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A Brief Overview of The History of Organic Farming

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A Brief Overview of the

History and Philosophy


of Organic Agriculture

George Kuepper

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

2010

Copyright 2010
Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture
Editing:
Maura McDermott and Wylie Harris
Layout and Design:
Tracy Clark, Argus DesignWorks

For more information, contact:


Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture
PO Box 588
Poteau, OK 74953
918.647.9123; 918.647.8712 fax
mailbox@kerrcenter.com
www.kerrcenter.com

Table of Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
The Origins of Organic Agriculture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
How Humus Farming Becomes Organic Farming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Two Enduring Ideas about Organic Agriculture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Earning Credibility: Groundbreaking Research. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
The Influence of the 60s and 70s Counterculture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
The Slow March towards Federal Regulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Enter Federal Regulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Organic Agriculture and Genetic Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Keys to the Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
USDA/NOP Organic Meets Humus Farming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
USDA/NOP Organic Meets the Counterculture Vision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
USDA/NOP Meets Itself . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
End Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
About the Author . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

the United States has the fifth largest amount

Introduction

of acreage in organic production, following

For most of its history, organic agriculture


has been given short shrift. If they paid attention
at all, conventional agricultural institutions
treated it as an antiquated, unscientific way to
farm suitable, perhaps, for gardeners, but not a

Australia, Argentina, China, and Italy.[5]


To better understand todays org a n i c
phenomenon, it helps to know the origins of
organic agriculture and its evolution to the present.

serious means of commercial food production.


Anyone who advocated for organic farming was
derided; it was professional suicide for an agronomist or soil scientist to do so.

The Origins of Organic


Agriculture[6]

While its methods, proponents, and philos-

As a concept and ideal, organic agriculture

ophy are still derided in some quarters, things

began in the early part of the twentieth century,

have been turning around for organic agricul-

primarily in Europe, but also in the United States.

ture. Organic consumption is increasing and

The pioneers of the early organic movement were

organic acreage is growing. An organic industry

motivated by a desire to reverse the perennial

is developing that not only commands respect,

problems of agriculture erosion, soil depletion,

but now demands a growing share of research

decline of crop varieties, low quality food and live-

and educational services from USDA, land-grant

stock feed, and rural poverty. They embraced a

universities, and state agriculture departments.

holistic notion that the health of a nation built on

By the end of 2008, the organic sector had

agriculture is dependent on the long-term vitality

grown to a whopping $24.6 billion industry.[1]

of its soil. The soils health and vitality were

While many sectors of the agricultural economy

believed to be embodied in its biology and in the

are growing slowly and even stagnating, the

organic soil fraction called humus.

organic sector has been growing at roughly 20%


a year since 1994.

A soil management strategy called humus

Even during the recession

farming emerged, which employed traditional

year of 2008, growth was a respectable 17%.[3]

farming practices that not only conserved but

At present the organic sector constitutes about

also regenerated the soil. These practices

3.5% of total U.S. food sales, but should these

drawn from mainly from stable European and

growth rates continue, it could reach 10% in less

Asian models included managing crop

than a decade.

residues, applying animal manures, composting,

[2]

According to ERS statistics from 2005, U.S.

green manuring, planting perennial forages in

organic acreage now exceeds four million, with

rotation with other crops, and adding lime and

certified production in all 50 states.[4] Worldwide,

other natural rock dusts to manage pH and

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

ensure adequate minerals.[7]


Since the strategy revolved around
soil building to nourish crops, feed the
soil became the humus farming
mantra. Feeding the soil meant
feeding the soil food web. The soil food
web is the living fraction of the soil,
composed of bacteria, fungi, eart hworms, insects, and a host of other
o rganisms that digest organic matter
and meter nutrition to crop plants
(see Figure 1). This contrasts with the
(then emerging) strategy of using

FIGURE 1

soluble fertilizers, which bypass the soil


food web to fertilize plants dire c t l y.

m a n u re crops in cropping sequences. These

Humus farmers typically avoided, or used

crops not only supplied nitrogen to subsequent

very few, synthetic fertilizers. Obviously, they

crops in rotation, but sustained soil biology and

were not consistent with the idea of crop fertil-

organic matter levels. Wherever synthetic fertiliz-

ization through the soil food web. Humus

ers and pesticides were used to cut corners on

farmers felt that soluble fertilizers led to imbal-

biodiversity and soil building, they were in direct

anced plant nutrition and luxury consumption,

opposition to the principles of humus farming.

which reduced food and feed quality. Many also


believed that many synthetic fertilizers actually
harmed the soil biology either killing organisms
or upsetting the natural balance. They also saw
this danger in the use of pesticides, and chose to
use few, if any, of those.

Humus farming, then, was a conscious, wellfounded approach to farming and soil management. It embodied a commitment to sustainability
through soil regeneration; it sought to avoid wasteful
exploitation of natural resources. This was in
stark contrast to many of the worlds agricultural

Still other humus farmers recognized that

systems, which, in so many cases, led to the

synthetic fertilizers and pesticides would lead to

downfall of nations through mismanagement of

shortcuts in crop rotation eliminating many of

resources.[8] It puts a lie to the commonly held

the soil building and pest control benefits that

notion that organic agriculture is simply farming

good rotations confer. The use of synthetic

as it was practiced before the advent of synthetic

nitrogen fertilizer, especially, would reduce the

chemicals.

inclusion of perennial legume forages and green

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

How Humus Farming Becomes


Organic Farming
The term humus farming went out of
vogue in the 1940s as the term organic became

than conventional fare is a foundational belief of


o rganic farming that continues to drive the
market today. Surveys continue to show that
healthfulness

is

the

main

reason

that

consumers buy organic food.[9,10,11,12]

more popular. According to one source, the first

Pioneers of the organic movement believed

use of organic to describe this form of agricul-

that healthy food produced healthy people and that

ture was in the book Look to the Land, by Lord

healthy people were the basis for a healthy society.

Northbourne, published in 1940.

Northbourne

Since most food originates with the soil, they natu-

uses the term to characterize farms using humus

rally promoted a method of growing that was based

farming methods, because he perceived them to

on soil health and vibrancy the organic/humus

mimic the flows of nutrients and energy in

farming method. They believed that soils thus

biological organisms a balanced, yet

managed would yield more nutritious food.

[42,43]

dynamic, living whole.[44] Therefore, the word


organic was intended and used to describe
process and function within a farming system
not the chemical nature of the fertilizer materials
used, and not adherence to a discredited notion
of plant nutrition.[45]

Is the organic community justified in its


belief? The answer depends on who gives it. In
the recently published article Nutritional Quality
of Organic Foods: A Systematic Review[13], the
British authors conclude that there is no difference in nutrient quality between organic and
conventional foods. This has been challenged by

Two Enduring Ideas about


Organic Agriculture
People believe many things about organic
farming. Some of them are true and some are
not. Some originated with humus farming and
persist in contemporary organic thinking. Two of
these are the beliefs that organically grown food
is healthier or otherwise better for you, and
that organic crops are naturally resistant to pests.
Both hypotheses are very controversial.

Is organic food healthier?


The belief that organic food is healthier

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

scientists from the Organic Center (TOC) a


nonprofit organization whose stated mission is
to generate credible, peer reviewed scientific
information and communicate the verifiable
benefits of organic farming and products to
society.[14] The TOC reviews support the British
findings on some classes of nutrients, but disagree
on others. Specifically, TOC cites considerable
research that shows organic foods are higher in
total antioxidants.[15] The British review generally
ignored this body of re s e a rch. TOC further cites a
failure to recognize the higher non-protein
nitrogen levels in conventional foods for the
hazard they present through formation of
nitrosamines in the human digestive tract.[16]

Nutritional content is not the only factor

the observation that these effects were caused at

that interests organic consumers. Since the

very low dosages.[21] In a similar vein, University

1960s, they have been concerned about pesticide

of Wisconsin researchers have recently reported

residues. The concern is not about acute poisoning,

a connection between exposure of pre g n a n t

but the possible effects from bioaccumulation

women to the popular pesticide chlorpyrifos

over time.

(trade names include Dursban and Lorsban)

That there would be less pesticide residue on


o rganic produce seems to be a given. It was re confirmed by a 2002 study of residue data from

and

long-lasting birth defects

in

female

offspring.[22] Again, the damage appears at


extremely low dose levels.

several sources over time. Organic produce had

Beginning in the 1990s, genetic engineering

o n e - t h i rd the residue levels of conventional fruits

became another issue in the organic food quality

and vegetables and half the level found on produce

debate. The National Organic Standard prohibits

grown using integrated pest management.[17]

the use of genetic engineering in organic agricul-

The compelling question is whether pesticide residues actually have significant negative
effects on human health. This is not clearly
a n s w e red. The scientific community is most
concerned about the possible impacts on
children.[18] Whatever those impacts, several
studies do demonstrate marked reductions in
pesticide metabolites in children switched to a
diet of organic food.[19,20]

ture as per 205.105(e), where its various permutations are referred to as excluded methods.
The concern over so-called frankenfoods and
their possible effects on human health were
certainly a major factor in the organic communitys
insistence that genetic engineering be banned
from organic food production.

Do organic crops resist pests?


The assertion that organic culture induces

The concern for children is certainly valid.

pest and disease resistance in crops is much less

Their body weight is lower and small effects in

well known than the healthy food claim, though

childhood can grow to major problems over a

the notion has been around for some time. In

long lifetime. But the danger may occur well

The Soil and Health, one of the earliest classics of

before childhood. A 2009 article in Newsweek

organic thought, the father of organic agricul-

suggests that the impact of pesticide (and other

ture, Albert Howard, writes that health is the

environmental chemical) exposure may be

birthright of all living things, and that health in

equally or more significant to those in the womb.

humans depends on a chain of health that begins

There is growing evidence that hormone-

in the soil. He goes on to state that vegetable

mimicking pollutants from pesticides and plasti-

(and animal) pests and diseasesare evidence of

cizers are a major factor in infant obesity, which

a great failure of health in the plant and animal

has risen 73% since 1980. Of particular note is

links in that chain and those failures begin with

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

the soil and its management. In other words, pests

susceptible.[29] If, as research shows, organic

and diseases may be considered agricologenic

crops produce more phytochemical antioxidants,

induced by the farmer. The organic method was,

it is logical to believe they might also produce

according to Howard, a means for restoring and

more pest-repellant phytochemicals.

sustaining soil health, thereby reducing and even


eliminating most pest problems.[23]

Another theory about how predisposition


works relates to the breakdown of proteins under

The notion that plant stress and disease/

stress, leading to the accumulation of soluble

pest tolerance are related did not originate with

amino acids in plant sap. It is believed that these

A l b e rt Howard and the organic movement.

forms of free nitrogen are more digestible by insect

There is an independent school of thought on

pests, many of which lack the enzymes to break

predisposition theory that traces back to the work

proteins down to their amino acid constituents.

of H.M. Ward in 1890 and continues at least

Therefore, they thrive on stressed plants.[30,31]

through the mid-1970s.[24,25] Subsequent inquiry


became increasingly bound to research on
organic systems. A prime example is P. L.
Phelans work with European corn borer that
found reduced pest damage under organic
management.[26]

A further theory links total dissolved plantsap solids to susceptibility and resistance. Higher
levels of sugars, minerals and other components
of plant sap are treated as indicators of plant
health and, therefore, improved resistance.[32]
Since dissolved solids can be readily monitored

Early work on predisposition theory focused

using inexpensive hand-held refractometers, this

on fungal diseases but later expanded to address

theory is quite popular among growers, though

other diseases and arthropod pests. It is the basis

research has not always supported a direct corre-

for a common belief among organic farmers that

lation. California-based research by Dr. Mark

insect pests are natures garbage collectors;

Mayse, for example, did not find a correlation

that their main function is to remove unhealthy

between dissolved solids in grapes and resistance

and unsuitable plants.

to leafhoppers during a two-year study.[33]

There are several theories regarding the

While induced resistance offers great

mechanisms of predisposition. One revolves

promise, it is not a panacea and its mechanisms

around phytochemicals that plants produce to

are hard to nail down. Furthermore, the degree

protect themselves from diseases and pests. A

of resistance is likely to vary with the pest or

prime example is DIMBOA, a chemical

disease involved. Predisposition theory may be

compound found in young corn plants that

totally irrelevant where a new crop species is

protects against fungi, bacteria, and a range of

involved, or a new pest or disease introduced.[34]

insect pests, including European corn borer.[27,28]


S t ressed plants, it is argued, produce fewer
protective phytochemicals, making them more
6

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

If organic crops are more resistant to pests


and diseases, the root cause is most likely the soil

food web. A healthy food web leads to good tilth

are inevitable, no matter how a crop is grown, and

and a better air and water balance. Increased

that they must always be dealt with by dire c t

humus means more moisture retention and less

means such as pesticides.

drought stress. There is also a significant nutritional benefit. Though organic agriculture recognizes that plants absorb soil nutrients in soluble
(inorganic) form, it places great importance on
the organic compounds chelated nutrients,

Earning Credibility:
Groundbreaking Research

amino acids, natural antibiotics, vitamins, growth

Because the organic movement criticized

factors, humic substances, etc. that plants also

and diverged from mainstream agriculture, it

absorb. Traditional practitioners believe that these

became something of a pariah in the profession-

phytamins contribute much more to plant health

al community. Few researchers would consider

and growth than is generally recognized.[35]

proposing serious research for fear of ridicule,

The soil food web not only makes phyta-

isolation, and damage to their careers. A slow

mins available, it also aids in their uptake. Albert

change began in the late 1970s with two widely

Howard noted this and wrote in considerable

publicized studies.

detail on the importance of mycorrhizal associa-

The better known of these was a USDA

tions in particular.[36] Mycorrhizae are fungi that

evaluation of organic farming that was published

coat, and form symbiotic relationships with,

in 1980 as the Report and Recommendations on

plant roots. They effectively increase the absorp-

Organic Farming.[46] The USDA team inter-

tive surface of the root hairs, aid in the uptake of

viewed a large number of organic spokespeople,

minerals and water, and provide a barrier to

promoters, writers, and farmers, studied a variety

pathogens.[37] High-humus, biodiverse, organically

of farms across the country, toured European

managed soil certainly favors the survival and

operations, and produced a positive report that

proliferation of mycorrhizae.[38]

pointed to the environmental benefits of organic

As early organic farmers embraced predispo-

farming, its wise use of resources, innovations in

sition theory, it led to a plant-positive paradigm for

pest and disease management, and the need for

disease and pest management. By accepting agri-

the USDA and land-grant universities to respond

cologenic stress as a root cause of pest problems,

better to the needs of these growers.

organic growers sought to change and improve

At roughly the same time, a large study of

their systems and reduce plant stress by improving

Midwestern organic farming was also underway.

tilth, balancing crop nutrition, and whatever else

It was conducted by The Center for the Biology

they could do to protect and enhance the soil

of Natural Systems (CBNS) at Washington

food web.[39] This is in contrast to a conventional

University in St. Louis, Missouri.[47] CBNS had

pest-negative paradigm that assumes outbreaks

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

acquired a multi-year National Science Foundation

In four out of five years, the lower organic

grant to study energy use in Corn Belt agriculture.

yields and higher labor costs were offset by lower

The study zeroed in on organic farms because

input costs, resulting in generally similar net

they used few energy-intensive inputs.

re t u rns per acre. The significance of this becomes

The CBNS study took a snapshot of organic


farming at a time before the organic marketplace
developed in the Midwest. Therefore market

most apparent when one realizes that all sales from


these organic farms were made into the conventional market at conventional market prices.[53]

premiums were almost nonexistent and did not

With no market premiums available, the

influence crop selection, agronomic practices,

motivations for converting to organic farming were

the economics of farming, or the decision to

somewhat diff e rent from today. Organic growers

farm organically. Among its many findings:

in these studies cited livestock health, soil problems,

Though conventional wisdom dictated


otherwise, commercial organic farming of agronomic crops was a fact in the Corn Belt.
Organic crop farms growing corn, soybeans,
small grains and hay crops consumed 40% of the
energy used by conventional farms to produce a
dollars worth of crop. The key factor in the
accounting was the high use of energy-intensive
nitrogen fertilizer on conventional farms.[48]
These same farms had 33% less soil erosion
than conventional farms, based on crop mix
alone. Though not quantified, almost all organic
farms had converted to mulch- and ridge tillage
to conserve soil. These practices were seldom in
evidence on neighboring conventional farms.[49]

and the cost of chemicals as their top three


reasons for converting.[54]
It is right to question how relevant the
Washington University findings might be to other
p a rts of the country, including the Mid-south and
the Southeast. Higher temperatures and rainfall
patterns that deplete the soil, resist the buildup of
humus, and increase pest and disease pre s s u re
hint at challenges for humus farming in the
South. They tend to buttress the conventional
wisdom that insists it doesnt work here.
However, prior to the Washington University
study, conventional wisdom also denied the viability and existence of organic farming in that region,
where it has ultimately proven workable and
competitive. No doubt, successful organic

Organic farming sequestered more carbon

farming systems in the South will look diff e rent

in the soil. There was no evidence of phosphate

from their northern counterparts, but to deny that

or potash depletion.[50]

such systems can be developed is premature.

Organic farms had lower yields of corn


(about 10%), comparable yields of soybeans, and
required about 12% more labor per dollar of crop
produced.[51]

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

The Influence of the 60s


and 70s Counterculture
Organic agriculture is beset by many
myths. Among the most common is that it
was created by the counterculture of the
1960s and 1970s. Obviously, this is not true.
What the counterculture did, instead, was to
co-opt what was then a small and rather
obscure organic movement whose political
and social tendencies were ultraconservative
and even reactionary.[55] The counterculture

FIGURE 2

gave it a left-leaning political and social


flavor. It also gave organic food, farming, and

traditional organic method. A lot of unattractive,

gardening greater visibility and popularity. But

low-quality produce appeared, grown using a do-

most significantly, it gave it customers and set

nothing approach that became known as

the stage for an industry to develop. So while one

organic by neglect. Organic by neglect was

cant say that the 60s counterculture invented

precisely the approach to farming that the pioneers

organic farming, it is fair to say that it created

of organic farming railed against in the first half of

the organic industry.

the twentieth century. They would have been


appalled to see the critics label these poor

The 1960s also married organic agriculture

examples of gardening and farming as organic.

to the wider environmental movement. Rachel


Carsons Silent Spring, published in 1962, high-

One very positive residual of the 60s and

lighted the dangers real and perceived of

70s counterculture was a holistic and enduring

pesticides, making organic agriculture especially

vision of what organic agriculture was and how it

attractive, as it eschewed the use of most

contrasted with mainstream, industrialized food

synthetic pesticides.[56]

and farming. This vision is well articulated by


Michael Pollan in The Omnivores Dilemma. He

The 1960s and 1970s also spawned a back-

writes that there are three pillars or legs to the

to-the-land movement, with a new generation

counterculture vision of organic (Figure 2). The

setting out to farm and garden organically.

first pillar is environmentally sound farm i n g

Unfortunately, many novices failed to under-

without the use of synthetics, to produce high

stand that growing quality food without pesti-

quality, safe food (i.e. humus farming). The second

cides or synthetic fertilizers would not work very

is an alternative food distribution system with

well without the regenerative practices of the

few middlemen. One bought organic food either

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

directly from the grower or from food coopera-

As organic standards developed in the

tives, buying clubs, or health food stores never

1970s and 1980s, they came to include the

from industrial food supermarkets. Last of all,

absolute exclusion of most synthetic pesticides

organic food meant whole, fresh food, with

and fertilizers. This was significant. As USDA

minimal processing and no artificial ingredients

investigators learned in the late 1970s, the

counter cuisine for the counterculture. There

organic movement represented a spectrum of

would be no room here for an organic version of

practices, attitudes, and philosophies that

the Twinkie.[57]

included purists who used no synthetic chemicals whatsoever, and those who were more

The Slow March towards


Federal Regulation
The growing demand for organic food in the
1960s and 1970s produced a more sophisticated
marketplace. Supply chains lengthened as organic

flexible using small amounts of agricultural


chemicals in limited circumstances.[58] Such
circumstances might have included spot spraying
of problem weeds, using an insecticide to rescue
an infested crop, or using starter fertilizer in cold
spring weather.

products traveled longer distances to reach

The emerging organic standards did not

customers. Third party certification emerged as a

allow these. All fertility and pest management

means of assuring those consumers that the

would be accomplished without these inputs.[59]

p roducts they purchased were truly org a n i c .

F rom this time onwards, unfortunately, organic

Certification agents, as the third party, stand

became better known and understood for what it

between organic farmers and food processors,

did not allow (synthetic pesticides and fertilizers)

and the ones who buy their products. They

than for positive farming practices and enviro n-

provide assurance to the consumer that he or she

mental benefits they yielded.

is truly getting an organic product.


California Certified Organic Farmers (CCOF)
Certification begins with the establishment

established the first organic certification program

of a standard that defines what organic means.

in 1973. Many more followed. By the late 1980s,

The standard details which practices, inputs,

there were quite a few agencies, both large and

ingredients, and so forth, are required, permit-

small. Each adopted standards that were consis-

ted, and prohibited in organic food production

tent on basic principles, but varied on details like

and processing. Farmers and processors submit

the permissibility of mined Chilean nitrate, the

plans that explain how they will meet the

re q u i rements for field buffer zones, and the need

standard, and submit to an annual inspection by

for pesticide residue testing.[60]

the certification agent. Those that measure up to


the standard become certified and can sell their
products as certified organic.

10

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

These differences led to complications,


especially for processors making multi-ingredient

products. The certifier might insist that all ingre-

Enter Federal Regulation

dients be certified only by itself or a handful of

The Organic Foods Production Act (OFPA)

other agencies with which it had equivalency

mandated creation of a National Organic Program

agreements. It was clear that a single national

(NOP) and a National Organic Standards Board

organic standard was desirable, but not clear

(NOSB). The NOP is the federal body responsi-

whether that should be brought about by

ble for writing, interpreting and enforcing the

industry or by federal regulation.

Organic Regulations, which are the National

That issue was settled in the late 1980s


when an unrelated matter brought things to a
head. That matter centered on a popular agricul-

Organic Standard. The NOP is part of the USDA


and is administered under the Agricultural
Marketing Service (AMS).

tural chemical called Alar. Alar is one of several

The NOSB is a 15-member advisory panel,

trade names for daminozide, a plant growth

comprised of individuals from the organic

regulator used to regulate fruit growth, make

community appointed by the Secretary of

h a rvest easier, and enhance color. It was

Agriculture. The NOSB advises the NOP on

commonly used on conventionally grown apples.

how to interpret the National Standard. It also

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

has statutory responsibility for the content of the

(EPA) had noted that Alar was a potential

National List. The National List is the part of the

carcinogen but, by 1989, had not yet taken any

Standard that catalogs the synthetic materials

action. In February of that year, the CBS news

allowed, and the nonsynthetic (natural) products

program 60 Minutes broadcast a story highlight-

prohibited, in organic production and processing.

ing the concerns about Alar.[61] As a consequence, market demand for organic apples, and
organic products in general, soared. While this was
a brief boon for organic growers, the longer term
consequences were grim as unscrupulous
marketers slapped organic labels on just about
everything. The credibility of organic was in peril.
The Alar Scare, as it was called, finally
drove representatives of the organic community
to Washington to seek regulation for the
industry. The result was the passage of the
Organic Foods Production Act of 1990.[62]

The process of drafting the National


S t a n d a rd was slow, but very public. NOSB
meetings were held three to four times a year in
various parts of the country in an attempt to
gather input. From that input, the NOSB developed a number of recommendations to the NOP.
According to many close to the process, the
NOP chose to ignore many of those recommendations in the first draft, which was published in
late 1997. The draft which the organic community had waited seven years to see was greeted
with outrage. The problems were many, but thre e
issues drew the most fire. These were the allowance
of food irradiation, sewage sludge as fertilizer, and

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

11

the use of genetically engineered crops and other


genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
An astounding 275,000 public comments
flowed into the USDA from the organic community. Since the estimated number of certified
U.S. organic farms at that time was only about
5,000, it was clearly the voice of organic
consumers speaking.[63] The NOP was sent a
clear message that this was a community not to

Organic Agriculture and


Genetic Engineering

he 1997 draft of the National Organic

Standard flooded the USDA with

275,000 public comments. The tidal wave


included a clear and resounding message

be taken lightly not easily snowed or manipu-

stating that the organic community

lated by bureaucracy or monyed interests.

would not accept genetic engineering in


organic food. As a result, the National

A chastened NOP returned to the drawing


board and, in the spring of 2000, produced a
revised draft that was much less controversial
and largely welcomed by the organic community.

Standard contains a broad 86-word definition of genetic engineering, which it refers


to as Excluded Methods (205.2). These

After reviewing the second round of comments,

Excluded

Methods

are

specifically

a Final Rule for the National Organic Standard

prohibited under 205.105 Allowed and

was published in the Federal Register by late

p rohibited substances, methods, and ingre d i-

winter. Full implementation went into effect in

ents in organic production and handling

October 2002.

(205.105(e)).
The clear and thorough prohibition
against genetic engineering surprised many in
the biotechnology world. They believed crop
technologies, such as Bt crops, would give
o rganic growers a leg up in controlling pests
without synthetic pesticides. (Genetically
e n g i n e e red Bt crops are implanted with a
gene(s) from the soil bacteria Bacillus
thuringiensis, which is capable of making a
biological poison toxic to some insect pests.)
O rganic growers were already using various
c o m m e rcial spray and dust formulations of Bt

12

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

in the field and had no compunctions about

control and manipulate nature.[65,66],

it.

Still, genetically engineered crops,

Furthermore, humankind does not yet

including those with Bt genetics, were

understand the possible environmental and

rejected by the organic community.

human health impacts of this technology

It would be a simple matter to write off

that has been in our midst for less than two

the prohibition based simply on consumer

decades. Concerns have certainly been

fear of frankenfoods, not that this

raised, and environmental research is only

wouldnt be justified. The biotech industry

beginning to point to possible conse-

has fought against the labeling of foods

quences. Among the most recent is

made from or with genetically engineered

research published in the Proceedings of the

ingredients. Consumers Union lists only

National Academy of Sciences suggesting

three labels that verify non-genetically engi-

negative effects on aquatic organisms from

neered contents.[64] Organic is clearly the

upstream plantings of Bt corn.[67]

most widely known and recognizable of


these, and the only one backed by federal

Decisions about new technologies for

regulation. It is understandable that

organic agriculture generally defer to the

consumers might want to have a choice!

Precautionary Principle, which reads: When

However, the rationale for prohibiting


genetic engineering in organic agriculture
runs both broader and deeper than food
quality

concerns

consumer choice.

or

preservation

of

Genetic engineering

an activity raises threats of harm to the environment or human health, precautionary


measures should be taken even if some cause
and effect relationships are not fully established scientifically. [68] The impacts of

represents a fundamentally different philos-

genetically engineered crops, animals, and

ophy and worldview than organic. Organic

agricultural inputs are not yet well under-

principles are holistic and based on cooper-

stood and have not been clearly proven

ation with nature. Genetic engineering is

harmful, but in the eyes of the organic

highly reductionist, seeking single-factor

community, enough concern has been raised

solutions to complex problems; it seeks to

to prohibit their use for the foreseeable future.

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

13

Keys to the Standard

organic it must have distinct boundaries and be


buff e red from chemical sprays and other forms of

The National Organic Standard is a large

contamination. The National Standard does not

document. The details are well beyond the scope

specify the width of buffer zones or even specifi-

of this paper. However, highlighting some of the

cally re q u i re them. It re q u i res only that contami-

key elements of the Regulation can aid in under-

nation be prevented. So, in most circumstances,

standing the evolution of organic agriculture and

buffers are a practical option. Customarily, certi-

the present state of affairs. In general, key elements

fiers accept 25-foot wide buffer zones, when

of the National Organic Standard include:

neighboring farmland or roadsides are ground-

C e rtification Require m e n t . All org a n i c


producers and handlers must be certified through

sprayed. However, much wider buffers are


usually required where aerial application is used.

accredited certifying agents. Certification is

Biodiversity & Natural Resource Protection.

optional for operations selling less than $5,000 of

Biodiversity and natural resource protection are

o rganic product annually.

at the core of humus/organic farming. Crop

Organic System Plans. Every operation


must submit an Organic System Plan (OSP) as
part of the application for certification. The OSP
details how the operation will comply with the
National Organic Standard. A complete OSP
includes all inputs to be used, production practices, strategies to prevent contamination and
commingling, monitoring

procedures, and

records to be kept.

rotation is one of the main supportive practices;


it is specifically required by the National Organic
Standard under 205.205. Since crop rotation is
a practice associated with annual crops, it would
appear to leave perennial systems without a
requirement or a strategy. However, the definition of crop rotation under 205.2 includes the
statement: Perennial cropping systems employ
means such as alley cropping, intercropping, and
hedgerows to introduce biological diversity in

Records. Detailed documentation of inputs,

lieu of crop rotation. Therefore, the National

field activities, crop yields, and sales must be

Standard requires a temporal biodiversity strategy

kept. These records should accurately reflect the

for annual crops and a spatial strategy for peren-

OSP. Most operations need to develop an audit

nial plantings.

control system to track production, ensure NOP


compliance, and provide critical information in
the event of product recall.
For crop production, additional key elements

As for resource protection, there are several


provisions within the National Standard similar
to 205.203(c), which reads: The pro d u c e r
mustnot contribute to contamination of crops,
soil, or water by plant nutrients, pathogenic

include:

organisms, heavy metals, or residues of prohibitLand Integrity. For land to become certified

14

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

ed substances. As in the case of land integrity,

the National Standard is non-prescriptive. It

levels of contamination with heavy metals or

requires that contamination be prevented and

other substances may prohibit their use.

allows the farmer and the certifier to agree on


the strategy.

Multi-ingredient pest control products may


contain only EPA List 4 and a few select List 3

Food Safety. Here, the National Standard


becomes quite prescriptive, requiring that livestock manure either be composted or applied a
minimum number of days prior to harvest; it
prohibits sewage sludge completely. The compost-

inert ingredients.
The definitions of synthetic and nonsynthetic
lack clarity. This has been discussed by the NOSB
for several years, but resolution is slow in coming.

ing requirements in the Regulation reflect EPA

O rganic agriculture emphasizes systems

requirements for the composting of biosolids to

design and cultural practices, and shuns input

ensure safe use.

substitution the strategy of simply replacing

[69]

Seed & Planting Stock. The NOP made it


clear at the outset that it sought to create more
sources for organic seed and planting stock to
bolster organic agriculture. As a result, organic
production requires organic seed and planting
stock. Only if a needed variety is not commercially available, may the grower use untreated,
non-GMO, non-organic seed and stock. Annual
transplants must be grown organically, though
variances may be granted in cases where a farms
organic transplants are accidentally destroyed.
Prohibited Substances. The rule of thumb is

conventional inputs with organically acceptable


ones. Still, at the farm level, the issue of what can
and cannot be used in organic agriculture has
become the most compelling. The reason is clear.
A single misapplication of a prohibited substance
to a crop not only decertifies that crop; the entire
field becomes decertified for three years.
For those producers dependent on a market
premium, such mistakes can be catastrophic.
For livestock production, The National
Organic Standard contains additional key
elements. These include:

that nonsynthetic (natural) materials may be

Origin of Livestock. Essentially, the Regulation

used in organic crop production unless they are

requires that slaughter stock be under organic

specifically prohibited and cataloged on the

management from the last third of gestation.

National List under 205.602. Synthetic materials

Dairy stock, by contrast, can, in many instances,

are automatically prohibited unless specifically

be transitioned to organic milk production in 12

allowed on the National List under 205.601.

months. Poultry can be transitioned if under

While this appears straightforward, there are many

organic management from the second day of life.

real world complications. Among the problems:


Livestock Feed. Organic livestock must be
While manures from conventional confined

fed 100% organic feed. Synthetic hormones and

animal feeding operations are allowed, high

antibiotics are prohibited in organic feed; so are

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

15

plastic pellets, urea, manure, and slaughter

begins with prevention. This includes selection of

b y p roducts. Synthetic feed supplements and

livestock species and type, nutrition, pro p e r

additives are allowed only if they are on the

housing and pasture, sanitation, stress reduction,

National List at 205.603(c) or 205.603(d),

and vaccination. There are also restrictions on

respectively.

physical alterations.

Living Conditions. When it comes to living

Producers may not withhold treatment

conditions, the National Standard reflects the

from a sick animal in an effort to preserve its

considerable influence the animal welfare

organic status. Sick animals may be treated using

community has had on its development. Living

natural therapies such as herbs, homeopathics,

conditions must accommodate the natural

flower remedies, essential oils, acupuncture,

behavior of each livestock type. Outdoor access,

radionics, etc. Synthetic medications on the

fresh air and sunlight, and space to exercise are

National List at 205.603(a) may also be used.

required. Shelter must also be provided. It, too,

All appropriate medications must be used to

must allow natural maintenance and behavior,

restore an animal to health when methods

must provide protection from temperature

acceptable to organic production fail.

extremes, have adequate ventilation, and be safe.

Synthetic parasiticides on the National List

Some specific details include required

at 205.603(a) may also be used, but they are

pasture access for ruminants and provision of

highly restricted. External parasites and other

bedding, which must be organic if it is consumed.

pests may be controlled using nonsynthetic pest

Temporary confinement is allowed only as


protection from inclement weather, if required
for a specific stage of production, to protect soil

means such as traps, botanicals, biologicals, and


mineral-based materials like diatomaceous earth.
Livestock

treated

with

prohibited

and water quality, or to ensure the health and

substance must be clearly identified and may not

safety of the animals.

be sold, labeled, or represented as organically

Waste Management. Manure must be managed

produced.

in a manner that does not contribute to contamination of crops, soil, or water by plant nutrients,
heavy metals, or pathogenic organisms, and
which optimizes recycling of nutrients. Under
ideal circumstances, manure is returned to the
land from which feed is harvested, preferably on
the same farm.[70]

USDA/NOP Organic Meets


Humus Farming
Humus farming is, almost by definition, a
soil-based system of agriculture. As it evolved
directly from humus farming, organic agriculture

Health Care. Organic livestock health care

16

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

has also been understood as soil-based.

However,

since

the

1960s,

the

meaning of organic has shifted to


mean any production system that does
not use synthetic pesticides, fertilizers,
or

other

prohibited

substances.

Reflecting this shift, the NOP has


decided things like fish, shellfish, and
mushrooms fall within their scope and
can be certified as organic. Even more
interesting is NOP recognition of
soilless hydroponic production, which
it indicates can also be considered for
certification.

USDA/NOP Organic Meets


the Counterculture Vision

FIGURE 3

The National Organic Standard captures

ture vision built solely on whole food, fresh food,

only part of the 60s70s vision that Michael Pollan

and no synthetic ingredients. While non-agricul-

described. The National Organic Standard effectively

tural food ingredients are limited to those on the

deals only with organic production advancing a

National List under 205.605, and irradiation is

production system that is environmentally sound

prohibited, there is nothing to prevent the

and capable of producing abundant clean and

formulation of what might be called organic

healthy food and fiber.

junk food. A number of organic food products

As for an alternative food distribution


system the second leg of the counterculture

might well earn that label, though there is no


organic twinkieas yet.

vision it is not addressed at all. In fact, at least

Still, the counterculture vision of organic

40% of all organic food is now purchased in main-

food and farming remains strong in the market-

[71]

s t ream, big box stores.

Much of it travels gre a t

place. And the struggle to sustain that vision is at

distances from such places as South America and

the core of debates over whether or not the

China before it hits the store shelves.

organic industry, and even the movement, has

As for the third leg, processing and

lost its soul in the wake of the NOP.

handling are part of the National Standard, but


the Regulation falls well short of the countercul-

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

17

USDA/NOP Organic Meets Itself


The National Organic Standard contains a

The latter definition is a well-stated defini-

two-part definition of organic production. The

tion for sustainable farming that combines the

first part defines it as: a production system that is

spirit of traditional humus farming with the

managed in accordance with the Act (OFPA) and

strong vision and values acquired in recent

regulations (National Organic Standard) The

decades. The regulatory language of Part One

second part says that an organic production

the National Organic Standard must live up to

system: respond(s) to site-specific conditions by inte-

the spirit of organic embodied in Part Two of the

grating cultural, biological, and mechanical prac-

definition. This struggle, too, is about the soul of

tices that foster cycling of resources, promote ecological

organic agriculture.

balance, and conserve biodiversity.

18

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

millions of Americans are buying organic foods.

Notes

Organic Consumers Association. www.organic-

1. Organic Trade Association. 2009. Organic Trade


Association 2009 Organic Industry Survey. Organic
Trade Association, Greenfield, MA.
2. Organic Trade Association. 2007. Organic Trade
Association 2007 Manufacturer Survey. Organic
Trade Association, Greenfield, MA.
3. Organic Trade Association. 2009. Op. cit.

consumers.org/organic/millions033004.cfm.
11. Hartman Group, The. Organic 2006: Consumer
Attitudes & Behavior, Five Years Later & Into the
Future. As cited by: Organic Trade Association.
2008. Consumer Profile Facts.
www.ota.com/organic/mt/consumer.html
12. Anon. 2009. Despite economy, consumers still
are choosing organic. Whats News In Organic.

4. USDA ERS. 2005. USDA Economic Research

Organic Trade Association, Greenfield,

Service, Washington, DC.

Massachusetts. August. p. 1.

www.ers.usda.gov/Data/Organic/

13. Dangour, A.D., et al. 2009. Nutritional quality

5. Willer, Helga, and Minou Yussefi. 2006. The

of organic foods: a systematic review. American

World of Organic Agriculture: Statistics and Emerging

Journal of Clinical Nutrition 90: 680-685.

Trends 2006. IFOAM, Bonn, Germany & FiBL,


Frick, Switzerland. p. 28.

14. Excerpt from The Organic Centers Web site.


www.organiccenter.org/about.mission.html

6. Information on the origins of humus and organic


farming was taken primarily from: Conford, Philip,
2001. The Origins of the Organic Movement. Floris
Books, Edinburgh, UK. 287 p., and Heckman,
Joseph. 2007. A History of Organic Farming
Transitions from Sir Albert Howards War in the Soil to
the USDA National Organic Program. The Weston A.
Price Foundation, Washington, D.C. 17 p.
7. The necessity for adding or returning organic matter to
cropped field became known as the law of return.
8. Lowdermilk, W.C. 1975. Conquest of the Land
Through Seven Thousand Years. Bulletin No. 99. USDA
Soil Conservation Service, Washington, DC. 30 p.
9. Dimitri, Carolyn, and Nessa J. Richman. 2000.
Organic Food Markets in Transition. Henry A.
Wallace Center for Agricultural and Environmental
Policy. Policy Studies Report No. 14.
10. Howie, Michael. 2004. Industry study on why

15. Benbrook, C. et al. 2009. Organic Center


response to the FSA study. The Organic Center.
www.organiccenter.org/science.nutri.php?action=
view&report_id=157
16. Ibid.
17. Baker, B. P., et al. 2002. Pesticide residues in
conventional, integrated pest management (IPM)grown and organic foods: insights from three US
data sets. Food Additives and Contaminants 19(5):
427446.
18. Benbrook, C., et al. 2006. Joint statement on
pesticides, infants and children. American Association
for the Advancement of Science symposium.
St Louis, MO. February 19. As cited in: Scientists
call for more decisive action in lowering childrens
exposures to pesticides. The Organic Center.
www.organiccenter.org/reportfiles/1581_Pesticide_Sy
m_Joint_Statement.pdf

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

19

19. Harder, B. 2005. Organic choice: pesticides

25. Coleman, Eliot W., and Richard L. Ridgeway.

vanish from body after change in diet. Science

1983. Role of Stress Tolerance in Integrated Pest

News 168(13): 197198. As cited in: Williams, Greg,

Management. p. 126. In: Knorr, Dietrich (ed.).

and Patricia Williams. 2005. All-organic diet

1983. Sustainable Food Systems. AVI Publishing

quickly rids body of (some) pesticides. HortIdeas

Company, Inc., Westport, Connecticut. 416 p.

22(11): 121.
26. Phelan, P.L. 1997. Soil management history
20. Curl, Cynthia, et al. 2003. Organophosphorus

and the role of plant mineral balance as a determi-

pesticide exposure of urban and suburban pre-school

nant of maize susceptibility to the European corn

children with organic and conventional diets.

borer. Biological Agriculture & Horticulture 15(1-

Environmental Health Perspectives 111: 377382.

4): 2534.

As cited in: Anon. 2005. A predominantly organic


diet virtually eliminates childrens exposures to two

27. Anon. 2008. Maize. New World Encyclopedia.

common insecticides. The Organic Center.

www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Maize

www.organiccenter.org/science.pest.php?action=view
&report_id=26

28. McLeod, Murdick J. 1992. First-Generation


European Corn Borer Management. Ex8079.

21. Begley, Sharon. 2009. Early exposure to

South Dakota State University Cooperative

common chemicals may be programming kids to be

Extension.

fat. Newsweek 154(12): 5662.

www.abs.sdstate.edu/PlantSci/ext/ent/entpubs/
ex8079.htm

22. Bowman, Greg. 2009. Tiny pesticide exposure


during pregnancy can have long-term impact on
female offspring. Rodale Institute, Kutztown,
Pennsylvania.
www.rodaleinstitute.org/20091110/porter_chlorpyrifos_tiny_dose_pregnancy_impact_daughters

29. Willis. Op. cit., p. 17.


30. Eliot Coleman, as quoted by Stoner, Kim, and
Tracy LaProvidenza. 1998. A history of the idea
that healthy plants are resistant to pests. p. 4. In:
Stoner, K. 1998. Alternatives to Insecticides for

23. Howard, Albert. 1947. The Soil and Health: A

Managing Vegetable Insects: Proceedings of a

Study of Organic Agriculture (1972 edition).

Farmer/Scientist Conference (NRAES 138).

Schocken Books, New York. p. 12.

NRAES, Ithaca, New York. December 67.

24. It should be noted that Albert Howard probably

31. Anon. 1999. Pests starve on healthy plants.

developed his ideas on predisposition while at

Ecology Action Newsletter, Willits, California.

Cambridge, where he studied with H.M. Ward in 1898

May. p. 34.

(according to Eliot Coleman, as quoted by Stoner,


Kim, and Tracy LaProvidenza. 1998. A history of the

32. Willis. Op. cit., p. 1828.

idea that healthy plants are resistant to pests. p. 4. In:

33. Mayse, Mark. A., et al. 1997. Field investigation

Stoner, K. 1998. Alternatives to Insecticides for

of grapeleaf sap brix levels and leafhopper populations

Managing Vegetable Insects: Proceedings of a

in San Joaquin Valley vineyards. Viticulture and

Farmer/Scientist Conference (NRAES 138).

Enology Research Center. California Agricultural

NRAES, Ithaca, New York. December 67).

20

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

Technology Institute, Fresno, California.


cati.csufresno.edu/VERC/rese/97/971101/index.html

44. Scofield. Op. cit.


45. During the 18th century, it was commonly

34. Coleman, Eliot W., and Richard L. Ridgeway.

believed that plants obtained all their nutrients,

Op. cit., p. 135.

including carbon, by directly absorbing organic


matter from the soil. (Tisdale, Samuel L. and

35. Phytamins is an occasionally used term that


originated among soil scientists in the 1930s. While

We rner L. Nelson. 1966. Soil Fertility and Fertilizers,


2nd ed. The Macmillan Co., New York. p. 13.)

its original meaning appears to be more restrictive, it

It must be noted, however, that traditional organic

is sometimes used to describe the whole range of

farmers still place great importance on those organic

beneficial organic compounds that plants absorb

compounds that plants do take up from the soil, believing

from the soil. The term is used in this manner in the

they contribute both to plant growth and health.

context of this document.


46. USDA Study Team on Organic Farming. 1980.
36. Howard. Op. cit., p. 24.

Report and Recommendations on Organic Farming.

37. Rai, M.K. (ed.) 2006. Microbial Biofertilizers.


CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, Boca Raton,
Florida. p. 252256.

USDA. July. 94 p.
www.nal.usda.gov/afsic/pubs/USDAOrgFarmRpt.pdf
47. CBNS was directed by the noted scientist, Dr.

38. Howard. Op. cit., p. 12. Howard understood


that some crops, especially crucifers, do not form

Barry Commoner. It was located at Washington


University in St. Louis, Missouri, during the years cited.

mycorrhizal associations. He argued that non-symbiotic

48. Lockeretz, William, Georgia Shearer, and Daniel

microbial complexes in the soil were still important

H. Kohl. 1981. Organic farming in the Corn Belt.

to plant absorption of nutrients, including larger

Science 211(4482): 540547.

molecules of nitrogen-bearing compounds (p. 2425).


49. Ibid.
39. Willis, Harold. No date. Crop Pests and
Fertilizers Is There a Connection? Midwestern

50. Ibid.

Bio-Ag, Blue Mounds, WI. p. 17.


51. Ibid.
40. Scofield, A.M. 1986. Organic farming the
origin of the name. Biological Agriculture and
Horticulture 4: 15.

52. Ibid.
53. Eliot Coleman once remarked that, considering all

41. Northbourne, Lord. 1940. Look to the Land.

the public and private resources supporting conven-

J.M. Dent, London.

tional research, development, extension, and education at the time, having organic farms perform this

42. Scofield, A.M. 1986. Op. cit.

well was comparable to pitting a professional football


team against a high school junior varsity and having

43. Northbourne, Lord. 1940. Look to the Land.

them split the wins. Coleman, Eliot. 2004. Indiana

J.M. Dent, London.

Horticultural Congress, Indianapolis, Indiana.

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

21

54. Wernick, Sarah, and William Lockeretz. 1977.

outset and continue to oppose it to this day.

Motivations and practices of organic farmers.


Compost Science 77(6): 2024.

63. OFRF. 1998. National Organic Certifiers


Directory. Organic Farming Research Foundation,

55. Personal observation of the author while a

Santa Cruz, California. September.

research assistant for CBNS, 19771979.


64 .Consumer Reports. 2009. Label Report Card.
56. Carson, Rachel. 1962. Silent Spring. Houghton

www.greenerchoices.org/eco-

Mifflin Co., Boston, MA. September. 400 p.

labels/reportLabelCategory.cfm?labelCategoryName
=No%20Genetic%20Engineering%20&mode=view

57. Pollan, Michael. 2006. The Omnivores Dilemma:


A Natural History of Four Meals. Penguin Books,

65. Koechlin, Florianne. 2002. Genetic engineering

London. p. 143.

versus organic farming. IFOAM (International


Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements),

58. USDA Study Team on Organic Farming. 1980.

Okozentrum Imsbach, Tholey-Theley, Germany.

Op. cit., p. xii.


66. Riddle, Jim. 2005. The constellation of organic
59. A very few synthetic materials were allowed by

values. The Rodale Institute, Kutztown,

most organic standards, though many of them would

Pennsylvania.

not even be recognized as synthetic. They

newfarm.rodaleinstitute.org/features/2005/1105/cons

included things like seaweed extracts, which are

tellation/riddle.shtml

made synthetic by the extraction process, fish


emulsion, which is preserved by phosphoric or

67. Rosi-Marshall, E.J., et al. 2007. Toxins in trans-

sulfuric acid, and insecticidal soap, which was

genic crop byproducts may affect headwater stream

considered relatively benign. Most of these synthet-

ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of

ics were later included in the national list of the

Sciences of the United States 104(41): 16204-16208.

National Organic Standard.

www.pnas.org/content/104/41/16204.abstract

60. Fetter, T. Robert, and Julie A. Caswell. 2002.

Note: This paper produced a strong response from

Variation in organic standards prior to the National

the biotech community. For details, see: Waltz,

Organic Program. American Journal of Alternative

Emily. 2009. GM Crops: Battlefield. GM Free

Agriculture 17(2): 5574.

Cymru Web site.


www.gmfreecymru.org/pivotal_papers/battlefield.html

61. Lutz, Karen. 1999. Alar shifts the focus of


public debate. (from: Pest Management at the

68. Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary

Crossroads, 1996) February 22. www.ecologic-

Principle. 1998. January. www.gdrc.org/u-gov/

ipm.com/pmac_alar.html

precaution-3.html

62. While most organic farmers are learning to live

69. USDA/AMS. 2000. 7 CFR Part 205. National

with the federal regulation of organic agriculture,

Organic Program; Final Rule. Federal Register

not all are happy with it. The organic community is

65(246): 80564.

not now, nor was it ever, monolithic. There were


many who objected to federal involvement from the
22

Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture

70. The latter creates a serious challenge for organic


operations without an adequate land base. A number
of confined feeding operations are certified organic.
The author is not aware of how the manure is dealt
with, in these cases, to conform to the regulations.
71. Anon. 2006. Nutrition Business Journal. March.

About the Author


George Kuepper is currently Sustainable
Agriculture Specialist and Intern Program Coordinator
for the Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture. Prior
to this, he was Midwest Office Coordinator and
Technical Specialist for the National Center for
Appropriate Technology and the ATTRA Project,
George Kuepper

specializing in issues related to organic certification,


compliance, and transition.

A Brief Overview of the History and Philosophy of Organic Agriculture

23

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