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Monday, 19 November 2007

I'm organic, buy me

 

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , 18 November 2007

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Look for the certification logos and licence numbers on imported organic products.

Increasing awareness on the benefits of wholesome, naturally produced foods has seen Malaysians switch from conventionally grown produce to organic ones. But with all varieties of "organic" food flooding the retail shelves, how can consumers identify the genuine product? P. SELVARANI, ELIZABETH JOHN and WONG YING SIM find out.

ASKED if he had any organic vegetables, the vendor at the Lucky Garden wet market in Bangsar grabbed a bundle of fresh looking spinach and thrust it before me.

"But how do I know it's really organic?" I asked, noting that unlike most products which had some packaging or label to identify them as organic, this one did not.

"You have to trust me lah! I know the farmer," he responded.

But how does one ascertain if a product is really grown organically?
"It depends on the certification or accreditation scheme. Only certification will tell you whether the food that you buy is really organic," said Agriculture director-general Datuk Sofian Mohd Salleh.

Local producers, he stressed, should get their farms accredited under the Malaysian standards, which is the Skim Organik Malaysia (SOM), for consumers to verify the authenticity of their produce.

The certification means that the farm has undergone a rigorous auditing process by the department's Crop Quality Control Division.

"We certify the farms as organic only when we are satisfied that chemical fertilisers, pesticides or any growth regulators, antibiotics or hormones have not been used totally in the production system.

"But these are not the only criteria. They have to meet the other elements of SOM to earn the certification."

These include traceability, land and soil management, water management, production management, handling, storage, packaging, transport, workers' health and safety, waste management and the impact on the environment.

The SOM certification is modelled after the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) and is based on the Sirim MS 1529:2001 standards governing the production, processing, labelling and marketing of plant-based organically produced food.

The certification also takes into consideration the WHO and FAO Codex standards for production, processing, labelling and marketing of organic foods.

Once accredited, the farms will be able to use the SOM logo which comes with a specific serial number for identification.

At present, the department only certifies organically grown fresh fruits, vegetables and rice.

"We have not started any certification for processed organic foods in the country.

"So if you see a processed product such as a beverage or flour bearing the SOM logo, then you ought to be suspicious because you don't know whether additives have gone into the product," Sofian said.

At present only about one per cent of the country's farm land is used to cultivate organic foods.

The department hopes to increase the area of organic farms from the present 2,367ha to some 20,000ha by 2010.

"There is a lot of potential in this sector because of consumer awareness and the high prices that organic produce can fetch."
 
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About Us

OAM stands for Organic Alliance Malaysia. It is a membership-based business association that seeks to promote and protect the organic industry in Malaysia. In short, we like everybody in Malaysia to think organic, grow organic and use organic.

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Newsflash

Special-Organic Joke

Special-Organic Joke 

 

A farmer in the country has a watermelon patch and upon inspection he discovers that some of the local kids have been helping themselves to a feast.

The farmer thinks of ways to discourage this profit-eating situation. So, he puts up a sign that reads: "WARNING! ONE OF THESE WATERMELONS CONTAINS CYANIDE!"

He smiled smugly as he watched the kids run off the next night without eating any of his melons.

The farmer returns to the watermelon patch a week later to discover that none of the watermelons have been eaten, but finds another sign that reads: "NOW THERE ARE TWO!"

Source: BFA

 

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Organic Facts

20 of 20 Good Reasons To Buy Organic 

 

 Eat the best-tasting food. Many Australians who consume organic products every day
do so because they believe that organic tastes best.

 

Source: BFA