news in food
Here are a handful of interesting links in food news for this week
Growing More Corn for Ethanol Makes Pest Control Harder, via the NY Times
Critics say turning more acreage over to corn to make fuel can lead to higher prices for other crops, increased soil erosion and other negative effects.
In a report in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Douglas A. Landis of Michigan State University and colleagues show that increasing the corn acreage can reduce the abundance of insect predators that control aphids, the most significant soybean pest in the United States.
Let’s Ask Marion Nestle: Are The USDA’s Organic Standards A Sham?, via Huffington Post
Cheating is the Achilles’ heel of organics. The entire organic certification system is based on trust. If trust goes, the organic industry collapses like a house of cards. Organics means two quite different things. To people who care about the food system, organics is about growing crops and raising animals using methods that are good (for the health of people and animals), clean (for the environment), fair (to the people who produce the food), and sustainable (meaning renewing–not wasting or destroying–the earth’s natural resources).
To everyone involved in raising and selling organic foods, organics is a business. This business commands higher prices if–and only if–buyers believe that the food is produced according to those criteria and is better for their health and that of the planet.
(edit. note: really good article)
Will Obama Integrate Food, Farming & Health Policies?, via ENN
Diet-related diseases continue to escalate – specifically in our children. Researchers predict that as a result of the continued rise in overweight, the children of today will have a shorter lifespan than their parents. Overweight and obesity alone have translated into skyrocketing health care costs which are bankrupting families and the health care system.
Likewise, the number of family farms and acres used for growing food is falling, while the cost of farm inputs are increasing. Subsidized crops such as corn, soybeans and wheat have flooded supermarkets with more processed, packaged “food-like” substances. Often, these foods are of low nutritional value and high in sugar, fat and salt.
A dichotomy exists between agriculture policies and Dietary Guidelines for Americans – yet, ironically, both are overseen by the USDA. Current food and farm policies stand in the way of making healthy food the easiest choice.
all for organic
November 13, 2008 by cshells58
Filed under environment science, Food
I find it shocking that an article like this is still being written. And, what I mean, is that this type of thing still happens.
Organic Farmer Murdered After Protesting Toxic Dumpsite, vie PlanetSave
I know that in India there has been a big push for the small farmer’s to become organic. In fact, when I posted a few months back about the clothing company LeAf, I know that they get their cotton from some Indian farms that made the switch. Farmer’s, I’m sure, have found that it will be more financially beneficial to them to become organic, even though it is a long process to overturn the soil, something along the lines of three years.
So, obviously, they would feel passionately about protecting their land. But to be killed!
After filing complaints the Pollution Control Board and many other agencies within the Indian government, none came to his aid. Krishnamurthy then contacted the local media to come document the waste site and mentioned that a truck driver from the factory had threatened him with a revolver that day.
According to one report, he was killed later that same day, mere hours before his scheduled meeting with the press.
And, don’t think we are immune to this type of behavior. No, there hasn’t been murder, but as a result of Monsanto suing small farmers in this country, many have resulted in suicide.



