
Organics A Global Answer
Posted
11th March 2001
Organic
agriculture has the potential to boost the incomes and food security
of developing countries, but distribution problems will hinder the
war on hunger, says the United Nations' world food body. The Rome-based
U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) believes that organic
farming is a safe way of growing food and is not subject to the possible
health and environmental risks associated with genetically modified
(GM) foods. ``Increasing organic farm production at a national level
does not mean you can distribute to everyone,'' Nadia Scialabba, FAO
environment officer and organic farming expert. ``The value of organic
farming is the prevention of the unknown problems that come with intensification,''
she added, referring to recent food scares linked to industrial farming,
such as mad cow disease and worries over GM crops. Rich countries,
such as the United States and those in the European Union, already
produce substantial food surpluses. The problem lies in how to distribute
food efficiently to the hungry, whether it is produced intensively
or organically. Some 800 million people around the world are severely
under nourished. Three-quarters of the world's 1.2 billion people
in abject poverty -- surviving on less than a dollar a day -- live
in rural areas. The U.N. admits that it is falling behind its target
to halve global poverty and hunger by 2015. The FAO plans a world
food summit in November to drum up the political will to achieve its
goal. ``Conventional systems of production have generated high environmental
costs in many cases, and the ir reliance upon externally supplied
inputs creates barriers to access amongst the poorest segments of
the population. ``Organic agricultural production based upon cheap,
locally available materials and technologies provides an important
alternative in the search for an environmentally sound and equitable
solution to the problem of food security,'' it added
WHAT IS ORGANIC FARMING? Organic farming means using methods
in tune with nature, enhancing the local eco-system, without adding
synthetic substances such as chemical fertilisers and pesticides.
Organic agriculture is growing fast, especially in Western Europe.
The FAO estimates that around two percent of food retailed globally
is organic. FAO officials estimate that organic food production is
increasing by at least 20 percent a year in Western Europe as consumers
worried over highly publicised food scares seek guarantees of food
safety. Germany plans to boost the share of organic agriculture to
20 percent of its farmland from the current 2.6 percent within the
next 10 years. The FAO has no forecasts for global organic food production.
CERTIFICATION The FAO believes it is important for developing
countries to certify organic food products so they can compete on
international markets.``The extraordinary growing market of certified
organic products offers export opportunities to developing countries,''
said another FAO document. ``Provided that producers of these countries
are able to certify their products and access lucrative markets, returns
from organic agriculture can potentially contribute to food security
by increasing incomes,'' it added. Scialabba said that governments
need to invest in training farmers how to produce food organically.
Organic agriculture does not require expensive inputs, farmers need
to follow strict practices in order to certify produce as organic..

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