Pesticide and Environmental Update
Letter to
Wal-Mart from the Organic Consumers Association
In the June 12, 2006 Washington Post article "For Wal-Mart, Fair
Trade May Be More Than a Hill of Beans," writer Ylan Q. Mui describes
one of Wal-Mart's foreign suppliers of fair-trade coffee, a Brazilian
co-op farm. The article paints a glowing picture of Wal-Mart's investment
in a small coffee farmer, complete with a portrayal of how the company's
never-ending quest to cut supplier costs led it to remote Poco Fundo.
Unfortunately, this is only a small part of a larger picture.
Wal-Mart's worldwide impact on fair trade and organic standards, farmers
and consumers runs much deeper and has far more negative consequences than
the article indicates. Wal-Mart has an opportunity to act responsibly and
morally to address the issues of lower standards, misleading consumers and
squeezing local family-scale farms. By investing significantly in American
farmers' transition from conventional to organic production, Wal-Mart can
make good on some of the hype its public relations department has produced
in recent weeks.
Wal-Mart's entry into the organic and fair trade food market has
generated much fanfare and publicity, at great benefit to a company
seeking to rebrand itself in the wake of broad-based criticism of its
business practices. While seeking to improve both its reputation and
bottom line by moving into the organic and fair trade market, Wal-Mart has
systematically lowered standards for these products by squeezing suppliers
and sourcing supplies from factory farms and overseas suppliers.
Currently, the demand for organic products outweighs the supply, and
Wal-Mart's entry into the market has only exacerbated the problem.
The scale of Wal-Mart's procurement of organic products, along with its
practice of squeezing suppliers to ensure lower costs, has led to a
lowering of standards in its organic purchasing and retailing. Organic
milk, for instance, is being purchased by Wal-Mart from large factory
farms that, while certified as organic, are at best complying with the
letter and not the spirit of organic regulations. Many of the cows on
these farms have been imported from conventional dairies, where they were
weaned on blood, injected with antibiotic and hormones, and fed
genetically engineered grains. National USDA organic standards mandate
that cows have access to pasture and that a good portion of their food
comes from pasture forage. However, according to a 2006 study by the
Cornucopia Institute, larger organic suppliers‹including those that
supply Wal-Mart‹are raising their dairy cows in intensive confinement,
with little or no access to pasture.
The popularity of organics for consumers has in large part grown from
the knowledge among purchasers that products they purchased were raised
and produced in a safe, humane and environmentally friendly manner and in
many cases were produced locally. The industrialization of organics by
companies like Wal-Mart threatens the ability of consumers to be certain
that products they are purchasing are indeed raised and produced according
to true organic standards.
Currently, certified organics and fair-trade products also provide a
sustainable source of income for many American small-family farmers who
are threatened by the industrialization of these industries. These small
local producers source products according to traditional organic and fair
trade standards and have historically received a healthy margin on their
sales. Unfortunately Wal-Mart and other large retail chains are now buying
products labeled as organic, such as soy milk and tofu made from cheap
soybeans from China, where organic standards are dubious and farm labor
exploitation is the norm. Wal-Mart's decision to enter the organic and
fair-trade markets and source from industrialized producers threatens the
livelihoods of America's organic family scale farmers.
In spite of these problems that threaten to undermine organic standards
and economic opportunities for American small farmers, Wal-Mart has an
opportunity to act morally and responsibly by sourcing organics in a
sustainable manner. As the world's largest and most financially successful
company, Wal-Mart can treat its customers, suppliers and the earth fairly
by sourcing organic and fair trade products from local and North American
growers who meet the most stringent standards. Further, Wal-Mart can
ensure a sustainable supply of organic and fair trade products by signing
equitable, long-term contracts with American family farmers who wish to
make the transition to organic practices.
Wal-Mart has shown a commitment to sourcing seafood by pressuring
suppliers of fish and shrimp to meet Marine Stewardship Council and
Aquaculture Certification Council standards. By taking steps to source
organic and fair trade products from local and regional smaller producers
who are committed to meeting the most stringent standards, Wal-Mart can do
the right thing by the environment, its suppliers and its customers.
Ronnie Cummins, National Director, Organic Consumers Association
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