ORGANIC TRADE ASSOCIATION
The 'Organic Trade Association' (OTA) is a membership-based business association that focuses on the organic business community in North America. OTA's mission is to promote ethical consumerism, promoting and protecting the growth of organic trade to benefit the environment, farmers, the public and the economy. OTA is a member of The International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements (IFOAM)
The OTA has been widely criticized for being an agent of big business interests working to undermine the credibility of the organic movement. The OTA Rider attached to the Agriculture Appropriations Act, which the USDA approved, and passed before Congress in 2006, opened the door for non-organic, non-agricultural, and synthetic additives in food products bearing the "organic" label. The Organic Consumers’ Association OCA derided the OTA’s “sneak attackâ€. The OCA stated, “In the broadest and most basic sense, the OTA rider takes away the organic
community’s leading role in setting and monitoring organic standards for processed organic foods, and instead places this power in the hands of the USDA and industry†(OCA 2005a). [1]
★ Organic Certification
★ Organic Food
★ Organic Farming
★ Organic Trade Association web site
★ USDA National Organic Program
★ The Organic Food Database - Informational database of organic farms, restaurants and organic food products.
★ UK Soil Association
| Contents |
| Criticism |
| See also |
| External Links |
Criticism
The OTA has been widely criticized for being an agent of big business interests working to undermine the credibility of the organic movement. The OTA Rider attached to the Agriculture Appropriations Act, which the USDA approved, and passed before Congress in 2006, opened the door for non-organic, non-agricultural, and synthetic additives in food products bearing the "organic" label. The Organic Consumers’ Association OCA derided the OTA’s “sneak attackâ€. The OCA stated, “In the broadest and most basic sense, the OTA rider takes away the organic
community’s leading role in setting and monitoring organic standards for processed organic foods, and instead places this power in the hands of the USDA and industry†(OCA 2005a). [1]
See also
★ Organic Certification
★ Organic Food
★ Organic Farming
External Links
★ Organic Trade Association web site
★ USDA National Organic Program
★ The Organic Food Database - Informational database of organic farms, restaurants and organic food products.
★ UK Soil Association
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