Santa Cruz, California
July 23, 2003
The
total number of organic research acres in the
U.S.
land grant system has more than doubled between 2001 and 2003,
yet it still lags far behind the proportion of U.S. farmland
that is certified organic, according to a new report by the
Organic Farming Research
Foundation.
The report, State of the States: Organic farming systems
research at land grant institutions 2001-2003, is the second
edition of a report on publicly-funded organic research and
education first published in 2001. It will be officially
released July 26 at a farm tour organized by Dave Vetter of the
Grain Place, an organic farm and processing plant in Marquette,
Nebraska. During the tour, farmers and researchers will discuss
organic research at land grant universities in the Midwest.
“Fourteen states that had no organic research acres in 2001 now
do,” commented Jane Sooby, OFRF’s Technical Program Coordinator
and author of the study. “Now, farmers in 36 states can benefit
from organic research plots at their land grant university. We’d
like farmers in all states to be able to do that.”
The OFRF study found that, overall, organic research occupies
only 1,160 acres (0.13%) of the 885,862 available research acres
in the land grant system. A recent USDA report documents that
overall, 0.3% of all U.S. farmland is certified organic. In
high-value crops such as vegetables, a full 2% of U.S. acreage
is certified organic. OFRF found that certified organic
research acreage is only 496 acres (0.06%) of the total
available research acreage. This represents a trebling of the
154 certified organic research acres that OFRF reported in 2001,
a growth trend that OFRF expects will continue. The OFRF Board
has set a goal that 10% of federal agricultural research funds
be directed to organic research by 2006.
The five states having the strongest organic research programs
in 2001 - Iowa, Ohio, Minnesota, North Carolina, and West
Virginia - are joined by new programs in Washington and New
York. South Carolina, Maryland, Florida, and New Hampshire have
emerging organic research programs and are bringing research
land through the transition to certified status. Michigan and
California both have relatively high numbers of organic research
projects being conducted, but lack a centrally coordinated
organic research program. Land grants in Wisconsin, Oregon, and
Pennsylvania have notably few resources for the large numbers of
organic farmers in these states.
OFRF considers the effort made to certify research areas as
organic to be an indicator of a land grant institution’s level
of commitment to organic research.
“If they have certified organic research acres, they are much
more likely to provide accurate information to local organic
growers,” said Bob Scowcroft, OFRF executive director. “They
have made a long-term commitment to organic, and are held to the
same standards that the farmers are.” Federal organic standards
require that farms be certified organic if the farm products are
to be marketed as organic.
The land grant system consists of 68 land grant universities, a
national network of agricultural research stations, and
Cooperative Extension personnel in every U.S. county. Because
the land grant system is funded with federal tax dollars, OFRF
expects it to respond to the needs of all its constituents,
including the growing number of organic farmers.
“Highlights” for specific projects in various states are
available in a PDF document
HERE.
Further information on organic research being conducted in your
state is accessible by downloading the
FULL REPORT.
The
Organic Farming Research Foundation’s purpose is to foster the
improvement and widespread adoption of organic farming
practices. To that end, our mission is to sponsor research
related to organic farming; to disseminate research results to
organic farmers and to growers interested in adopting organic
production systems; and to educate the public and decision
makers about organic farming issues. |