Organic & Beyond
-
Food & Agriculture Tell Target to stop selling food grown with toxic pesticides!TAKE ACTION
-
Food & Agriculture Tell Lowe’s and Home Depot: Stop selling bee-killing RoundupTAKE ACTION
Friends of the Earth works to advance organic for all: for our health, our families and our communities; for the farmers and farmworkers who grow our food; for the land that provides us with nourishment, the pollinators that make food production possible and the climate and ecosystems that sustain all of life.
Science shows that organic agriculture can produce enough food to feed a growing world population while protecting our health and the environment.
Organic farming protects us from toxic pesticides, is more profitable for farmers and conserves the soil, water and biodiversity that we need to feed the world for generations to come. It is also a climate solution. In times of drought and flood, organic outperforms industrial agriculture. And compared with industrial farming, it conserves water, saves energy and captures more carbon in the soil.
The United States represents 43 percent of the global market for organic food, less than one percent of total U.S. cropland is devoted to organic farming. Expanding organic agriculture is a tremendous economic opportunity for American farmers and an important conservation strategy for our nation.
The science is clear: with agroecological methods of farming, like organic, we don’t have to rely on toxic pesticides and synthetic fertilizers to produce abundant food. That’s great news for people, pollinators and all living things. We know that the need for resilient, regenerative farming is more urgent than ever. Industrial agriculture costs the world an estimated $3 trillion annually in environmental damage, and climate change threatens future food security.
Amid bee crisis, leading organic U.S. food retailer focuses pollinator policy on pesticides in supply chain.
The 2023 Bee-Friendly Retailer Scorecard tracks what the largest US grocery retailers are doing to address toxic pesticides in supply chains.
This bill will keep chlorpyrifos out of places that directly affect our communities, and provide safeguards for bees and other pollinators.
Without pollinators, grocery stores would run short of a wide assortment of fruits and vegetables, nuts, beans, and delicious favorites like chocolate and coffee.
Every year, 80 million pounds of pesticides are used on U.S. lawns to maintain attractive, lush greenery. In many cities across the country, Latinx immigrant workers are the primary labor force responsible for lawn care.
As farmers face the new crisis of the pandemic, we must come together to demand that federal stimulus funding and future farm policies support small and mid-scale farmers across the country who are supporting resilient and regenerative local and regional food systems.
-
Organic for All: Results of the Organic Diet Biomonitoring Study
-
Bayer-Monsanto Merger: Big Data, Big Agriculture, Big Problems
-
Farming for the Future: Organic and Agroecological Solutions to Feed the World
-
2023 Bee-Friendly Supermarket Scorecard
-
Genetically Engineered Soil Microbes: Risks and Concerns
-
Pesticides and Soil Health