Release
For Immediate Release
CONTACT: Bob Scowcroft, 831-426-6606
Erica Walz, 435-826-4565
OFRF
releases partial results of
4th National Organic Farmers Survey:
First impacts of GMOs on organic farmers
are now documented
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (May 14,
2003) – In a nationwide survey conducted by the Organic
Farming Research Foundation (OFRF), certified organic farmers have
reported the first direct financial and related operational impacts
associated with the threat of contamination by genetically modified
organisms (GMOs). National standards for organic products, recently
implemented by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture exclude recombinant-DNA
technologies from use in organic farming. In addition, there are
a variety of strict tolerances for GMO contamination imposed on
organic growers by foreign and domestic buyers.
Coping with the threat and consequences
of GMO contamination is a recent development for organic farmers.
“In 1998, when OFRF conducted our previous survey, GMO contamination
was not yet a national issue,” said OFRF Executive Director
Bob Scowcroft. “These new survey results based on the 2001
crop year document that significant impacts have begun to occur
within a very short time frame. If this trend continues, what we’re
seeing now will prove to be just the tip of the iceberg.”
According to OFRF President Ron Rosmann,
a diversified organic farmer from Harlan, Iowa, “This new
data supports OFRF’s call for a moratorium on the release
of GMOs until there is a solid regulatory framework that prevents
genetic pollution and assigns liability for the damages imposed
by GMO contamination.” (OFRF’s Organizational Policy
Statement on Genetic Engineering in Agriculture is available at
<http://ofrf.org/policy/policy_statements/gmos.html>.)
The OFRF survey, Sustaining Organic
Farms in a Changing Organic Marketplace, included nine questions
related to GMOs and organic farming. Highlights of the survey results
are as follows:
- 17% of survey respondents indicated
that they have had GMO testing conducted on some portion of their
organic farm seed, inputs or farm products. 11% of those that
had GMO testing conducted indicated that they received positive
test results for GMO contamination on some portion of their organic
seed, inputs or farm products.
- 8% of the respondents indicated that their
organic farm operation has borne some direct costs or damages
related to the presence of GMOs in agriculture. These costs include:
payment for testing seed, inputs, or organic farm products for
GMO contamination; loss of organic sales/markets due to actual
contamination or perceived contamination risk; loss of sales due
to presence of GMOS in organic product; or loss of organic certification
due to presence of GMOs in organic products.
- 48% of the survey respondents indicated that
they have taken some measures to protect their organic farms from
GMO contamination. The greatest percentage, 24%, indicated that
they have communicated with neighboring farmers about GMO risks
to their farm.
- 19% indicated that they have increased the
size of buffer zones to neighboring farms, 18% have discontinued
use of certain inputs at risk for GMO contamination, 15% have
adjusted timing of crop planting, 13% have altered cropping patterns
or crops produced, and 9% have changed cropping locations.
- 46% of the survey respondents rated the risk
of exposure and possible contamination of their organic farm products
by GMOs as moderate or greater, with 30% characterizing their
farm’s risk as high or very high.
Survey respondents identified contaminated
seed stock as their primary concern as a possible source of GMO
contamination of their organic farm products (identified as a moderate
to high risk by 48% of respondents). This was followed by GMO pollen
drift in the field (identified as a moderate to high risk by 42%
of respondents) and contaminated farm inputs, other than seed, (identified
by 30% of respondents as a moderate to high risk). Such inputs might
include seed inoculants or manures and composts from materials obtained
from off the farm.
Only 10% of survey respondents feel
that a regulatory framework is in place to adequately protect their
organic farm products from damages due to contamination from GMOs.
In spring 2002, OFRF mailed a 22-page
survey to certified organic farmers throughout the U.S, with 1,034
farmers responding. The 4th National Organic Farmers’ Survey,
Sustaining Organic Farms in a Changing Organic Marketplace, is OFRF’s
first survey to focus specifically on organic farmers’ experiences
in the organic market. The survey was conducted with support from
True North Foundation, Wallace Genetic Foundation, the USDA Agricultural
Marketing Service, and contributors to OFRF’s general program
fund.
The OFRF survey included 8 sections:
Farm profile; Production and product detail; Marketing your organic
products; Organic market conditions, 2001; Information and services;
Marketing orders and organic; GMOs and organic; and More about you
and your farm (demographics).
OFRF surveys collect and disseminate
information on the demographics, production, marketing and research
priorities of organic farmers in the U.S. The survey population
is developed from producer certification lists voluntarily provided
by organic certification agencies.
OFRF survey results relevant to GMOs
and organic farms will be released this week at the Organic Trade
Association’s All Things Organic Conference and Trade Show
in Austin, Texas. The complete results of OFRF’s 4th National
Organic Farmers’ Survey: Sustaining Organic Farms in a Changing
Organic Marketplace will be published in fall 2003.
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To view the Power Point presentation
of the gmo survey results, click
here.
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