The world’s retail organic agriculture market is worth nearly US$40 billion a year and is now produced from over 30 million hectares of land. Australia has by far the largest organic production area (12.3 million hectares).
The Government’s current method of controlling cattle TB – surveillance, testing and slaughter – is not working effectively. That is the conclusion of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (EFRA) select committee in its report Badgers and cattle TB, published on February 27th.
A new, independent report, published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, has concluded that the majority of bovine tuberculosis spread in high-risk areas is a result of badger-to-cattle interaction.
The “Jamie Oliver” effect, resulting from the screening of the TV show Jamie’s Fowl Dinners, is seeing supermarkets suffering shortages of free range and organic chicken, reports the Daily Mail.
Cash for farmers to leave land uncultivated as wildlife habitat (set-aside) in on its way back into UK farm policy
GM maize edges out organic production in Spain.
Seeds from some genetically modified crops can endure in soil for at least 10 years. That’s the finding of Swedish scientists who examined a field, originally planted with experimental oilseed rape a decade ago, and found transgenic specimens were still growing there.
Horse power on Iain Tolhurst’s holding
The European Commission has confirmed that the implementation of the new EU-wide organic “Bio” logo will be postponed until 2010.
Are the world’s livestock such polluters of our atmosphere?
New plan from EU to combat climate change
MPs say biofuels are no solution
Mark Measures discusses the effects of organic conversion grants – OELS
Exeter Univ shopping study
UK retail market analysis from TNS
New hope for EU effort on organic plant breeding
We have had a year of disease after disease.
For organic read multifunctional
A call for real organic poultry – produced with ethics, principles and adherence to proper organic standards
The world’s first organic cod farm, run by Johnson Seafarms just off Shetland, is in crisis. The firm has been put into administration with its directors sacked after they allegedly ran up debts totalling £40 million in the last two years.