RSC - Advancing the Chemical Sciences


 

Consumers are paying too much for organic food


Crop rotations, higher animal welfare standards and restricted use of chemicals, leading to lower yields, all mean that organic food costs more to produce. Subsidies from the government are paid mainly to farmers with non-organic farms allowing them to keep their prices low. The pro-organic lobby argue that when buying non-organic food you are in fact paying threefold; once at the counter, second via taxation and third to remedy the environmental pollution. As the sector develops and technologies are improved, the cost of organic food should decrease as yields increase and production costs decrease.

Organic vs non-organic

Organic vs Non-organic Farming - The Debate

Introducing the debate between organic and non-organic farming