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The Eth-Assist

U.K. organic certifier says air-freighted organics must meet "ethical standards"

Posted at 5:44 AM on 25 Oct 2007

Britain's main organic certifier, the Soil Association, has decided not to deny the organic label to air-freighted food, instead opting to require producers of flown-in fare to meet ethical standards similar to "fair trade" certification. The association decided that denying organic status to all flown-in food would unfairly hurt farmers and workers in poor countries. Only about 1 percent of organic food is air-freighted to the U.K., but the association is worried about the market's future growth. The "ethical standards" seek to ensure that workers are not subject to exploitative conditions and that they are guaranteed a fair wage. After a consultation period, the new rules could take effect in January 2009.

sources:  The Guardian, Reuters, BBC News

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What Does Organic Certification Signify?

Organic certification is supposed to show that the food was produced without the used of petrochemical pesticides and fertilizers.  It would be great if it also showed that transportation of the food did not consume and burn an unusually large amount of fossil fuel, so this decision is a major environmental defeat.

Food, like all things, should be produced and sold locally in order to keep environmental harms from transportation to a minimum.  Whether farmers in another continent would be economically harmed by lack of organic certification should not even have been considered in this anti-environmental decision.

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