Is Organic Food Better Than Non Organic?

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Robert Pavlis

Is organic food better? I know you have heard the marketing. It is more nutritious. It is healthier. It is better for the environment. But is any of that really true? How much of this is marketing hype by both companies and pro-organic groups, and what is the real science behind organic food?

Let’s get the facts about organic food.

Is Organic Food Better Than Non-organic Food?
Is Organic Food Better Than Non-organic Food?, source: Super Market News

What is Organic Food

Some people think that organic food is food that is grown organically. You might grow such food in your backyard but that is not officially ‘organic food’. Let’s be clear about this point. When most people talk about organic food, they are talking about certified organic food. Food can only be stamped organic if the grower is certified organic and if they follow all of the rules in the “organic certification manual.

Your backyard garden does not produce organic food, no matter how organically you grow it.

The actual definition is quite complex, but in short, it is food that is grown without synthetic chemicals, although the definition of what is synthetic might surprise you. Some manufactured chemicals are considered synthetic, and others are not. For example, copper sulfate is considered “organic’ even though it is manufactured. The most common method uses recycled copper metal scraps and adds sulfur, which is then purified into copper sulfate.

Is Organic Food Better?

I’ll examine organic food using a number of different criteria.

  • Does it taste better?
  • Is it more nutritious?
  • Is it healthier?
  • Is it better for the environment?
  • What about GMOs?

Each of these topics has been reviewed by many reliable authorities, and so I won’t be going into detail on them. My goal is to summarize what we know about organic food today.

Does Organic Food Taste Better?

There have been numerous studies on this, and many people, including food experts like chefs and nutritional experts, think organic food tastes better because it is grown more naturally. They believe that the organic treatment of soil transfers extra flavor into the food. The reality is that “most studies report no consistent or significant differences in taste“.

A comparison of organic fertilizer to synthetic fertilizer found no difference in taste. Synthetic did produce a higher yield.

Cornell University offered pairs of food to volunteers, who were told one was organic and the other was not. In reality, both were identical and organic. Most volunteers rated the organic choice as better tasting than the one labeled non-organic. Organic marketing has promoted this ‘halo effect’ and many consumers now believe it, but belief is not truth.

Do pesticides affect taste? A study tested 28 herbicides on a variety of crops and found eleven reduced the flavor and two produced a slight off-taste. The rest had no effect on taste. The taste test was done by professional tasters, and the effects were minimal. The researchers felt that a consumer panel is unlikely to detect a difference.

Taste has much more to do with freshness/ripeness and cultivar selection than with how it is grown.

Is Organic Food More Nutritious?

Organic food is grown with compost and manure, which add important ingredients to soil, that synthetic fertilizers just can’t match. Organic builds a healthy soil system full of microbes and fungi all helping food to become more nutritious – or so the story goes. But is any of this true? Is the resulting food more nutritious?

In 2012, Stanford’s Center for Health Policy did a very comprehensive meta-analysis of existing studies comparing organic and conventional foods. They did not find strong evidence that organic foods are more nutritious than conventional alternatives.

Vitamin content was not higher. Phosphorus was significantly higher in organic food, but few people have a phosphorus deficiency; this has little clinical significance. Protein and fat contents were the same in both organic and conventional milk. A few studies did show a higher level of omega-3 fatty acids.

One thing is clear. Fresh food is more nutritious than food that has sat around for a while, and this may be a bigger factor than how it is grown.

Is Organic Food Healthier?

A major concern of conventional food is the exposure to synthetic chemicals, including fertilizer, pesticides, and medication given to farm animals.

There are very few studies that have actually looked at overall health and compared people eating mostly organic to those eating mostly conventional.

Synthetic Fertilizer

A lack of chemistry knowledge leads people to think that synthetic fertilizers are somehow inferior to organic fertilizers like manure and compost, but there is no scientific basis for this. Both types of fertilizer must release nutrients in plant-available forms before plants can use them. Once in this form, both sources are identical as far as nutrients go. Neither one produces healthier food than the other.

Pesticides

A very common belief is that organic food is grown without pesticides. That is completely false. Organic certified farmers can, and do, use a list of “approved” pesticides like copper sulfate and pyrethrin. What many consumers do not understand is that these organic pesticides can be more toxic than many of today’s synthetic pesticides. Not only that, but the organic ones are less effective, which means they are applied more frequently and at higher doses. The dose makes the poison.

Certified organic farmers are allowed to use copper sulfate, which has caused liver disease in farm workers, and they can use pyrethrin, which increases the risk of leukemia.

Microbe Science for Gardeners Book, by Robert Pavlis

The other important fact is that plants produce a vast number of natural pesticides – that is, how they keep bugs from eating them. When you eat fruit or vegetables, 99.99% of the pesticides you consume are natural pesticides, and these are the same in both types of food. The remaining 0.01% are man-made. Solanine is one of these natural pesticides. Potatoes produce it when they go green, and even small amounts can make you sick.

It is true that conventional fruits and vegetables have a higher amount of synthetic pesticides on them, but the amounts are extremely small and well below any safety limits. Today’s tests are so sensitive that they can find almost any chemical anywhere – but that means nothing about health issues.

Medications

Organically grown animals can’t be given antibiotics or growth hormones, and their feed can’t be exposed to pesticides, growth hormones, or synthetic fertilizers. Chickens and turkeys can be given antibiotics in the hatchery and on their first day of life. In Canada, organic dairy farmers are also permitted to give antibiotics when it’s medically necessary and natural treatments don’t work.

Organic Alberta, a group educating consumers about organic food, said, “the long-term effects on human health of trace amounts of antibiotics in food have been difficult to determine”. Translation: there is no evidence of a problem.

“Contrary to what you may think, the chances of you actually consuming antibiotics through animal foods is extremely low”. The US, Canada, Australia and the European Union have strict laws that prevent contaminated meat from entering the food chain. If an animal is given an antibiotic, it must go through a drug withdrawal period before it can be sold as food. Testing by the USDA in 2010 found less than 0.8% of animal food products to be positive for some form of contamination, including antibiotic residue, and these were removed from the food chain.

Even if there is some exposure to antibiotics, there is no evidence that they cause any health issues.

The overuse of antibiotics in both animals and humans is a significant concern because it can lead to resistant strains of bacteria.

Is Organic Better for the Environment?

Organic agriculture needs a lot more land to produce the same food
Organic agriculture needs a lot more land to produce the same food, source: Ashutosh Viramgama

Organic food does not taste better, and it is not healthier for you, but surely it is a more sustainable way to grow food? It has got to be better for the environment?

The organic food industry has done a good job of convincing you of this, and they even produce reports showing you how bad conventional agriculture is for the environment. Just think of all those oil-based synthetic fertilizers! Check out this link – it is mostly a myth.

The problem with many of these reports is that they don’t look at the big picture. Sure, a single small farm may be sustainable, provided you don’t count the manure that comes from another farm, or the impact of trying to grow food for a large population from this one farm, but when you look at the big picture, it is not so rosy.

Effect on the Environment

A single organic farm uses less electrical energy and produces fewer greenhouse gases. The problem is that organic farms are much less productive because they don’t use synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. In order for an organic farm to produce the same amount as a conventional farm, it needs to use much more land. Producing organic milk requires 59% more land, organic meat, 82% more land, and organic grains require 200+% more land.

More land for agriculture means converting natural lands to farms, which impacts native plants and animals, and produces more CO2.

If an organic certified farmer has a choice between doing something that is better for the environment or following strict certification rules, they have to follow the rules. For example, some of the modern pesticides are more effective, require lower application rates, are safer than organic options, and cause less harm to the environment. A certified farmer is still not allowed to use them, even though they are the most sustainable option. Synthetic fertilizer can grow better animal feed on a smaller area of land, but organic farms can’t feed it to their cows. Organic certification is not always a good choice for the environment.

Healthier Animals

You might think that animals on organic farms are healthier than regular farms. They eat organic food, have fewer medications, and are allowed to roam at will.

A five-year US study of dairy farms showed that the health of animals is the same on conventional and organic farms. A Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety reached a similar conclusion when it reported no difference in disease occurrence. Pigs and poultry have better access to open areas on organic farms, but this freedom also increases their exposure to parasites, pathogens, and predators.

Jacy Reese, senior fellow at the think tank Sentience Politics, said, “In my view, the bigger downside to organic meat is the harm it does to animals.”

What about GMOs?

Certified organic food in the US and Canada does not contain GMOs. “The European Union prohibits farmers from growing GMOs“. This is a big deal to some consumers, but the facts do not support their concern.

First of all, most fruits and vegetables are not available in a GMO form, and GMO-produced food is mostly used in the manufacturing of processed foods. So the majority of fresh food from conventional sources is also “non-GMO”.

Secondly, scientists are in almost universal agreement that GMO food poses no health risks. If you want to know more about this, see GMO Myths – Understanding the Truth about GMO Plants.

The fear of GMOs is a poor reason to buy organic food.

Buy From Local Farmers

I don’t see much value in buying organic food, but there is some value in buying from local farmers – if you can trust them.

These local farmers do not need to be certified organic; they just need to farm in an organic/sustainable way. I actually think that certification produces food that is “less organic” than some conventional farms. It is certainly less “organic” than the food I grow in my backyard. But you do have to get to know the farmer so you trust them.

Don’t be fooled by local farm markets. Many of the sellers in those stalls are importing food from who knows where and reselling it. Today, much of the produce at local markets is not local, and it is not grown by the people selling it.

Is Organic Food Worth More Money?

The only benefit you get when you buy organic is that you support organic farmers.

Organic food does not taste better, it is not more nutritious, and it is not better for the environment. If you want to be more organic, take that extra cash and plant a tree. Even if you fertilize it with synthetic fertilizer, you will be more organic.

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Robert Pavlis

I have been gardening my whole life and have a science background. Besides writing and speaking about gardening, I own and operate a 6 acre private garden called Aspen Grove Gardens which now has over 3,000 perennials, grasses, shrubs and trees. Yes--I am a plantaholic!

47 thoughts on “Is Organic Food Better Than Non Organic?”

  1. Funny that there are so many comments and arguments about taste. Taste is far from an objective, quantifyable thing. Unlike nutrition and chemical components.

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  2. I dont know what robert is trying to convince people here bks he disagree with lots of ur argument about him saying that organic doesnt have imprttant amd so he so confusing, for sure people are so aware and tey to find organic and robert should have made conrete argument that surely organic is way better even if it doesn rili taste better or even if doesn rili have more nutrients, robert should agree and suggest us to plant our food so we are sure that its organic and fresher rather than arguing with nonsense.

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    • My arguments are quite clear. If you disagree with them – then supply the evidence that they are wrong.

      Gardens are NOT certified organic – they are not discussed in this post.

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  3. With all due respect, having people taste organic food, when telling them that is not, does not prove anything on the difference in taste between organic and non-organic food. It shows bias towards organic indeed, but if you want to know what tastes better, you feed a person both, and ask them which he likes the best.

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      • You choose this example. It does not prove your point at all. You ask other people to come with evidence for their statements, but you seem to think that that rule does not apply to you. There are some things wrong with your other research and your conclusions base on it as well, but I will take SiaktoY’s advice and stop arguing with nonsense.
        Kind regards, Nynke

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        • You missed the part “The reality is that “most studies report no consistent or significant differences in taste”.” and its link.

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          • I certainly did not miss that part nor its link. It brings me to a page that states that organic potatoes contain more vitamins. Did you miss that part? It contains a link as well to the institute that did this research. On their page you find all kind of benefitsof organic food, like better cognitive functions of children that were exposed to organic food in the whoom. Maybe you should read it again. I am going to spend a lot of time reading that research, thank you for pointing me towards it. I do have a question for you, I am honestly interrested in your motivation to write this article? Why do you pretent that you did thorough research, and provide proof of the opposite of what you are stating? Seriously, what is your gain?

          • The link takes you to this conclusion”

            “Most studies report no consistent or significant differences in taste and organoleptic quality. It is extremely rare that the taste of organically grown fruits and vegetables is found to be poorer than that of fruits and vegetables grown conventionally or with integrated techniques. ”

            My motivation was to summarize what science has concluded about organic food. I’ve read numerous articles over the years about taste, and they usually come to the same conclusion. Organic does not taste better.

  4. “Home grown vegetables taste better” – one reason gardeners may believe that is because it helps to justify all the effort and cost and waiting that goes into growing your own veggies. The old saying “I will beleive it when I see it “ should really be “when I beleive it I will see it”. My green beans are mighty tasty if I do say so myself.

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  5. No it is not! Organic food sits on the shelf longer…losing its nutrients by the minute. Picking and eating is the best and only way to get all your nutrients. And it’s fun…AND delish!!!

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  6. One thing for sure as soon as anything is labeled organic you will pay more for the product. People will also assume it is better for you and are willing to pay more.

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  7. I am thinking of all the people who cannot buy organic, grow their own vegetables and have to pay supermarket prices, Conventional farming keep vegetables prices down It also gives us food security:
    You could have touched on the price of extracting those fertilizers from the ground and the cost of the pesticides.
    Buying organic eggs and chickens ensures the animals have more room to roam. You simply pay for animal welfare

    I have not found that permaculture is viable in Ontario i have tried it for 20 years and we do not have the climate for this

    Reply
    • Permaculture in Ontario: Permaculture as a design science that is focused on regenerative ways of living can be practiced anywhere humans live. It is far beyond gardening, although gardening is how many people are introduced to permaculture.

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  8. Where is your source that says organic farmers don’t use fertilizer? “The problem is that organic farms are much less productive because they don’t use fertilizers and pesticides.” Did I read that wrong? You did already say they DO use pesticides, just approved ones from a list. I am also wondering how would one be able to compare “production”, is it just a measure of the same area of the same crop? Or is it total inputs vs outputs, including the effect on the community of people and organisms, land and water? I understand you are reporting on what is currently known and measured.

    Your claim about not being able to trust if food is local is not true as far as Certified Farmers Markets in California. To participate, a farmer must have grown or produced the thing in question themselves, within the state. Are there bad actors? As in all else, probably.

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    • The problem is that organic farms are much less productive because they don’t use fertilizers and pesticides.” – I have changed that to “synthetic fertilizers and pesticides”.

      Reply

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