Good news. Clueless American consumers of organic food are helping to destroy Mexico’s environment. The New York Times reports:
TODOS SANTOS, Mexico — Clamshell containers on supermarket shelves in the United States may depict verdant fields, tangles of vines and ruby red tomatoes. But at this time of year, the tomatoes, peppers and basil certified as organic by the Agriculture Department often hail from the Mexican desert, and are nurtured with intensive irrigation.
Growers here on the Baja Peninsula, the epicenter of Mexico’s thriving new organic export sector, describe their toil amid the cactuses as “planting the beach.”
Del Cabo Cooperative, a supplier here for Trader Joe’s and Fairway, is sending more than seven and a half tons of tomatoes and basil every day to the United States by truck and plane to sate the American demand for organic produce year-round.
But even as more Americans buy foods with the organic label, the products are increasingly removed from the traditional organic ideal: produce that is not only free of chemicals and pesticides but also grown locally on small farms in a way that protects the environment.
The explosive growth in the commercial cultivation of organic tomatoes here, for example, is putting stress on the water table. In some areas, wells have run dry this year, meaning that small subsistence farmers cannot grow crops. And the organic tomatoes end up in an energy-intensive global distribution chain that takes them as far as New York and Dubai, United Arab Emirates, producing significant emissions that contribute to global warming.
From now until spring, farms from Mexico to Chile to Argentina that grow organic food for the United States market are enjoying their busiest season.
“People are now buying from a global commodity market, and they have to be skeptical even when the label says ‘organic’ — that doesn’t tell people all they need to know,” said Frederick L. Kirschenmann, a distinguished fellow at the Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture at Iowa State University. He said some large farms that have qualified as organic employed environmentally damaging practices, like planting only one crop, which is bad for soil health, or overtaxing local freshwater supplies.
Many growers and even environmental groups in Mexico defend the export-driven organic farming, even as they acknowledge that more than a third of the aquifers in southern Baja are categorized as overexploited by the Mexican water authority. With sophisticated irrigation systems and shade houses, they say, farmers are becoming more skilled at conserving water. They are focusing new farms in “microclimates” near underexploited aquifers, such as in the shadow of a mountain, said Fernando Frías, a water specialist with the environmental group Pronatura Noroeste.
The rest here.
But this is typical American behavior from the Left. Buying “organic” makes you feel good psychologically, but there’s no consideration of the ramifications of this decision. And as far as I’m concerned, give me some factory-farmed American produce rather than food from a country where you can’t drink the water.
"traditional organic ideal"
No
Such
Thing
organic started out meaning no pestisides or chemicals ... still does today ...
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIf people want to spend more money for vegetables grown in Mexico, that's entirely up to them.
Meanwhile, Mexicans are gainfully employed in something other than narcotics and less likely to illegally emigrate to the US. Seems like a win for everyone involved to me.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe other problem with organic produce that is rarely mentioned is that whenever you read of some e coli outbreak due to spinach or salad, it is always organic. E coli only comes from animal guts and the only way it gets on vegetables is through the use of organic fertilizers. Chemical fertilizers don't contain e coli.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseSurely the noble souls who insist on organic produce know the designation does not address size or location of the farm.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse