Albuquerque Journal

Know what you’re buying if you buy ‘organic’

Labels and claims can be confusing, misleading

- BY DEBBIE CARLSON CHICAGO TRIBUNE

You see the labels out there — organic, cage-free, natural — but what does it all mean?

If you’re trying to make better shopping choices for the environmen­t by choosing “greener” or ethically made products, you’re going to be bombarded by dozens of labels purporting to measure up to a certain standard, and probably charging more money for the goods.

But don’t be fooled. Be an informed consumer by taking a few minutes to familiariz­e yourself with a few common terms and certificat­ions so you can avoid being “greenwashe­d.”

Look for the USDA Organic label

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e certifies what food and fiber products meet federal regulation­s to be called organic and can carry the circular “USDA Organic”

label.

This certificat­ion means they were grown and processed according to federal guidelines addressing, among many factors, soil quality, animal-raising practices and use of additives. Farmers can’t apply synthetic pesticides or herbicides or use geneticall­y modified seeds. No other “eco” label out there has federal regulation­s behind it, said Connie Karr, certificat­ion director at Oregon Tilth, a USDA-accredited certificat­ion organizati­on that inspects farms to ensure regulatory compliance.

If you see terms like natural, cage-free or pasture-raised on a product without the USDA organic label, there are no strict guidelines. “Those are claims that a company can make, but there’s no federal regulation to them. (They) could mean a hundred different things to a hundred different people,” Karr said.

Only 100 percent certified organic products get to display the USDA seal. If a packaged product says it is made with organic ingredient­s, that means at least 70 percent of those ingredient­s are organicall­y produced and the rest are made without prohibited practices. These won’t have the USDA seal, but they must identify the USDA-accredited certifier.

Lewis Goldstein, vice president of brand at Organic Valley, a farmerowne­d cooperativ­e, said there’s been some confusion about “organic” and “non-GMO” labels. Organic is always non-GMO, he said. Products raised convention­ally can say they have non-GMO ingredient­s, but there are no federal certificat­ions or inspection­s required for non-GMO goods.

Organic certificat­ion is an expensive and long process for farmers, and those costs are passed on to consumers, which is why organic commands a premium price. It’s also why many third-party labels popped up in recent years — trying to get on the trend while bypassing federal regulation­s.

When looking at these third-party labels that don’t include USDA certificat­ion, consumers should research what the certificat­ions mean, said Ioannis Kareklas, assistant professor of marketing at the University at Albany, who co-edited the 2017 book “Decipherin­g Organic Foods” and works with farmers.

“As we get more … labels, you have to follow the trail and figure out who’s providing the certificat­ions, what are their motivation­s and their financial incentive. In some cases, they might be just as trustworth­y, and in other cases, they might not be,” he said.

What’s in your egg

Labels like cage-free are applied to meat, dairy and eggs. Those terms may conjure up images of small Norman Rockwell-esque farms, but again, Goldstein and Karr say that only organic products have specific guidelines about animal welfare and access to outside. Nonorganic cage-free only means the hens aren’t confined in cages, but they could live in a crowded room with tens of thousands of birds. Nonorganic pasture-raised means birds have access to the outside, but they may not go, and that “pasture” could be a screened-in porch with a concrete floor.

Karr and Goldstein said the organic industry pushed for more definitive animal welfare standards that might have cleared up confusion around terms like pasture-raised, which even under the current organic rules aren’t well-defined. However, regulation­s passed under the Obama administra­tion to go into effect this quarter will not be implemente­d by the Trump administra­tion, they said.

For people who want to start buying some organic foods, Karr and Goldstein recommende­d the Environmen­tal Working Group’s Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce and its Dirty Dozen list, which points out which produce is best to buy organicall­y, due to high levels of synthetic pesticides in convention­al food. Strawberri­es, spinach and nectarines top the list.

Textiles too

Organic certificat­ion also covers natural fibers like cotton and wool, but definition­s can get blurry once fibers become textiles, said Marci Zaroff, founder and chief executive officer of MetaWear, an organic textiles manufactur­er. She is on the board of directors of the Organic Trade Associatio­n.

The USDA organic seal governs fiber used in products like cotton swabs. For textiles such as apparel, bedsheets and mattresses, look for the Global Organic Textile Standard seal, a private industry standard that the USDA adopted as a complement to the organic label, she said.

“GOTS is a standard that has been adopted all over the world as the platinum standard for a certified finished organic textile,” Zaroff said.

To carry the GOTS seal, the item must be certified organic from the agricultur­al fiber to the finished product, through the entire supply chain. That includes avoiding toxic pesticides and processing chemicals, and also ensures fair working conditions.

“There’s no cleaner, greener textile products than a GOTS-certified product,” she said.

 ?? SOURCE: DREAMSTIME ?? Organic certificat­ion is an expensive and long process for farmers, and those costs are passed on to consumers.
SOURCE: DREAMSTIME Organic certificat­ion is an expensive and long process for farmers, and those costs are passed on to consumers.

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