Archive for the ‘Food’ Category

Organic Milk Producers In Deep Trouble

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Very sobering article in the NY Times today about the rise and fall of the organic dairy farmer.

[When Ken Preston turned his dairy farm organic in 2005] his income soared 20 percent, and he could finally afford a Chevy Silverado pickup to help out. The dairy conglomerate that distributed his milk wanted everything Mr. Preston could supply. Supermarket orders were skyrocketing.

But soon the price of organic feed shot up. Then the recession hit, and families looking to save on groceries found organic milk easy to do without. Ultimately the conglomerate, with a glut of product, said it would not renew his contract next month, leaving him with nowhere to sell his milk, a victim of trends that are crippling many organic dairy farmers from coast to coast.

For those farmers, the promises of going organic — a steady paycheck and salvation for small family farms — have collapsed in the last six months. As the trend toward organic food consumption slows after years of explosive growth, no sector is in direr shape than the $1.3 billion organic milk industry. Farmers nationwide have been told to cut milk production by as much as 20 percent, and many are talking of shutting down.

CAFOs not UFOs

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

There are some who are obsessed with UFOs – unidentified flying objects. It occupies most every breathing hour. Far fewer are concerned with CAFOs, or pulled with such intensity. Too bad, because CAFOs have far more effect on our lives.

…livestock production has undergone a transformation in which a small number of very large CAFOs (confined animal feeding operations) predominate.

These CAFOs have imposed significant—but largely unaccounted for—costs on taxpayers and communities throughout the United States.
CAFOs are characterized by large numbers of animals crowded into a confined space—an unnatural and unhealthy condition that concentrates too much manure in too small an area.Many of the costly problems caused by CAFOs can be attributed to the storage and disposal of this manure and the overuse of antibiotics in livestock to stave off disease.

The predominance of CAFOs is not the inevitable result of market forces; it has been fostered by misguided public policy.

The Union for Concerned Scientists, via its Catalyst magazine, has an important report for you, here.