Arab Times

Consumers pay Brazil farmers to go organic

Relationsh­ip of trust

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PLANALTINA, Brazil, June 23, (RTRS): Every week, farmer Thiago Kaiser fills his truck with dozens of boxes of organic food to be delivered directly to those who will eat it in Brasilia, Brazil’s capital city.

Kaiser is one of a growing number of Brazilian farmers paid by customers to grow organic fruit and vegetables through a shared-production system.

His farm does not sell any of its produce on the open market, including restaurant­s and supermarke­ts.

“We have our co-farmers, who are the people who finance our planting. It is a relationsh­ip of trust,” Kaiser told the Thomson Reuters Foundation beside a vegetable garden on his family farm in Planaltina, some 34 miles (55 km) from Brasilia.

“When you go to the supermarke­t, you choose what you are going to eat ... Our co-farmers don’t know what we’ll deliver to them,” he added.

Organic agricultur­e has grown in popularity around the world in recent years, amid rising health and environmen­tal concerns over industrial farming, and pressure for more sustainabl­e use of soil, water and other natural resources, according to a 2017 report published by Codeplan, a state-run company that carries out developmen­t work in Brazil’s Federal District.

Growing demand for food low in fat and sugar makes fruit and vegetables key weapons in the battle against obesity and malnutriti­on, giving an extra boost to the organic market.

The model adopted by Kaiser, known as “Community Supported Agricultur­e” (CSA), is a system in which local residents finance and participat­e in food production.

Calculate

The farmer calculates the cost of producing food for a group of people, who pay a monthly fee. They agree to buy seasonal vegetables and fruits, and to split the costs of crop failure.

“If we can produce a good harvest of lettuce, they will receive two, three or four lettuces — but if I have a problem with rain and cannot produce lettuce, they will also understand,” Kaiser said.

Organic fruit and vegetables are delivered to collection points on a weekly basis, but customers can also visit the farm, take part in decisions about what to plant, suggest new crops and help with the harvest themselves. “For people with children, we say it’s priceless,” said agronomist Abilio Vinicius Barbosa Pereira.

“Children grow up knowing the name of the food and placing value on food, on land and on the environmen­t in practice.”

Pereira joined a CSA group in his Brasilia neighbourh­ood in November, and pays about $80 per month. Since then, his children are eating far more fruit and vegetables.

“We visit farms, and my children recognise the name of the plants, and are encouraged to eat vegetables children usually don’t want to eat,” Pereira said.

Brazil’s organic food sales reached some 2.5 billion reais in 2016 ($663 million), with annual growth of 20-30 percent, according to the Codeplan report. About 70 percent of organic production is exported to Europe.

Organic production represents the fifth largest supply chain in the Federal District, where Brasilia is located, making about 30 million reais per year, according to Codeplan.

“There is rising consumer awareness about the importance of eating healthily,” said Ana Maria Resende Junqueira, agronomy professor at the University of Brasilia (UnB).

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Junqueira

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