1. Official: organic really is better
Jon Ungoed-Thomas
The Sunday Times, October 28 2007
See article
THE biggest study into organic food has found that it is more nutritious
than ordinary produce and may help to lengthen people's lives.
The evidence from the GBP12m four-year project will end years of debate
and is likely to overturn government advice that eating organic food is
no more than a lifestyle choice.
The study found that organic fruit and vegetables contained as much as
40% more antioxidants, which scientists believe can cut the risk of
cancer and heart disease, Britain's biggest killers. They also had
higher levels of beneficial minerals such as iron and zinc.
Professor Carlo Leifert, the co-ordinator of the European Union-funded
project, said the differences were so marked that organic produce would
help to increase the nutrient intake of people not eating the
recommended five portions a day of fruit and vegetables. "If you have
just 20% more antioxidants and you can’t get your kids to do five a day,
then you might just be okay with four a day," he said.
This weekend the Food Standards Agency confirmed that it was reviewing
the evidence before deciding whether to change its advice. Ministers and
the agency have said there are no significant differences between
organic and ordinary produce.
Researchers grew fruit and vegetables and reared cattle on adjacent
organic and nonorganic sites on a 725-acre farm attached to Newcastle
University, and at other sites in Europe. They found that levels of
antioxidants in milk from organic herds were up to 90% higher than in
milk from conventional herds.
As well as finding up to 40% more antioxidants in organic vegetables,
they also found that organic tomatoes from Greece had significantly
higher levels of antioxidants, including flavo-noids thought to reduce
coronary heart disease.
Leifert said the government was wrong about there being no difference
between organic and conventional produce. "There is enough evidence now
that the level of good things is higher in organics," he said.
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2. Eat your words, all who scoff at organic food
Jon Ungoed-Thomas
The Sunday Times, October 28 2007
See article
ITS unassuming location belies its importance. Sandwiched between
Hadrian’s Wall and the busy A69 road to Newcastle upon Tyne is a
725-acre farm that will help to determine the nation’s future eating
habits.
In a unique experiment, its rolling pastures and ploughed fields have
been split into two so that conventional and organic produce can be
grown side by side. It has enabled scientists to test the alternative
foods rigorously and answer a question that most shoppers ask themselves
on a regular basis: is buying organic better for you?
Findings from the GBP12m European Union-funded project, the biggest of
its kind and the first to investigate systematically the physiology of
produce from the different farming techniques, will be peer reviewed and
published over the next 12 months.
But already one conclusion is clear: organically produced crops and
dairy milk usually contain more "beneficial compounds" - such as
vitamins and antioxidants believed to help to combat disease.
"We have a general trend in the data that says there are more good
things in organic food," said Professor Carlo Leifert, leader of the
QualityLowInput-Food (QLIF) project. "We are now trying to identify the
agricultural practices that are responsible for this."
The research has shown up to 40% more beneficial compounds in vegetable
crops and up to 90% more in milk. It has also found high levels of
minerals such as iron and zinc in organic produce.
The findings from the farm, which is part of Newcastle University,
appear to conflict with the official government advice that buying
organic food is a lifestyle choice and there is no clear evidence that
it is "more nutritious than other food".
The new research comes after a seven-year stand-off between the Food
Standards Agency (FSA) and the organic sector over the nutritional
benefits of organic food. Lord Krebs, the FSA's first chairman, even
said that organic food may not be good value for consumers.
The organic market has boomed in recent years, growing by 25% annually
on average, and is now worth nearly GBP2 billion a year. Organic produce
is typically about 30% more expensive, although for products such as
cherry tomatoes and carrots it is almost double the price. Supermarket
organic milk is 18% more expensive.
The FSA has recently offered a more conciliatory approach to organic
groups such as the Soil Association. One internal e-mail, sent on August
1, 2006 and obtained under freedom of information laws, states: "[There
is] a perception among a range of stakeholders that the agency is
antiorganic. Part of the action to address this is to change the tone of
our statements."
However, the agency has not changed its scientific advice. As David
Miliband, then the environment secretary, told The Sunday Times last
January: "It's a lifestyle choice that people can make. There isn’t any
conclusive evidence either way."
However, the evidence of the nutritional differences has been mounting.
Last summer a 10-year study by the University of California comparing
organic tomatoes with those grown conventionally found double the level
of flavonoids - a type of antioxidant thought to reduce the risk of
heart disease. Other studies show milk having higher levels of omega3
fatty acids, thought to boost health.
Over the past four years, the QLIF project, involving 33 academic
centres across Europe and led by Newcastle University, has analysed the
725-acre farm's produce for compounds believed to boost health and
combat disease.
Like other studies, the results show significant variations, with some
conventional crops having larger quantities of some vitamins than
organic crops. But researchers confirm that the overall trend is that
organic fruit, vegetables and milk are more likely to have beneficial
compounds. According to Leifert, the compounds which have been found in
greater quantities in organic produce include vitamin C, trace elements
such as iron, copper and zinc, and secondary metabolites which are
thought to help to combat cancer and heart disease.
Patrick Holden, director of the Soil Association, said the research
could help to contribute to a "seismic" change in the food industry: "If
you know there are significant nutritional differences in these foods,
any sensible citizen would conclude it must have health implications."
Andrew Wadge, the FSA's chief scientist, said the agency had ordered a
review of evidence on the nutritional content of organic and
conventional produce. He said that even if the review found significant
differences, the government would still need to assess any possible
impact on health.
He added that the debate over the relative benefits of organic food
should not blur the key message on diet and health. "The organic brand
has been hugely successful," he said. "But the most important issue is
not whether people are eating organic or not, but whether they are
eating a healthy balanced diet."