Organic food prices way high

by Rob Peters | April 18, 2008 at 04:26 pm
965 views | 10 Recommendations | 7 comments

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All food prices are up lately, but organic food is particularly hard on the wallet. This New York Times feature takes a look at why.

Shoppers have long been willing to pay a premium for organic food. But how much is too much?

Rising prices for organic groceries are prompting some consumers to question their devotion to food produced without pesticides, chemical fertilizers or antibiotics. In some parts of the country, a loaf of organic bread can cost $4.50, a pound of pasta has hit $3, and organic milk is closing in on $7 a gallon.

“The prices have gotten ridiculous,” said Brenda Czarnik, who was shopping recently at a food cooperative in St. Paul.

Organic prices are rising for many of the same reasons affecting conventional food prices: higher fuel costs, rising demand and a tight supply of the grains needed for animal feed and bakery items. In fact, demand for organic wheat, soybeans and corn is so great that farmers are receiving unheard-of prices.

But people who have to buy organic grain, from bakers and pasta makers to chicken and dairy farmers, say they are struggling to maintain profit margins, even though shoppers are paying more. The price of organic animal feed is so high that some dairy farmers have abandoned organic farming methods and others are pushing retailers to raise prices more aggressively. Several organic manufacturers worry that sales may slow as consumers cut back.

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Barry Artiste
Barry Artiste
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 16:32 on April 18th, 2008

Rob Peters, I like this story. It's good stuff. studies from just about any scientist and nutritionist today will tell you there is virtually no difference in quality between fruits and vegetables organic or with pesticides, though I am not to keen on antibiotics, but a quick wash of organphostphate or chorlrides will remove any of these pesticides off the skin, versus excrement used in organic farming procedures as a natural fertilizers, as they say you are what you eat, I would rather go with the pesticides, as they have never given you crapola.

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Rebecca Blood

Eating organic doesn't have to cost an arm and a leg, and last year I proved it by Eating Organic on a Food Stamp Budget <http://www.rebeccablood.net/thriftyo/2007/04/mother_hubbard.html> for 5 weeks, during which we ate extremely well. Food costs are higher now across the board, but the choices you make can have an enormous impact on your personal food budget.

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Birch30D

Ian is a farmer suppling organic biodynamic produce to multiple farmers markets and restaurants of distinction.

He describes himself as a share cropper at Sunbow Farms. This photo was taken at the People Food Coop weekly Farmers Market in Southeast Portland Oregon. Buying directly from the grower can be as much about building relationship as price. The Farmers market prices are about the same as a Chain Markets but the food is picked one day ago and grown local rather than trucked in from out of state.

I grow a lot of food in my yard but use the market to get food that has yet to mature in my garden.

Birch30D has contributed a photo to this story.

Barbara McPherson
Barbara McPherson
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 15:32 on April 19th, 2008

Rob Peters, I like this story. It's good stuff.  I think the reality of food prices have yet to hit the average consumer.  There is a crisis on Vancouver Island as well as the rest of the country with the huge loss of family farm operations.  Why? Because even if an aspiring farmer inherits a piece of land he can't make enough money from it to build a house and support a family.  If a young person has to buy the land, they had better have another good paying outside job.  The farm dweller has similar costs in many areas as does the city dweller -- shoes for the kids, gas bills, diesel for the tractor. New regulations that favour the factory farms have put many small operators out of business.   I'm a farmer, and if my husband and I didn't have good pensions, we couldn't afford to farm.  Food prices in North America are extremely cheap but sometimes that is because the food is suppied by factory farms or from countries where standards for cleanliness and pesticide use are very lax. 

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eastvanray

Why are people so attached to “family farms”?  Family farms are inefficient.  If we relied on family farms for all of the world’s food production 1/3rd of the world’s people that exists now would have already died of starvation.

It is no wonder they cannot survive, people want food that they can afford.  Either family farmers have to convince wealthy consumers to pay extra for their produce or move over and let the efficient producers get the job done.  I am one of those people who will spend extra for good ingredients (mostly buying locally grown and butchered meat) but that isn't going to feed the world.

 

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Barry Artiste

But by buying locally, makes for a smaller carbon footprint as well as contributes to our economy.

Mass Farming can feed the masses, and leave the local farms to feed us, because local farming was never meant to feed to world, unless those local farms are in the third world.

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Caroline Rolfe

Spotted at a stall in the fantastically colourful food market in Barcelona ~ our lunch certainly lived up to expectations!

Caroline Rolfe has contributed a photo to this story.

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Barry Artiste
First Flagged at 4:32 PM, Apr 18, 2008 by Barry Artiste
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