philosophy also requires
farmers to treat their people and livestock with respect and, ideally, to sell
small batches of what they produce locally so as to avoid burning fossil fuels
to transport them. The USDA rules don't fully address these concerns.
Hence the organic paradox: The movement's adherents have succeeded beyond their
wildest dreams, but success has imperiled their ideals. It simply isn't clear
that organic food production can be replicated on a mass scale. For Hirshberg,
who set out to "change the way Kraft (KFT ), Monsanto (MON ), and everybody else does
business," the movement is shedding its innocence. "Organic is
growing up."
Certainly, life has changed since 1983, when Hirshberg teamed up with a
back-to-the-land advocate named Samuel Kaymen to sell small batches of full-fat
plain organic yogurt. Kaymen had founded Stonyfield Farm to feed his six kids
and, as he puts it, "escape the dominant culture." Hirshberg, then
29, had been devoted to the environment for years, stung by memories of
technicolor dyes streaming downriver from his father's New Hampshire shoe
factories. He wrote a book on how to build water-pumping windmills and, between
1979 and 1983, ran the New Alchemy Institute, an alternative-living research
center on Cape Cod. He was a believer.
But producing yogurt amid the rudimentary conditions of the original Stonyfield
Farm was a recipe for nightmares, not nirvana. Meg, an organic farmer who
married Hirshberg in 1986, remembers the farm as cold and crowded, with a road
so perilous that suppliers often refused to come up. "I call it the bad
old days," she says. Adds her mother, Doris Cadoux, who propped up the business
for years: "Every time Gary would come to me for money, Meg would call to
say 'Mama, don't do it."'
Farming without insecticides, fertilizers, and other aids is tough. Laborers
often weed the fields by hand. Farmers control pests with everything from
sticky flypaper to aphid-munching ladybugs. Manure and soil fertility must be
carefully managed. Sick animals may take longer to get well without a quick hit
of antibiotics, although they're likely to be healthier in the first place.
Moreover, the yield per acre or per animal often goes down, at least initially.
Estimates for the decline from switching to organic corn range up to 20%.
Organic farmers say they can ultimately exceed the yields of conventional
rivals through smarter soil management. But some believe organic farming, if it
is to stay true to its principles, would require vastly more land and resources
than is currently being used. Asks Alex Avery, a research director at the
Hudson Institute think tank: "How much Bambi habitat do you want to plow down?"
IMPOSSIBLE STANDARD
For a sense of why Big Business and organics often don't mix, it helps to visit
Jack and Anne Lazor of Butterworks Farm. The duo have been producing organic
yogurt in northeastern Vermont since 1975. Their 45 milking cows are raised from
birth and have names like Peaches and Moonlight. All of the food for the cows
-- and most of what the Lazors eat, too -- comes from the farm, and Anne keeps
their charges healthy with a mix of homeopathic medicines and nutritional
supplements. Butterworks produces a tiny 9,000 quarts of yogurt a week, and no
one can pressure them to make more. Says Jack: "I'd be happiest to sell
everything within 10 miles of here."
But the Lazors also embody an ideal that's almost impossible for other food
producers to fulfill. For one thing, they have enough land to let their
modest-sized herd graze for food. Many of the country's 9 million-plus dairy
cows (of which fewer than 150,000 are organic) are on farms that will never
have access to that kind of pasture. After all, a cow can only walk so far when
it has to come back to be milked two or three times a day.
STEWARDS OF THE LAND
When consumers shell out premiums of 50% or more to buy organic, they are
voting for the Butterworks ethic. They believe humans should be prudent
custodians not only of their own health but also of the land and animals that
share it. They prefer food produced through fair wages and family farms, not
poor workers and agribusiness. They are responding to tales of caged chickens
and confined cows that never touch a blade of grass; talk of men losing
fertility and girls becoming women at age nine because of extra hormones in
food. They read about pesticides seeping into the food supply and genetically
modified crops creeping across the landscape.
For Big Food, consumers' love affair with everything organic has seemed like a
gift from the gods. Food is generally a commoditized, sluggish business,
especially in basic supermarket staples. Sales of organic groceries, on the
other hand, have been surging by up to 20% in recent years. Organic milk is so
profitable -- with wholesale prices more than double that of conventional milk
-- that Lyle "Spud" Edwards of Westfield, Vt., was able to halve his
herd, to 25 cows, this summer and still make a living, despite a 15% drop in
yields since switching to organic four years ago. "There's a lot more
paperwork, but it's worth it," says Edwards, who supplies milk to
Stonyfield.
The food industry got a boost four years ago when the USDA issued its organic
standards. The "USDA Organic" label now appears on scores of
products, from chicken breasts to breakfast cereal. And you know a tipping
point is at hand when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. enters the game. The retailer
pledged this year to become a center of affordable "organics for
everyone" and has started by doubling its organic offerings at 374 stores
nationwide. "Everyone wants a piece of the pie," says George L.
Siemon, CEO of Organic Valley, the country's largest organic farm co-
operative. "Kraft and Wal-Mart are part of the community now, and we have
to get used to it."
The corporate giants have turned a fringe food category into a $14 billion
business. They have brought wider distribution and marketing dollars. They have
imposed better quality controls on a sector once associated with bug-infested,
battered produce rotting in crates at hippie co-ops. Organic products now
account for 2.5% of all grocery spending (if additive-free "natural"
foods are included, the share jumps to about 10%). And demand could soar if prices
come down.
But success has brought home the problems of trying to feed the masses in an
industry where supplies can be volatile. Everyone from Wal-Mart to Costco
Wholesale Corp. (COST ) is feeling
the pinch. Earlier this year, Earthbound Farm, a California producer of organic
salads, fruit, and vegetables owned by Natural Selection Foods, cut off its
sliced-apple product to Costco because supply dried up -- even though
Earthbound looked as far afield as New Zealand. "The concept of running
out of apples is foreign to these people," says Earthbound co-founder Myra
Goodman, whose company recalled bagged spinach in the wake of the recent E. coli outbreak. "When you're
sourcing conventional produce, it's a matter of the best product at the best
price."
Inconsistency is a hallmark of organic food. Variations in animal diet, local
conditions, and preparation make food taste different from batch to batch. But
that's anathema to a modern food giant. Heinz, for one, had a lot of trouble
locating herbs and spices for its organic ketchup. "We're a global company
that has to deliver consistent standards," says Kristen Clark, a group
vice-president for marketing. The volatile supply also forced Heinz to put dried
or fresh organic herbs in its organic Classico pasta sauce because it wasn't
able to find the more convenient quick-frozen variety. Even Wal-Mart, master of
the modern food supply chain, is humbled by the realities of going organic. As
spokesperson Gail Lavielle says: "You can't negotiate prices in a market
like that."
While Americans may love the idea of natural food, they have come to rely on
the perks of agribusiness. Since the widespread use of synthetic pesticides
began, around the time of World War II, food producers have reaped remarkable
gains. Apples stay red and juicy for weeks. The average harvested acre of
farmland yields 200% more wheat than it did 70 years ago. Over the past two
decades chickens have grown 25% bigger in less time and on less food. At the
same time, the average cow produces 60% more milk, thanks to innovations in
breeding, nutrition, and synthetic hormones.
It's also worth remembering how inexpensive food is these days. Americans shell
out about 10% of their disposable income on food, about half what they spent in
the first part of the 20th century. Producing a budget-priced cornucopia of
organic food won't be easy.
Exhibit A: Gary Hirshberg's quest for organic milk. Dairy producers estimate
that demand for organic milk is at least twice the current available supply. To
quench this thirst, the U.S. would have to more than double the number of
organic cows -- those that eat only organic food -- to 280,000 over the next
five years. That's a challenge, since the number of dairy farms has shrunk to
60,000, from 334,000 in 1980, according to the National Milk Producers
Federation. And almost half the milk produced in the U.S. comes from farms with
more than 500 cows, something organic advocates rarely support.
What to do? If you're Hirshberg, you weigh the pros and cons of importing
organic milk powder from New Zealand. Stonyfield already gets strawberries from
China, apple puree from Turkey, blueberries from Canada, and bananas from
Ecuador. It's the only way to keep the business growing. Besides, Hirshberg
argues, supporting a family farmer in Madagascar or reducing chemical use in
Costa Rica is just as important as doing the same at home.
Perhaps, but doing so risks a consumer backlash, especially when the organic
food is from China. So far there is little evidence that crops from there are
tainted or fraudulently labeled. Any food that bears the USDA Organic label has
to be accredited by an independent certifier. But tests are few and far
between. Moreover, many consumers don't trust food from a country that
continues to manufacture DDT and tolerates fakes in other industries. Similar
questions are being asked about much of the developing world. Ronnie Cummins,
national director of the nonprofit Organic Consumers Assn., claims organic
farms may contribute to the destruction of the Amazon rain forest, although
conventional farming remains the proven culprit.
Imported organics are a constant concern for food companies and supermarkets.
It's certainly on Steve Pimentel's mind. "Someone is going to do something
wrong," says Costco's assistant general merchandise manager. "We want
to make sure it's not us." To avoid nasty surprises, Costco makes sure its
own certifiers check that standards are met in China for the organic peanuts
and produce it imports. Over at Stonyfield, Hirshberg's sister, Nancy, who is
vice-president of natural resources, was so worried about buying strawberries
in northeastern China that she ordered a social audit to check worker
conditions. "If I didn't have to buy from there," she says, "I
wouldn't."
For many companies, the preferred option is staying home and adopting the
industrial scale of agribusiness. Naturally, giant factory farms make purists
recoil. Is an organic label appropriate for eggs produced in sheds housing more
than 100,000 hens that rarely see the light of day? Can a chicken that's
debeaked or allowed minimal access to the outdoors be deemed organic? Would
consumers be willing to pay twice as much for organic milk if they thought the
cows producing it spent most of their outdoor lives in confined dirt lots?
ETHICAL CHALLENGES?
Absolutely not, say critics such as Mark Kastel, director of the Organic
Integrity Project at the Cornucopia Institute, an advocacy group promoting
small family farms. "Organic consumers think they're supporting a
different kind of ethic," says Kastel, who last spring released a
high-profile report card labeling 11 producers as ethically challenged.
Kastel's report card included Horizon Organic Dairy, the No. 1 organic milk
brand in the U.S., and Aurora Organic Dairy, which makes private-label products
for the likes of Costco and Safeway Inc. Both dairies deny they are ethically
challenged. But the two do operate massive corporate farms. Horizon has 8,000
cows in the Idaho desert. There, the animals consume such feed as corn, barley,
hay, and soybeans, as well as some grass from pastureland. The company is
currently reconfiguring its facility to allow more grazing opportunities. And
none of this breaks USDA rules. The agency simply says animals must have
"access to pasture." How much is not spelled out. "It doesn't
say [livestock] have to be out there, happy and feeding, 18 hours a day,"
says Barbara C. Robinson, who oversees the USDA's National Organic Program.
But what gets people like Kastel fuming is the fact that big dairy farms
produce tons of pollution in the form of manure and methane, carbon dioxide,
and nitrous oxide -- gases blamed for warming the planet. Referring to
Horizon's Idaho farm, he adds: "This area is in perpetual drought. You
need to pump water constantly to grow pasture. That's not organic."
Aurora and Horizon argue their operations are true to the organic spirit and
that big farms help bring organic food to the masses. Joe E. Scalzo, president
and CEO of Horizon's owner, WhiteWave, which is owned by Dean Foods Co., says:
"You need the 12-cow farms in Vermont -- and the 4,000 milking cows in
Idaho." Adds Clark Driftmier, a spokesman for Aurora, which manages 8,400
dairy cows on two farms in Colorado and Texas: "We're in a contentious
period with organics right now."
At the USDA, Robinson is grappling with the same imponderables. In her mind the
controversy is more about scale than animal treatment. "The real issue is
a fear of large corporations," she says. Robinson expects the USDA to
tighten pasture rules in the coming months in hopes of moving closer to the
spirit of the organic philosophy. "As programs go," she says,
"this is just a toddler. New issues keep coming up."
Few people seem more hemmed in by the contradictions than Gary Hirshberg.
Perhaps more than anyone, he has acted as the industry's philosopher king,
lobbying governments, proselytizing consumers, helping farmers switch to
organic, and giving 10% of profits to environmental causes. Yet he sold most of
Stonyfield Farm to a $17 billion French corporation.
He did so partly to let his original investors cash out, partly to bring
organic food to the masses. But inevitably, as Stonyfield has morphed from
local outfit to national brand, some of the original tenets have fallen by the
wayside. Once Danone bought a stake, Stonyfield founder Samuel Kaymen moved on.
"I never felt comfortable with the scale or dealing with people so far
away," he recalls, although he says Hirshberg has so far managed to uphold
the company's original principles.
The hard part may be continuing to do so with Danone looking over his shoulder.
Hirshberg retains board control but says his "autonomy and independence
and employment are contingent on delivering minimum growth and
profitability." Danone Chairman and CEO Franck Riboud expresses admiration
for the man he considers to be Danone's organic guru, but adds: "Gary
respects that I have to answer to shareholders."
The compromises that Hirshberg is willing to make say a lot about where the
organic business is headed. "Our kids don't have time for us to sit on our
high horses and say we're not going to do this because it's not ecologically
perfect," says Hirshberg. "The only way to influence the powerful
forces in this industry is to become a powerful force." And he's willing
to do that, even if it means playing by a new set of rules.
**********************************
11.
Annual Farm Registration-with Michigan
Department of Agriculture
Did you know that MDA requires organic
farms to be registered-one so when another farm is spraying a pesticide you
will be notified and the other so they can track production. For the safety of
you and your farm there is a registration so that you can be notified when
surrounding farms are spraying any pesticide or restricted product. You can get
the form at this WEB site or you can call 517-241-1169, Michigan Department of
Agriculture. http://www.michigan.gov/documents/05ORGANICform_115123_7.FOR.pdf.
The other type of registration is so
the state can track all organic products. This form can be found at http://www.michigan.gov/documents/Handler_Application_69057_7.pdf
or you can call 517-373-1075 for an application.
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)
http://safs.msu.edu/
http://www.mottgroup.msu.edu/
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