Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown...

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Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica Hylton

Transcript of Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown...

Page 1: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple

Comparing the sustainability of  Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington

Organic Produce

Alison Hard and Veronica Hylton

Page 2: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Local vs. Organic – What’s the Answer?

“Localvorism” & Organic foods movement in America

Concern with what goes into out food (chemicals).

What about the resources that go into producing our food?

Page 3: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

The Local Conventional Route: Stuart’s Farm

Located in Granite Springs, NY

44.1 miles from Upper West Side Whole Foods Market

Produces about 7,500 bushels of apples per season.

Conventional farm: does not meet the qualifications of organic farming, typically uses antibiotics and pesticides

Page 4: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

The Organic Route: CraveOrganics

Located in Royal City, Washington

2,710 miles from Upper West Side Whole Foods Market

Produces about 550 bushels of apples per season

Page 5: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

USDA Definition of Organic USDA National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) definition,

April 1995: “Organic agriculture is an ecological production management system that promotes and enhances biodiversity, biological cycles and soil biological activity. It is based on minimal use of off-farm inputs and on management practices that restore, maintain and enhance ecological harmony.Organic is a labeling term that denotes products produced under the authority of the Organic Foods Production Act. The principal guidelines for organic production are to use materials and practices that enhance the ecological balance of natural systems and that integrate the parts of the farming system into an ecological whole. Organic agriculture practices cannot ensure that products are completely free of residues; however, methods are used to minimize pollution from air, soil and water. Organic food handlers, processors and retailers adhere to standards that maintain the integrity of organic agricultural products. The primary goal of organic agriculture is to optimize the health and productivity of interdependent communities of soil life, plants, animals and people.”

Page 6: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Why Ecological Footprint Accounting?

Compares the cost of each method of apple production to available biocapacity (earth’s available resources).

Creates a single, clear indicator of sustainability that incorporates the complex series of processes involved in apple production.

Page 7: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

The Problem with EF on a Local Scale

Unreliable data reporting from farms.

Difficulty of converting different consumption factors (i.e.grams of fertilizer, Joules of fuel) into a single number.

Flaws in Ecological Footprint Accounting as a relatively new method.

Page 8: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Our Solution: Calculating Consumption per Apple

To compare the consumption of the two farms, we decided to calculate the ratio between the amount of materials or energy used in each process of farming the apples to the number of apples produced for the given orchard.

We will then compare the ratio of consumption for the two farms to each other to determine which farm consumes the most of each resource.

Page 9: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

New Conclusions

Page 10: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Major Factors in Consumption

GAS!! Gasoline & diesel used to grow, cultivate & transport apples is the biggest resource consumed

Transportation efficiency matters: more apples sent at once from Washington consume less diesel than the same number of apples sent from local farms in small loads

Mechanical labor Organic farms tend to use less mechanical labor mid-size & large farms can hire more people &

depend less on machinery

Page 11: Two Apples’ Journeys to the Big Apple Comparing the sustainability of Local Conventionally-Grown vs. Washington Organic Produce Alison Hard and Veronica.

Where Do We Go From Here?

Farmers & other business owners can keep better track of their resource consumption by keeping a record of all materials & energy consumed Including lights & heat used in buildings where products

are packaged

Develop better formulas for comparing resources consumed to available resources Easy to use, yet comprehensive Based on accessible data