Organic farming fell to its lowest level on record last year. Farmers dramatically reduced the amount of land they set aside for organic crops and livestock last year to 605,329 hectares, the smallest area since records began in 2002, according to new figures from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. The area is almost a fifth less than at the height of the organic boom in 2008, when sales hit £2.1bn, and the decline continues a trend that looks set to accelerate in the coming years.
The pattern is set to speed up because the amount of farm land being converted for organic use dived last year to just 32, 223 hectares, its lowest level in at least a decade. This is just one sixth of the level of land “in conversion” in 2002, when farmers were scrambling to avail of government grants and subsidies that would allow them to take advantage of the anticipated boom in organic crops and livestock. The amount of organic land being converted – a process that takes two to three years to ensure all the system is entirely decontaminated – is a key indicator of the total area that will be given over to crops and livestock in the coming years.
Struggling consumers continued to desert a sector that had been booming until the financial crisis set in. Sales of organic food and drink soared before the recession, well over doubling from just over £800m in 2000 to £2.1bn in 2008. But they have fallen steadily since, to £1.64bn in 2012 – nearly a quarter below its 2008 peak, according to the Soil Association.
However, industry watchers say the horsemeat scandal has given the industry some cause for hope. Figures released last month by the retail research Kantar Worldpanel showed that organic sales through supermarkets increased for the first time since this year – although by only 1.6 per cent – as the horsemeat scandal made people think slightly more carefully about the provenance of their food.
The pattern is set to speed up because the amount of farm land being converted for organic use dived last year to just 32, 223 hectares, its lowest level in at least a decade. This is just one sixth of the level of land “in conversion” in 2002, when farmers were scrambling to avail of government grants and subsidies that would allow them to take advantage of the anticipated boom in organic crops and livestock. The amount of organic land being converted – a process that takes two to three years to ensure all the system is entirely decontaminated – is a key indicator of the total area that will be given over to crops and livestock in the coming years.
Struggling consumers continued to desert a sector that had been booming until the financial crisis set in. Sales of organic food and drink soared before the recession, well over doubling from just over £800m in 2000 to £2.1bn in 2008. But they have fallen steadily since, to £1.64bn in 2012 – nearly a quarter below its 2008 peak, according to the Soil Association.
However, industry watchers say the horsemeat scandal has given the industry some cause for hope. Figures released last month by the retail research Kantar Worldpanel showed that organic sales through supermarkets increased for the first time since this year – although by only 1.6 per cent – as the horsemeat scandal made people think slightly more carefully about the provenance of their food.
2 comments:
I stopped to follow your blog because all this irrationalist bullshit about organic farming. You embraced the Obscurantist Party. You are always spurting that there is food for everyone, but that will not be the case if humanity still produced food using the irrationalist method of organic farming. Prince Charles be with you!
Read this http://www.mobot.org/plantscience/resbot/Phil/shiva.htm
if the blog has given the impression that we somehow favour one style of farming and agriculture over another then we are in error. This decision is for society , a democratic socialist world to make, not for ourselves to impose our own sentiments.
Yes we do claim that there is presently enough food in the world and the potential exists to produce even more . This is not some obscurant claim but an actual fact supported by many non-socialist scientific and industry sources.
The problem is not a technological one dependent on if its GM or organic or whatever but an economic social problem. The blog post pointed out that it is the market and the production for profit that determines what is grown, how much is grown and how it is grown.
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