USDA May Relax Standards for Organic Foods
With the "USDA organic" seal stamped on its label, Anheuser-Busch calls its Wild Hop Lager "the perfect organic experience."
"In today's world of artificial flavors, preservatives and factory farming, knowing what goes into what you eat and drink can just about drive you crazy," the Wild Hop website says. "That's why we have decided to go back to basics and do things the way they were meant to be ... naturally."
But many beer drinkers may not know that Anheuser-Busch has the organic blessing from federal regulators even though Wild Hop Lager uses hops grown with chemical fertilizers and sprayed with pesticides.
A deadline of midnight Friday to come up with a new list of nonorganic ingredients allowed in USDA-certified organic products passed without action from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, leaving uncertain whether some foods currently labeled "USDA organic" would continue to be produced.
The agency is considering a list of 38 nonorganic ingredients that will be permitted in organic foods. Because of the broad uses of these ingredients - as colorings and flavorings, for example - almost any type of manufactured organic food could be affected, including cereal, sausage, bread and beer.
Organic food advocates have fought to block approval of some or all of the proposed ingredients, saying consumers would be misled.
"This proposal is blatant catering to powerful industry players who want the benefits of labeling their products 'USDA organic' without doing the work to source organic materials," said Ronnie Cummins, executive director of the Organic Consumers Assn. of Finland, Minn., a nonprofit group that boasts 850,000 members.
USDA spokeswoman Joan Shaffer declined to comment on the plan.
Food manufacturers said this week that they were hoping the agency would approve the rules by Friday to continue labeling their products as organic.
A federal judge had given the USDA until midnight Friday to name the nonorganic ingredients it would allow in organic foods, but the agency did not release its final list by the end of the day.
"They probably don't know what to do" Cummins said. "On the other hand, it's hard to believe they're going to make people change their labels, although that's what they should do."
Demand for organic food in the U.S. is booming as consumers seek products that are more healthful and friendlier to the environment. Sales have more than doubled in the last five years, reaching $16.9 billion last year, according to the Organic Trade Assn. in Greenfield, Mass., which represents small and large food producers.
But with big companies entering what was formerly a mom-and-pop industry, new questions have arisen about what exactly goes into organic food. For food to be called organic, it must be grown without chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Animals must be raised without antibiotics and growth hormones and given some access to the outdoors.
Many nonorganic ingredients, including hops, are already being used in organic products, thanks to a USDA interpretation of the Organic Foods Protection Act of 1990. In 2005, a federal judge disagreed with how the USDA was applying the law and gave the agency two years to revise its rules.
Organic food supporters had hoped that the USDA would allow only a small number of substances, but were dismayed last month when the agency released the proposed list of 38 ingredients.
"Adding 38 new ingredients is not just a concession by the USDA, it is a major blow to the organic movement in the U.S. because it would erode consumer confidence in organic standards," said Carl Chamberlain, a research assistant with the Pesticide Education Project in Raleigh, N.C.
In addition to hops, the list includes 19 food colorings, two starches, casings for sausages and hot dogs, fish oil, chipotle chili pepper, gelatin and a host of obscure ingredients (one, for instance, is a "bulking agent" and sweetener with the tongue-twisting name of fructooligosaccharides).
Under the agency's proposal, as much as 5% of a food product could be made with these ingredients and still get the "USDA organic" seal. Hops, though a major component of beer's flavor, are less than 5% of the final product because the beverage is mostly water.
Sales of organic beer, though still a small portion of total beer sales, have been growing even faster than overall organic food sales. They reached $19 million in 2005, a 40% increase over the previous year (2006 figures are not yet available).
Trying to get a share of the market for green products, Anheuser-Busch introduced two organic beers in September, and soon pitched them in fliers to wholesalers.
"Environmentally conscious consumers are looking for certified organic products, including beer, the fastest-growing organic beverage," the pitch said. "Capitalize on this growing market with Wild Hop Lager and Stone Mill Pale Ale."
But while the two beers use 100% organic barley malt, less than 10% of the hops they use is organic. Hops are conelike flowers that grow on vines and impart a bitter taste on beer to offset the sweetness of malts.
Anheuser-Busch said it simply couldn't find enough organic hops.
"There currently is only a small supply of organically grown hops available for purchase by brewers, and we purchased all we could for brewing these beers," said Doug Muhleman, vice president of brewing operations for Anheuser-Busch Inc.
But that argument doesn't wash with Russell Klisch, owner of Milwaukee's Lakefront Brewery, which has been producing beer with 100% organic hops since 1996.
"If we can do it, we think Anheuser-Busch, the world's largest beer producer with virtually unlimited resources, should be able to follow our example," he said.
Klisch said there were enough organic hops to satisfy 90% of the current organic beer demand in the U.S., but some brewers were put off by their higher price.
There are no organic hops commercially grown in the U.S.; most come from New Zealand, Britain and Germany. But Klisch has recently contracted with two Wisconsin farmers to grow some on their land. He doesn't understand why large brewers can't do the same.
"You're telling me that Anheuser-Busch can't find a little plot of ground somewhere to grow organic hops?" he said.
In addition to hops, two other items on the USDA list have attracted particular attention: casings for sausages and hot dogs, and fish oil.
Casings are the intestines of cows, pigs or sheep, which have been used for centuries to wrap meat into sausages and frankfurters.
Although the casings are a tiny portion of the overall sausage, organic purists object to eating anything from animals that are raised on conventional farms, where livestock may be housed in tight quarters and given antibiotics and growth hormones. Further, they note that the USDA's food safety division has identified cow intestines as a possible source of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or mad cow disease.
But the USDA has already banned part of the cow's small intestines for human consumption because of the risk of mad cow disease. Barbara Negron, president of the North American Natural Casing Assn. in New York, said casings were safe to eat.
"It's a very safe, clean and natural product," she said. "It's not an organic product. It's a natural product."
It's very difficult to maintain pure organic eating habits, Negron added, "unless you want to lock yourself up and only raise your own food."
Fish oil's presence on the USDA list has drawn objections because it could carry high levels of heavy metals and other contaminants, said Jim Riddle, a former member of the National Organic Standards Board. But fish oil producers said such contaminants could be screened out through proper processing.
The USDA rules come with what appears to be an important consumer protection: Manufacturers can use nonorganic ingredients only if organic versions are not "commercially available."
But food makers have found a way around this barrier, in part because the USDA doesn't enforce the rule directly. Instead, it depends on its certifying agents - 96 licensed organizations in the U.S. and overseas - to decide for themselves what it means for a product to be available in organic form.
Despite years of discussion, the USDA has yet to provide certifiers with standardized guidelines for enforcing this rule.
"There is no effective mechanism for identifying a lack of organic ingredients," complained executives of Pennsylvania Certified Organic, a nonprofit certifying agent, in a letter to the USDA. "It is a very challenging task to 'prove a negative' regarding the organic supply."
Large companies have a better chance of winning approval to use nonorganic ingredients because the amount they demand can exceed the small supply of organic equivalents, said Craig Minowa, environmental scientist for the Organic Consumers Assn.
scott.wilson@latimes.com
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times
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28 Comments so far
Show AllI think americans should go to the root of the problem that is our good company MONSANTO http://www.monsanto.com/monsanto/layout/default.asp .
Thanks to this genetic engineering company we American have the fatest people in the WORLD. THANKS MONSANTO ....
All the more reasons to buy locally grown organic foods only. Stop supporting BigAg.
sorry, the link is www.DogtorJ.net and then read "The Answer"
Important to remember, the Monsters have been screwing enforcement budgets of USDA & Dept. of Agrig. going back to Reagan. You know, "Get Big Gov't off the backs of Corporations so they can be all they can be." We found out. That was phase one. Phase two they fuck with the laws directly and get the Corporate guys as heads of the Agencies.
But it would never have happened if those Corporations couldn't buy our entire political class in wholesale lots, for pennies on the $$$ - and we get sick, diseased, and short lives so the Few may live in palatial wealth power and privilege over us, forever.
The header in Santa Clara v. S. Pacific Railroad 1886, used as stare decisis for Corporate Super Citizenship and acting as the foundation for their right to participate in our politics - IS A LIE.
KILL THE LIE, FREE THE PEOPLE, SAVE THE NATION. It isn't just about what we eat. It's about how we live.
Peace.
Eco-Eating: Eating as if the Earth Matters
www.brook.com/veg
Wow, Ronnie Cummins from Finland, MN-- hey man good for you to have so many members in a worthy cause.
Good article, especially since I have been drinking Anheser-Busch beer. Been meaning to brew my own, took me a while to obtain all that's needed to do so. Right now waiting for a more constant tempt. as beer needs 70 degrees for a week to 10 days.
I for one am also concerned with what the Dept. Of Natural Resources does with its spraying of wooded lands, as I eat mostly venison. They certainly have screwed up enough with the introduction of flies to combat army worms, and then the lady beetle infestation. I have gotten so mad, thinking we should have a class action suit against the plagues they have brought on us. There is also the the deer brain disease, moose get it too and you wonder where it all really ends when they talk about birth control for does.
The Center for Science in the Public Interest:
http://www.cspinet.org/
has a lot of useful information, including a comprehensive, printable list of food additives and warnings about the "fake fat" on the market.
Our regulatory agencies are all paid for by taxpayers and then work to increase the power and profits of corporations. It's sickening.
For myself, I was one of the few people who never wanted national organic standards. The standards were much safer under state control. With the new National Food Safety act, the states will have even less control.
I envy those who have options. I'm retired and although I try to eat mainly organic, I don't have the money to change to a different life style. People like me are just stuck.
It's dogtorj.net
U.S. consumers are not much better off than the force-fed cattle raised in captivity for our consumption. They give us fewer and fewer choices. This month it's non-organic hops. Next month we'll be eating melamine-laced breakfast cereal using ingredients from China ala the recent tainted pet food scandal.
On the Organic Consumers Association page there is a link to a place where one can send comments to the USDA about this:
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/oca/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=11401
Hey 13truthseekers,
I tried the link you provided (DogturJ.net) because I was interested in the article you recommended but the link isn't working. Is the address correct?
Thanks
Having just come here from the "libertarians" discussing their philosophy in Gonsalves Ron Paul piece, why don't we just rely on their their beloved "free markets" to assure the we get organic foods?
What? Don't have a complete analytical lab in your garage to test samples of all the food you eat? Well like that say, "caveat emptor"!
...as much as 5% of a food product could be made with these ingredients and still get the "USDA organic" seal.
How pure was Jim Jones' koolaid or Chinese pet food - better than 95% I'll bet. At least the Chinese know how to deal with errant Food and Drug Tzars.
I agree aum33, and if that don't work they will vaccinate us with something!
OK, listen up. What they did in Europe is the organic farmers and the markets joined together to create their own real "organic" standards after realizing the government agency rules were being sold out by the big agri-business interests there. So when you go to the market there, there are two areas, one for the REAL organic foods and the other for the agri-business death foods, kinda like we've seen in the chain US supermarkets.
Organic only came in to the big chains only fairly recently. Alot of it is from out of country. Can you trust them that it's REALLY organic food. It was discovered that most of the "organic" produce at Walmart was NOT organic. They lied. (Anyone gonna prosecute them for that one??)
Buy organic at your local organic co-op or health food store. Ask questions. Read labels. Don't buy the corporate brand name organic food because they know how to bend the rules, believe me. The USDA 'organic standard' rules AREN'T being enforced, as the article above states, and the 'organic standards' were written by the lawyers for the big agri-business concerns. Sound familiar?
Buy local trusted organic farm produce if you can. This USDA crap will go on for years so vote with your dollars. Buy smart. You'll live to teach your family, neighbors and community. Local community laws will be the route to go, as we are seeing with the trans-fat bans. So start educating your local government officials.
For a great website detailing how just four foods are causing most of the disease in this country, go to: www.DogturJ.net and read the section entitled THE ANSWER. This article, "THE ANSWER," really educated me, and I've been managing a health food market for 7 years. I quit eating those four foods two weeks ago and the health problems I'd been experiencing for years disappeared within 10 days.
Be Well and Fare Well, Common Dream friends!
Thank goodness I live in a country where "organic" still means "organic" and I personally know the regional certifier, and the average organic farm in is under 80 acres.
I'll betcha Mall*Wart has their hand in this crap. They've discovered the gold in organic, and I'm sure they've got plenty of high-priced legal talent: half of which is working to see how close to the line they can get, and the other half working to lower the line. That's teamwork!
Ronald White said it all in the very first post on this subject:
To a rationally-thinking population the reaction to this confession of corporate-profit-sine-non-quo is a slam dunk : I BOYCOTT ANHEUSER-BUSCH.But ,I forget , this is America where USDA is in business to think and act for me because I have more important things to do,like watching American-idol...
It is not an impossibility - and when you refuse to buy, tell the retailer why. I do this all the time, and most people look at me like a crazy old bag - but why shouldn't I vote with my money.
The economic boycott worn recognition for the United Farm Workers when they boycotted green table grapes [I had quite a discussion with my new Mother-in-Law about why she couldn't buy them and serve them at MY house]
Or Safeway in Hawaii selling papaya and bananas from Central America, when we are awash in them. The corporations have nothing if people refuse to buy what they offer.
Popcorn is another problem - most corn now days is genetically modified [as are most soy products] Yet the health Food Stores here sell Organic, non-GMO products, and the popcorn anyway is cheaper then Orvilles.
You probably work [or worked] hard for your money. Spend it on the things that matter to you and your families.
Corporations have become like cancerous tumors - sucking the life out of healthy cells. Looks like they pretty much own all of our top politicians.
It would be so fine to see the stock markets totally collapse.
What a joke. Anheuser Busch owns Sea World and other marine parks and is a big supporter of capturing sea creatures to parade in front of bored and stupid humans who apparently like to get sprayed with whale urine.
As a vegetarian I am not hang wringing about sausage casings either. There is nothing wholesome or organic about livestock production. Factory farms: bad, the alternative is small farm or public lands grazing which as a Counterpunch article today says:
"In reality, ranchers are the most pervasively destructive force on our public land, with logging placed a distant second. Via outlandish subsidies, you, I and Uncle Sam support the cattle industry with drought and fire relief, fencing, water tanks, windmills and bargain basement grazing fees. Our government kills hundreds of thousands of wild creatures each year to protect ranchers' cows against predators such as wolves, mountain lions and coyotes.
In return we get erosion, endangered species, habitat destruction, flash-flooding, exotic weeds, desertification and some of the most degraded landscape on Earth. Much of it will never recover. "
Didnt mention global warming but that's just another of its problems.
It is AMAZING. There is a rise in the demand for organic foods because people, rightly, fear the food supply and what corporate farming has done to it. We are conscious of the unnatural, unhealthy things (bovine growth hormone, for example, thanks very much Monsanto) put into our foods and we want a healthier, more natural option. Instead, the USDA looks at organic labeling as a matter of marketing, as do all the players wanting to take advantage of our (justified) fears without doing anything to assuage them. I read a NYT article a couple of days ago about Honda discontinuing their hybrid Civic. Apparently, the hybrid Civic got worse mileage than the purely gasoline version of the Honda car. A Honda spokesperson said that Honda was LEARNING that hybrid buyers were only interested in FUEL ECONOMY NUMBERS. Yeah, they really said that. Corporations are so caught up in image and so unaware of substance that there is no objective reality for them. No sense of what it might MEAN to have an organic beer, instead of one with pesticides. What it means to them is simply MARKETING. Of course, the people at the top of the USDA are looking for consulting jobs with the very people they regulate, or lobbying jobs on their behalf, so they are eager to please Corporate America and set an example for the predecessors that will make their lobbying jobs easier and more successful as they come back to further push the envelope of Corporate Catering. The revolving door of the public regulation and private consulting is destroying what little power our government has left to regulate industry. Currently, if the an inspector actually goes to a slaughter house and sees feces on meat as it rides along one conveyor belt or another, the inspector is not permitted to stop the conveyor and check THAT meat for E. Coli, but has to go to another part of the plant (with no means to follow and indentify the offending meat) and check some random sample in another place. By then, the feces has been washed away so that it is no longer visible, but the E. Coli will still be present. I am a vegetarian, but I worry about my friends, family and neighbors who seem unable to grasp the fact that our meat supply is simply not safe.
We need to let the government know (this thtreat to organic standards is CONSTANT, so you'll have to let them know on an annual, or semi-annual basis) that ORGANIC is not a marketing ploy. It is a way of LIFE.
collidingrivers is correct that organics are outrageously expensive and not the domain of the poor. They are a large sacrifice for many of us, from a financial perspective, but, if we keep making that sacrifice to the detriment of non-organic alternatives, the market will have to either convince the government to lie on its behalf (the current USDA plan) or to turn to organic farming, which will be a boon not only for those eating the food, but for drinking water everywhere. For the animals who sustain us. For the health of the Earth that produces our food. Quite simply, organic is healthy far beyond the grocery store shelf. Forcing Anheuser-Busch to adhere to meaningful organic standards to earn that USDA seal will drive the market further toward making organic the STANDARD. Making it the standard will drive down the price and help to make healthier food available to those with lower-incomes. No argument, it is a crime what we feed to lower-income families and there is little doubt that these foods play a major role in the obesity epidemic.
We fought this battle some hundred years ago and won the right of labeling. Now, we need to fight again to renew the MEANING of labels. We need to make sure they mean what they say and not what marketing departments would like you to BELIEVE.
Thank you Mr. Wilson.
After spending the last twenty years of my life promoting natural and organic sustainable foods, I can not tell you how sick it is that these folks jump in and try to co-opt organic for no other reason than market share. Know where your food comes from or you may be voting with your dollars for the wrong team. The fact that we get no protection from the government shows what special interest pandering can get you. First the feds fought certification, then they made us pay for it through state agencies, now they step in order to WEAKEN the standards we put in place!
They bastards that control the nation are rather clever.
If all of us filled our bodies with the crap that the FDA approves of like veggies that were regularly drenched in pesticides, growth hormone infested milk, eggs, & meat, it'd be much easier for the "authorities" to keep us in a coral.
Everything is light. High quality organic food is full of light. Low quality, highly processed & sprayed foods have no more light than dog food. We're all Gods (in potential) and the more light we ingest, the better.
More "think global, act local." Time to get together neighbors, go back to seasonal foods, visits to your local farmer, and, how about a co-op canning faciltiy?
Yeah, I know, it's the USDA. All these Bush administration incompetent agencies are starting to blend together!
This Bush FDA is REALLY starting to annoy me!
Oh People, if you only knew what goes on under the USDA umbrella, especially since Bush & Co.- not mainstream news, but it should be.
YES- people have the RIGHT to know what the hell they are eating! (Everyone, educate yourself about what they are doing, and don't overlook how they want to force small farms of all sorts to tag ALL farm animals, plus more related outrages).
Yes, organic should mean organic, dammit. But check it out: mostly the RICH are eating organic, and when the rich get mad, the rich listen! Ever see a poor hippie at the organic foods store trying to buy the month's food on food stamps? Ya get two beans and a sift of flour. The shit's expensive beyond belief. So, yes, the rich will definitely complain and they will back off- on THIS.
What is really scary? They label corn syrup as "natural" (and with two complex chemical processes during manufacture, that is a whopping misnomer). The rich can pay for their high-priced organic, evaporated sugar cane juice, but the poor are stuck eating the less expensive, corn syrup soaked EVERYTHING else that's sweet. Corn syrup is considered a major culprit for the rise in obesity since the early 1980s. The body can't deal with it very well. Thanks, USDA, for duping us poor, fat Americans into thinking "natural" means "real". Our gigantic asses thank you.
Klisch said there were enough organic hops to satisfy 90% of the current organic beer demand in the U.S., but some brewers were put off by their higher price.
To a rationally-thinking population the reaction to this confession of corporate-profit-sine-non-quo is a slam dunk : I BOYCOTT ANHEUSER-BUSCH.But ,I forget , this is America where USDA is in business to think and act for me because I have more important things to do,like watching American-idol
If there is some big money to be made, they will ALWAYS relax the standards.