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P A N U P S
Organic Apples Win Productivity and
Taste Trials
August 10, 2001
A study in the journal Nature counters arguments
that organic farming systems are less
efficient and produce lower yields than conventional farming
systems. Conducted by researchers at Washington State University from
1994 to 1999, the study compared organic, integrated and conventional
apple orchards and found that while all three systems gave similar
apple yields, the organic system had the greatest environmental sustainability,
profitability and energy efficiency.
In the study, the organic system did not
use synthetic pesticides or fertilizers
and relied on compost, mulch, pheromone-mating disruption (PMD),
Bacillus thuringiensis and thinning fruit by hand. By contrast, the
conventional system used synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, PMD
and chemical fruit thinner; the integrated farming
system used compost, synthetic fertilizers, mulch and herbicides.
Cumulative yields were comparable and there were no observable differences
in physiological disorders or pest and disease damage across the
three apple production systems. However, the study found that the
organic apple system had the highest soil quality,
profitability, energy efficiency and
taste appeal. The organic apple system also had the least adverse environmental
impact.
Although sustainability is a difficult concept to measure, the researchers
included both ecological and economic factors in their analysis.
They noted that to be sustainable a farm must produce adequate high-quality
yields, be profitable, protect the environment, conserve resources
and be socially responsible in the long term. Specifically, the
indicators of sustainability used in the study were soil quality,
horticultural performance, orchard profitability,
environmental quality and energy efficiency.
Organic apples were the most profitable due to price premiums
and quicker investment return.
The price premiums reflect consumer willingness
to pay extra for organically grown produce. Production costs of
organic and conventional systems varied by year. In the long term,
the organic apple system recovered initial costs
faster than the conventional system.
The study projected that the organic system would break
even economically (net returns equaling costs) after nine years, but that
the conventional system would break even only after fifteen years.
Despite higher labor needs, the organic system expended
less energy on fertilizer, weed
control and biological control of pests than the conventional
and integrated systems. By using the least amount of inputs overall,
the organic system was the most energy efficient of the three systems.
A consumer taste test found that organic apples were less
tart at harvest than both conventional
and integrated apples. They were also found
to be sweeter than conventional apples after six months of storage.
The study's data indicate that the organic system ranked
first in environmental and economic
sustainability, the integrated system second and
the conventional system last. The authors suggest that perennial food
crops such as apples may prove to be more sustainable to produce over
the long term than annual crops. Perennial crops currently comprise a significant
portion of the world's agricultural production.
Organic farming became one of the fastest growing segments
of U.S. and European agriculture
during the 1990s.
Sources: John P. Reganold, Jerry D. Glover,
Preston K. Andrews and Herbert R. Hinman,
"Sustainability of three apple production systems," Nature Vol.
410, April 19, 2001;
Reuters "Organic Apples Get Top Rating in Comparative Study," April
18, 2001.
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