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U.S.
Shift on Organic Rules Proved Costly
By Samuel Fromartz ,
Reuters News Service
Bart Reid had been struggling
hard to keep his West Texas shrimp farm
afloat since April, when U.S. regulators
relaxed the rules covering organic food.Reid
was suffering because the rules under the
U.S. Department of Agriculture's National
Organic Program were altered, taking seafood
out of the program.It meant he couldn't
label his Permian Sea Shrimp product ``USDA
organic,'' which prompted retailers to
cancel purchases.
That, in turn, scared off
investors interested in his business --
the first organic shrimp farm in the rapidly
expanding $11 billion U.S. market for organic
foods.But Reid and the organic industry
won a reprieve on Wednesday, when Secretary
of Agriculture Ann Veneman rescinded the
April rule changes made by the National
Organic Program.And, that means
Reid will be able to use the USDA label
after all.
“It may be too late,
but at least it will give us a ray of hope,” said
Reid, speaking by telephone from Imperial,
Texas.The April ruling that Veneman reversed
had removed a number of industries -- including
personal-care products, dietary supplements,
and pet foods -- from the organic program's
purview.“Everybody who was looking
to do business with me ran like cockroaches
under a spotlight,” Reid said, when
the April rule change was made.
His friends, family and lenders
had chipped in to invest $1 million in
his business.
CONTROVERSIAL RULINGS
The ruling was one of several
the USDA issued in April, raising alarm
among consumer groups and the organic industry,
which expressed concern that the rulings
diluted “organic” standards.Before
Veneman's decision, the USDA had said the
changes were only interpretations of existing
regulations.What also had organic proponents
up in arms was that the USDA issued the
rulings by fiat, rather than in consultation
with the National Organic Standards Board,
an advisory panel of industry, consumer,
farmer and environmental representatives.Veneman
directed the department's National Organic
Program to revisit the issue with input
from the board and the public.
Reid said he had worked for two years to make sure his own practices
met the standards of the organic law.He avoided chemicals and antibiotics,
did not crowd his pens and fed the shrimp organic feed -- all in line
with U.S. regulations.
Marty Mesh, executive director of Florida Organic Growers in Gainesville,
Florida, said his U.S-accredited group certified the shrimp “USDA
organic” because Reid followed the rules.
Reid thought this label might help his products compete with foreign
shrimp flooding into the United States from Asia and South America.He
said he could charge $5 a pound wholesale for the organic shrimp, compared
with $2 for conventional shrimp.Consumers have been willing
to pay a premium for organic products to avoid chemicals in conventional
food production. If aquaculture were to be placed outside of the U.S.
program -- as the USDA ruled in April -- any producer could have labeled
its fish “organic” without having to follow any regulations.The
same would also have been true for makers of pet food, supplements and
personal care products, rendering the organic label meaningless in those
segments.
Although it's unclear whether those
industries will permanently be part of the
USDA Organic program, at least now the producers
have a chance to be heard.
ORGANIC FISH FUTURE?
The NOSB advisory panel approved
recommendations for organic aquaculture
in 2001, but the USDA never acted upon
them -- in part, observers say, because
they were contentious.Recently, the USDA
suggested forming another working group
to develop organic standards for aquaculture.This
may have been prompted by competition.European
countries already certify organic fish
and could capture the bulk of the developing
global market, especially in big seafood-consumer
countries like Japan.“Chile is also
moving very fast,” said Richard Nelson,
vice president of Nelson & Sons Inc.,
a fish food company in Murray, Utah, participating
in the new organic working group. “They
will have an organic salmon product, probably
in six months.”'Until the USDA comes
up with new rules -- perhaps in two years
-- Reid will be able to sell his product
under the USDA Organic label, barring other
action from the department.
But the reprieve might be too late. “I'm in
dire straits,” he said.
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