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Africa at BioFach 2009

Posted - January 18, 2009

Africa Pavilion Going Strong for BioFach 2009

Africa will again makes its presence known at BioFach. After great success with its first Africa Pavilion at the 2008 edition of the Nuremberg, Germany, fair, 2009 fair visitors will again enjoy African designs, colours, sounds and flavours.

Last year, the Africa Pavilion gathered 73 exporters exhibiting from 13 African countries, generating favourable coverage and sales. This year over 100 exporters, export promotion agencies and non-governmental organizations will showcase specialities from Sub-Saharan African countries, connecting buyers and suppliers. According to organizers Grolink and Agroeco, this year, around 35 stands with 120 exhibitors from 14 African countries will be exhibiting a full range of organic certified products.

Africa Pavilion

Products to be displayed include cashew nuts, cereals, cocoa, coconut oil, coffee, cotton, dairy, dried fruit, essential oils, fertilizers (organic, of course), flowers, fruits, spices, nuts, herbs, hibiscus, honey, wax, macadamia, natural products, oilseed, processed food, pulses, rice, sesame, shea butter, spices, tea and vegetables.

Countries represented are: Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The 2009 Africa Pavilion will occupy 500 square metres of space; Uganda alone will occupy 90 square meters.

Products to be displayed include cashew nuts, cereals, cocoa, coconut oil, coffee, cotton, dairy, dried fruit, essential oils, fertilizers (organic, of course), flowers, fruits, spices, nuts, herbs, hibiscus, honey, wax, macadamia, natural products, oilseed, processed food, pulses, rice, sesame, shea butter, spices, tea and vegetables.

Organizations cooperating with Grolink and Agroeco in the development of the project include IFOAM, ITC, Organic Exchange, Rwanda Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources, NOGAMU (a Ugandan agricultural movement), TOPAZ, Hivos and the Triodos Foundation.

If the Africa Pavilions at Biofach 2009 and 2010 show results similar to those in 2008, organizers will consider to celebrate Africa as Continent of the Year in BioFach 2011.

Visit http://www.organicafrica2009.com and send any requests to africa2009@grolink.se.

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La Vita Launches New Cookies

Posted - December 18, 2008

Crunchy, Healthy Cookies Deliver Old-Fashioned Good Taste: La Vita Introduces Eight New Prebiotic Cookie Varieties

La Vita Health Foods has introduced a line of cookies with a low glycemic index that are also prebiotic, vegan and Kosher, and cholesterol, wheat, dairy and lactose-free. These La Vita All Natural Crunchy Cookies contain no high fructose corn syrup, maltitol, artificial sweeteners, or preservatives and still have a year-long shelf life.

“When family and friends visit this year, hosts can offer adults and children alike La Vita Crunchy Cookies,” said Zina Minz, founder of La Vita Health Foods. “They’re suitable for guests with special dietary needs, or just watching what they eat. As a family-run business, those values are so important to us at La Vita and are always at the forefront of our minds.”

Industry-savvy attendees at the 54th Fancy Food Show in New York City recently proclaimed the cookies the best-tasting sugar free and gluten free cookie they had tried.La Vita Poppy Seed Cookies

“Until now, most healthy, high-fiber cookies simply have not been very enjoyable to eat,” Minz said. “We developed La Vita All Natural Crunchy Cookies to have a delicious homemade taste and fresh-baked texture that melts in your mouth.”

After two decades of research and testing in Israel and Europe, La Vita’s unique soy-flour recipes and baking processes now allow the firm to offer its nutritious alternative to “traditional” grocery-store baked goods, which usually contain artificial preservatives, colors and flavors.

La Vita Crunchy Cookies are available in eight varieties, based on classic recipes updated with a modern twist to appeal to today’s health-conscious eaters. These include Poppy Seed, delightfully matched with a whisper of light lemony goodness, Peanut Butter, for that rich, satisfying wholesomeness, and Cajun, which features cayenne, red peppers and chicory and is subtly sweet with a pleasant saltiness.

Try some out at your next party or as a gift. For once, you can be sure no one will miss the “junk” food!

About La Vita Health Foods, Inc.

Based in Monsey, New York, La Vita Health Foods is dedicated to providing consumers and retailers with the very best “Gluten-Free and Sugar-Free Foods for a Healthy Future.” Its Crunchy Cookies are available in Almond, Chocolate Chip, Chocolate, Strawberry, Poppy Seed, Raspberry Lemon, Cajun, and Peanut Butter. For more information, call (845)368-1073 or visit www.LaVitaHealthFoods.com.

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Danish Lead 2009

Posted - November 1, 2008

Denmark Country of the Year at BioFach 2009

By Adriana Michael - as printed in O.W.N. Fall 2008

Next year in February, Biofach, the most international and influential fair for organic trade celebrates its 20th anniversary. Denmark has been selected  “Country of the Year” to greet and share its amazing success story in the organic sector with over 46,000 visitors and around 2,900 exhibitors.

This is no surprise for those in the know. Denmark has a strong history of environmentalism. The country is a pioneer and trailblazer in wind power.

Today Danes spend an average of 80 Euros a year per person on organic food, making this small country of over 5 million people, the leader in the European Union (EU). Sales of Danish organic products grew by 33% in 2007.  A 6.5% of all food sold in the country comes from organic sources. The capital city of Copenhagen enjoys a 12%, while the Danish government scores even higher than the citizens, with 45% of food requirements in schools, hospitals and other official areas coming from organic production.
Organic Denmark's Director Paul Holmbeck

“We have chosen Denmark because it has one of the world’s leading organic markets,” said in a release Udo Funke, managing director of BioFach in Nuernberg. Biofach management is convinced Denmark will continue to play an important role on the organic market in the future. “Denmark is a strong export-partner with internationally recognised organic products.”

How did Danemark reach this benchmark?

Denmark was the first country in the world to introduce a state-controlled organic certification, represented by a red Ø-mark, says Paul Holmbeck, managing director of Organic Denmark, a national umbrella organization that coordinates all private and public efforts for the proper development of the organic sector in the country. “Our national organic mark is trusted by Danish consumers and enjoys a 94% recognition rate”, says Holmbeck. “People in Denmark believe in our government institutions”. If someone tries to break the rules, the process goes very public and this openeness creates consumer trust.

Holmbeck also believes that the merging of all consumer, farmer and trade organic associations in 2002 under the umbrella – Organic Danemark – was a real turning point in the country’s organic movement.

The merger of eight main different organic associations was a process that started back in 1998, when the first step was to move offices of all entities to the same building. Holmbeck has been involved with the organization since the beginning and has seen first hand the process of internal restructuring and organization that has made Organic Danemark the powerhouse it is today.

Spring and Fall each bring a national organic festival to Danish fields.

“We had the same objectives and worked on the procedures to make sure all needs of all entities were addressed and covered,” says Holmbeck. Having one voice, one umbrella has empowered the movement and its members even further. “Communication with government officials and the media and reaching end consumers has been much effective”, adds Nanna Hyldegaard Hansen, public relations manager for Organic Danemark.

One of the main accomplishments of the Danish organic sector i since its pioneering years has been the cooperation of farmers and processors with the major supermarket chains, a task that Organic Danemark has developed even further.

“We created a tailor-made marketing strategy with each chain,” says Holmbeck. “They are competitors and know we work with all of them, but we make sure to offer each chain added value for our relationship with them.”

Another contributing aspect to the strong development of the organic sector has been the product differentiation, thanks to strong cooperation between organic producers, research institutions and Universities and the amazing support received from the government. “Danemark  enjoys an environment that rewards innovation and a commitment to product development and to find more sustainable ways to obtain consumer goods”, says Holmbeck.

Given Denmark’s high levels of organic food consumption, it’s a sure bet that their strategy has paid off. Holmbeck also says that Organic Danemark is using the same approach to increase export activity with supermarket chains outside the country. During Biofach 2009 in Germany, visitors and exhibitors will enjoy a series of seminars and presentations to showcase Danemark’s success story and the different aspects of the programs currently in place , besides the release of results from research showing more evidence of the strong relationship between health issues and organic farming.

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Germany Leads the Way

Posted - May 12, 2008

Organic Supermarkets and Discounters Remain as Driving Forces in Germany

Introduction by Kai Kreuzer, BIO-Marktinfo

When Rudolf Steiner “invented” organic agriculture in the 1920s, he couldn’t have perceived what significance it would have in Germany some 80 years later. Today, Germany is the biggest European organic market, with a share of around 30% of all organic sales in the continent. Three percent of total food consumption is organic. Last year 16,800 farmers worked on 812,000 hectares of organic farmland. That’s almost 5% of the total agricultural surface. Germany recorded 4 billion Euro in organic sales in 2007, 15% more than the year before.

Germany Organic MapBased on its evolution, the German market can be divided into three categories: the pioneers, the small specialized shops and the conventional market. The first phase refers to the early 1920s, when concern for the side effects of industrialized farming was already evident. Farmers noticed the steady decline in their crops; some decided to follow the principles of Rudolf Steiner. Demeter and Reformhaus were among the first names to appear. During World War II, development came to a halt.

The first simple direct-marketing systems sprung up in the mid 1950s, when farmers began to sell their produce at shops and farmers’ markets. In the 1960s, there was moderate growth in organic farms belonging to the biodynamic Demeter association and the Bioland group, founded in 1971.

In the second phase, beginning in the early 1970s, specialized organic shops emerged. One of the first was the Erdgarten in Munich and Rapunzel in Augsburg, predecessor of today’s big importer and trader. Most organic wholesalers were founded during this period, due to demand from shops for regular suppliers. Shop owners drove to farms for wheat, potatoes, vegetables and fruit. Some drove to Italy in lorries to import wine and oranges! A structure of about 18 wholesalers was born which continue to do business today, largely delivering on a regional basis. Dennree, the only national distributor and now the biggest wholesaler with a yearly turnover of 230 million Euro, started in 1974.

After 25 years, about 2,500 specialized shops had been founded and the percentage of organic product lines continues to increase. The average retail space grew from about 25 m2 to 100 m2. These shops were still tiny compared to the supermarkets and shopping centers that had been developing at the same time.

The third phase began in 1998, with the foundation of the organic supermarket Basic in Munich, center of Germany’s organic lifestyle. Although Basic was not the first organic supermarket in Germany - about a half dozen others preceded it - none has enjoyed such enormous success. In the last 8 years, small retail chains have developed. In 2005, 60 organic supermarkets opened with a retail space between 200 and 1,000 m2. Altogether, there are now more than 300 such stores, with 50 to 60 new ones cropping up per year.Organizations in Germany

Meanwhile, consumer awareness of organics grew thanks to the “conventional” mistakes of non-organic producers. Organic options moved into mainstream consciousness through food scandals, including hormones in calf meat. Soon organics were no longer considered fringe products for odd customers who wore eco-clothing, but instead developed an image as a choice for modern, sustainability- and future-oriented customers.

Seeing opportunity, big business entered the picture. In 2003, the discount-retail company Plus (2,750 shops) rolled out a modest range of organic products (30 lines) under their own label BioBio. Branchenprimus Aldi Süd (together with Aldi Nord and its 3,700 shops) are now the biggest sellers of organic potatoes. In May 2006, discounter Lidl (2,700 shops) began to offer organics, with a range of 50 products. Last year, discounters added organic bananas with good results.

Quantities sold in the specialized markets have stayed about the same, but bulk sales are made by discounters and conventional supermarkets. Total sales of organic bananas in Germany tripled from 2004 to 2006, from 8,000 tons to 21,700 tons. Standard organic items such as milk, yoghurt, bread, cheese, mueslis, potatoes and some fresh fruit and vegetables are widely available. Broad ranges (of 2,000 organic items or more) are carried by specialized shops, organic supermarkets and a smattering of conventional shops.

The next years will bring a moderate growth of organic food lines in the conventional trade and more competition for the specialized trade, as the old standbys try to to defend their loyal market share. The winner, in any case, will be the consumer, who enjoys ever more choices.

Please read on to Part 2, main text of the article.

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Germany Leads the Way - Part 2

Posted - May 12, 2008

Organic Supermarkets and Discounters Remain as Driving Forces in Germany

By Martin Grass

Learning about the people behind the brands we see at the fairs and shops is important to maintain the transparency of the organic sector. Keeping track “from field to fork” is the prevalent slogan.Germany Organic Logo

Here we present some of the best players of the organic scene in Germany. They are producers and processors. Most of them started a retail shop back in the 1970s . The retailers play an important role, especially organic supermarkets and natural health stores such as the Reformhaus chain, the oldest health conscious retail chain, dating back from the 19th century. Today, Reformhaus operates mainly in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, with products under its own Neuform brand and the brands of other suppliers.

Although not all products are organic, the trend is to increase the number of organic certified products. Reformhaus is a strong reference in the German market for reliable advice, quality products, variety and convenience. On the other hand, organic supermarkets have been emerging with a strong image of a trendy yet quality-oriented sector, where LOHAS consumers gather for a cappuccino while their bread is being baked.Top Organic Brands in Germany

The association of organic supermarkets includes ten companies, among them Alnatura, Basic, BioCompany, Ebl-Naturkost, eo (for Eat Organic), Füllhorn, Grüner Markt, Naturata, SuperBioMarkt and Vollcorner BioMarkt.
Please meet some German entrepreneurs, pioneers and newcomers below!

Rapunzel naturkost AG

Managing Director Joseph Wilhelm

Line of products: Muesli, dried fruits, oils, sauces, grains, chocolate

In 1974, pioneers Joseph Wilhelm, Jennifer Vermeulen and Peter Erlinger opened an organic natural food store. Three decades later, the company has become one of Europe’s largest importers and distributors of organic dried foods and has operations in Spain, France, Italy, Turkey and the United States. Annual turnover reached Euro 76 million in 2005. The firm delivers more than 400 products directly to natural food stores and organic supermarkets in Germany. Exports, 34% of the firm’s business, go to 31 countries. Imports come via long-term projects and partners around the world. The firm developed the fair trade seal “Hand in Hand”.

Andechser Molkerei Scheitz GmbH
Barbara Scheitz, with Andechser

Managing Director Barbara Scheitz

Line of products: Dairy, yogurt and cheese specialist

Bavarian organic pioneer, the 5th most sold organic brand in Germany. Mrs. Scheitz is the 2nd generation running this successful Euro 75 million business with 170 employees and 420 farmers from the producers’ associations Bioland and Demeter. Andechser introduced functional and reusable glass containers to the sector. The firm boasts annual processing of 64 million kg of cows’ milk and 5 million kg of goats’ milk. Exports go to France, Greece and Holland. Constant innovation and product diversification is Andechser’s recipe for success.

Naturata Spielberger AG

Managing Director Volkmar Spielberger

Line of products: Cereals, oils, dried fruits, chocolate, nuts, tomato-based sauces, salt and spices

Mr. Spielberger is the 3rd generation in this dynamic business, established in 1930, operator of the first and only organic mill in Germany. Involved in production under Demeter quality since the mid 1960s, the firm now has 100 employees and an annual turnover of around Euro 20 million. Naturata imports ingredients through long-term cooperations and partnerships in over 30 countries. These include olives from Greece and Tunisia, dried fruit from Turkey, chocolate from the the Dominican Republic and sesame seeds from Uganda.

Ulrich Walter GmbH
Ulrich Walter
Managing Director Ulrich Walter

Line of products: Organic coffee, tea, herbs and spices

In 1979, Ulrich Walter and his wife Angela started a 30 m2 natural food store. Today, their firm is one of the main players in Germany’s organic scene, with 6 divisions for a total area of 5,500 m2. Annual turnover was Euro 17.5 Million in 2005. The company’s own brands are Lebensbaum, Bioveda, Donum Naturae and, under license, Janosch and Kosmos Krauterhexe. These brands are present in a range of 300 products distributed at the national level. Exports go to the EU, Japan and Taiwan; imports come from 30 countries, mostly European nations.

La Selva Toskana Feinkost-Vertriebs-GmbH

Managing Director Karl Egger

Line of products: Tomato purees and sauces, soups, wine, pesto

In 1980, Karl Egger, co-founder of the organic producers association Naturland, made his dream come true: An organic enterprise in Italy to produce quality food in a sustainable way. With an annual turnover of some Euro 10 million, La Selva is among the best known brands in the specialty food segment and has a range of 140 products. Exports account 50% to Germany and the rest to other countries. At first people thought he was crazy, but today his project has become a model to inspire others. The firm also offers a bed and breakfast facility suiting up to 30 guests.

Bionade GmbH
Peter Kowalsky

Managing Director Peter Kowalsky

Line of products: Innovative soft drink

Bionade is one of the current success stories of the organic sector in Germany. Established in 1995 by Dieter Leipold, the firm developed a unique soft drink produced with organic ingredients following revised beer-brewing principles. It was not easy to launch the product properly, but perseverance, unique advertising and a close relationship with the press finally paid off. In the last 2 years, the company has grown 300%, with 60 million bottles sold. The drink is distributed to organic stores and to conventional supermarkets and other points of sale, including a distributing relationship with the Coca-Cola Company.

Siegfried Schedel e.K.

Managing Director Siegfried Schedel

Line of products: Baked goods

Established in 1996 as an innovative enterprise from the Bioland association, Siegfried deals in direct milling and production of frozen baked goods distributed throughout Germany. Exports are sold to 17 European countries. The group’s annual turnover was Euro 5 million in 2005. Mr. Schedel was not satisfied with the development of the conventional baking industry and searched for alternatives in the organic sector, with support from Demeter and Bioland. The firm carries 14 patents and a range of 75 products in a mill developed with eco-friendly standards.

Natur-Oase
Veronika Ramsauer, with Natur-Oase

Managing Director Veronika Ramsauer

Line of products: Hemp-based natural cosmetics, energy bars, teas and oils

One of the youngest companies on the German organics scene, Natur-Oase was established in 2004 as part of Hanfwelt Riegler-Nurscher Österreich, with annual growth of 30%. Mrs. Ramsauer comes from the health sector. Fascinated with the beneficial properties of hemp that have been long neglected by modern industry, she decided to bring this natural product back to the consumer. Paying close attention to the market, Natur-Oase has developed a unique range of hemp foods and cosmetics. Exports go to France and Switzerland, with plans for an expanded distribution network.

Continued from Part 1, introduction.


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Yacon

Posted - May 1, 2008

Yacon: Natural Sugar Control

By Adriana Michael - as printed in O.W.N. Summer 2008

A South American tuber grown in the Andes could offer valuable sugar control and immune system bonuses to the human body. The yacon, called an apple or pear of the earth for its sweet, crispy taste when washed and eaten fresh, grows between 1,500 and 2,500 metres above sea level. The Andean peoples have long used the root to ease health problems like liver ailments, says Dr. Cass Ingram, a natural health expert who has written a dozen books touching on functional foods such as yacon.

“South American traditional medicines have never been written about in common books. There’s been a lack of quality articles describing their ethnic use and the medicinal properties,” says Ingram, explaining yacon’s low profile. “No one has published about what the properties are.”

Yacon contains a high percentage of inulin, a fructo-oligo-saccharide or FOS. The body does not convert this class of sweet-tasting chemicals into energy, and so they rank a zero on the glycemic index scale. “This is the perfect functional food for resting the pancreas,” says Ingram.

Inulin mimicks better-known insulin, Ingram says, producing all kinds of health benefits. “Insulin has everything to do with how we digest our sugars and starches,” he says.

Good bacteria in the gut feed off the inulin, Ingram says. Yacon functions both as sugar control and as pro-biotic, thus boosting the immune system.

Caution is required to ensure a marketable product retains the benefits of the pure root. “We knew if we could keep it unprocessed, then it would be medicinal,” Ingram says of his early work with yacon.

Organic products derived from yacon are gradually becoming available in North America. Careful methods are required to ensure desirable inulin is obtained while unwanted fructose sugar, which occurs only in the root’s fibrous parts, is not. “If you don’t treat the product properly, what’s going to happen is that you will obtain only fructose sugar, which is not good,” says Jorge Urena, president and CEO of Uhtco Corporation. Uhtco is a well known supplier of organic yacon products, and the main importer to Canada.

Ingram worked with Urena and Uhtco’s partners in Peru to get organic yacon in its highest potency. “We asked him to make extracts that were unprocessed. No alcohol. No heat,” Ingram says. Working with small farmers in Peru and having built a Peruvian processing facility to house the required machines, Uhtco’s processing plant introduced yacon syrups and the line is expanding.

Yacon has a citrus, light caramel flavour, Ingram says. Urena prefers to use the syrups as a sweetener, while Ingram pours his over yogurt or other dairy products. “It’s more interesting for its aroma,” Ingram says, and its health properties.Whatever the impetus, many people today have far too much sugar in their diet and could certainly benefit from the natural, healthy powers of this exotic and not widely known “apple of the earth”.

Send your comments to: editorial@organicwellnessnews.com

BioFach Globally

Posted - May 1, 2008

Focus on BioFach Globally 2008:
Where the Organic People Meet

By O.W.N. News Network - as printed in O.W.N. Summer 2008

The BioFach fairs, starting with Nuremberg and now with four international offshoots, are a worldwide success. They connect the global organic market by building a business network able to address diverse market conditions in individual countries and regions.

The main German fair and its subsidiaries attract about 3,700 exhibitors and 100,000 trade visitors each year. February 21-28 this year saw a rousing celebration at the main BioFach fair in Nuremberg, the world’s leading organic exhibition. Held alongside Vivaness, the fair for natural personal care and wellness, the two events attracted 46,484 visitors from 124 countries. The entire international industry gathered to learn about and enjoy the products of 2,764 exhibitors.

BioFach China – Organic Products in the “Middle Kingdom”

Following the glittering BioFach China premiere in 2007, more than 50 Chinese companies exhibited at BioFach Nuremberg this year. Seminars at the BioFach Congress presented in-depth information on the possibilities China offers. Most of that country’s organics are now for export, making BioFach China an ideal event for international buyers. Demand for high-quality imports is also growing. Shanghai is a boomtown, with the strongest purchasing power and international connections in China. Axel Bartkus, Managing Director of NürnbergMesse China and Jane Jiang, Exhibition Director of BioFach China, expect a successful event May 29-31, 2008.

Growing Export Market in Brazil

If you want to learn about sustainability and the richness of Brazil and Latin America, mark your calendar for October 23-25, 2008. International trade visitors will find an amazing assortment of products at BioFach América Latina and ExpoSustentat in Sao Paulo. Show organizers Nürnberg Global Fairs, Planeta Organico and Organic Services foresee a sixth edition full of examples of sustainability.

The huge appetite for organic products in the US and Western European markets is having a positive impact on producing countries, with Brazil a main beneficiary. Research firm Organic Monitor predicted a 30% increase in Brazil’s share of international organics by the end of 2008.

US Still the World’s Largest Organic Market with Sales of $20 Billion

The Organic Trade Association estimated US organic sales at $20 billion dollars, a growth of over 20%. Demand for organics is especially high in the Northeast and West Coast regions. BioFach America, celebrated simultaneously with Natural Products Expo East, invites exhibitors and visitors to its event in Boston, October 16-18, 2008. Over 65% of the exhibition space was booked by October 2007, despite the move from Baltimore to Boston that created more exhibition space.

Japan is Third Largest Organic Consumer Market

Japan’s largest financial newspaper estimated the overall value of the Japanese organic market at EUR 1.9 billion last Fall, marking the third largest market after the US and Germany. Japanese customers traditionally place a high premium on nature and quality. The growing trend toward sustainable, healthy lifestyles combined with changing Japanese demographics creates rising demand for outstanding products.

As with the entire Asian market, natural beauty products were extremely popular at BioFach Japan 2007. The industry’s next gathering will be in Tokyo, September 24-26, 2008. BioFach Japan, like its sister BioFach fairs, offers exhibitors and visitors a reliable and exciting platform to initiate business relationships with the organic industry’s global players.

Send your comments to: editorial@organicwellnessnews.com

TerraCycle

Posted - May 1, 2008

From Worms to Wealth

By Adrian Larose - as printed in O.W.N. Summer 2008

Making money from millions of empty juice pouches and drained-out pop bottles might sound like a difficult prospect, but that’s what TerraCycle is doing. TerraCycle works with mainstream companies like Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Kraft Foods. Working with these companies, says CEO and co-founder Tom Skazy, is exactly what is needed to move consumers towards environmentally-friendly products.

Skazy insists that discovering new ways to work with the mainstream in an eco-capitalist fashion is the only sustainable approach. Starting during Skazy’s university studies with an organic worm-poop compost product, his firm TerraCycle has grown from US $70,000 turnover in 2004 to $3.5 million in 2006, with $7 million likely in 2008.

Hungarian-born but raised in Canada, Skazy discovered that worm poop is a very effective fertilizer. He also realized that the main ingredient, garbage, is readily available - it’s “simply a commodity that people are willing to pay to get rid of,” he says. “Waste doesn’t exist in nature,” he adds: it’s a human-made problem.

With this ready supply of ingredients, Skazy obtained funding through business plan contests. Selling a product made from waste was not enough for the firm, though: soon, it also began to package its product in containers usually seen as waste.

“Since we make a product from garbage, why don’t we package it in garbage?” Skazy says of the group’s thinking. Visiting area recycling centers, TerraCycle learned that plastic pop bottles are standardized enough to be cheap, practical non-food packaging. The “world’s first and still only products made and packaged entirely out of garbage” were born, Skazy says. Remove the old labels from the bottles, wash them out and re-fill: you’re ready to roll. (TerraCycle is not packaging food, which would have different requirements.)

The company is built on three brand criteria for all products, such as the cleaners it now also makes. First, TerraCycle’s product must work better than the typical one it replaces. Second, the product must be made with the greenest ingredients - often items previously viewed as waste. Third, the product must cost less or not much more than typical offerings.

“It’s the price that’s the big issue,” Skazy says of environmentally-friendly goods. “Usually, eco-friendly products are more expensive and they don’t work as well. That’s what people think.” The solution: find ways to work within the system that let your firm save money while it helps the environment, so you can provide the consumer an affordable product. Working from waste is one option.

To get enough empty pop bottles for its fertilizer, TerraCycle began paying collection locations - schools and churches, for instance. These locations send in empties under a program called the “bottle brigade” that now has about 4,000 participating US locations. By returning empties, the groups earn money for charitable causes and save TerraCycle laborious collection work.

TerraCycle has partnered with firms like Clif Bar, Stonyfield Farm and Honest Tea to collect their empty, non-recyclable packages, and has a US $1 million deal to collect Capri Sun juice pouches for Kraft. As of writing, the firm was in the final planning stages of a $1 million deal with Oreo.

The basic business model for such deals sees the sponsor company cover all costs to get empty packages to TerraCycle’s factory, Skazy says, such as collection and publicity costs. Locations that offer to collect empty packages receive two to six cents a package towards a charitable cause. Meanwhile, TerraCycle receives free raw ingredients - the empty packaging. It can then manufacture pencil cases, bags and other goods out of the waste, selling the end products for as little as $2 retail for pencil cases. Each year, the brigade programs collects millions of Capri Sun juice pouches from 850 schools.

Good media coverage, and lots of it, is the main benefit for the sponsor, Skazy says. More and more firms are likely to sign up for such programs. “All these big companies are looking to embrace this right now, so we’re in a very fortunate position,” he says.

“Really where it has to happen is Wal-Mart,” he says of the shift towards environmental products. “I’m not an environmentalist. I think I’m very much the average person. I don’t drive a hybrid car. I don’t go out of my way to eat organic food,” Skazy adds. To get such people to choose environmentally-friendly products, those products must be better in every way than others.

The most important ingredient for environmentally-friendly products to succeed, what Skazy calls “the holy grail” , is not to try and make the customer care about your product’s values, but “to make them choose your product without having to care.” Choosing sustainable options must not feel like a sacrifice, but simply be the obvious, best, ordinary choice. Terracycle products have succeeded here.

Even many of the green-oriented people attending the Green Jobs Conference held in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania this March admitted to Skazy that they sometimes choose price over environment. During his speech at the conference, Skazy asked audience members whether they bought organic bananas at the current premium cost, and only one third of the supposedly forward-thinking audience members raised their hands.

But if the price of organic vs conventional bananas was similar? Who would buy organic then? Everyone raised their hands.

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Fish Standards

Posted - May 1, 2008

Organic Fish: Standards May Vary

By Adrian Larose - as printed in O.W.N. Summer 2008

Contrast the isolation of one Peruvian fish farm currently producing organic trout with the debates around the regulatory definition of organic seafood, and you have some idea of the confusion now swirling through organic aquaculture.

Peru’s BioTrucha raises, harvests and processes its own organic fish in Andina, a town on Lake Arapa. The 19 families of the Asociación de Productorres de Trucha Ecológica Bio-Trucha Andina Peru have been producing certified organic trout since 2005 in canned, vacuum-packed and smoked forms.

Organic fish forms about 30% of the co-op’s total production. Production manager Wilfredo L. Vasquez Quispesivana said this ratio is likely to shift towards more organic over time.

Yet what “organic” means in the case of fish (and other seafood) remains complex. Quispesivana said he is often asked how BioTrucha obtained organic certification for fish. Its products are certified by BioLatina, an agency approved to EU and USDA standards. Yet such standards do not yet exist for fish, leaving definitions to the certifiers.

“This is the first canned certified organic fish to hit the Australian market,” says Antonio Ramos of his firm Olive Green Organics’ decision to import BioTrucha’s canned trout as a private-labelled variety. Advantages Ramos identified include relatively low cost, traceability and nutritional properties.

Importing direct from the producer-processor, BioTrucha, should “give consumers assurance that they are eating a clean product that is fully traceable,” Ramos said. A single organization in a single town raises, harvests and processes the fish. The compact Peruvian operation also makes the price attractive, compared to other specialty fish. The few such offerings now available in Australia are quite expensive, Ramos says. Nutritionally, BioTrucha’s trout is very high in omega-3 and omega-6 fats. It contains no heavy metals, including mercury, Ramos said, good news for Australian consumers.

While companies like BioTrucha are already offering such healthy fish, neither the European Union nor the United States has passed a regulatory definition of organic seafood. Both are developing such standards, with EU implementation scheduled for 2009.

Standards/Certifiers

Until now, certification agencies have been certifying organic seafood based on their own standards. The WWF recently studied more than 20 private aquaculture certifiers, 10 of which certify organic products.

It gave most organic certifiers good marks. “Generally, organic aquaculture standards performed better in the benchmarking exercise than their conventional counterparts, indicating that today’s organic aquaculture standards do address the defined criteria to a greater extent,” the report reads.

That leaves Stefan Bergleiter , aquaculture expert with the Naturland certification organization, wondering how much coming EU and US regulations will affect private certifiers. Establishing rules will certainly bring diverse private standards closer together, but some private standards - such as Naturland’s - also include detailed social and environmental criteria. “We certainly would not expect the EU regulation to really address these issues, at least not in detail,” Bergleiter said.

The legislated standards must address some controversial topics. What types of fish meal to allow is a major debate. In fish farming, “it looks like it’s not possible to do completely without fish meal,” Bergleiter said. “In conventional aquaculture, you can replace animal protein by plant protein and then substitute amino acids that are absent in the plant protein.” Such synthetics are banned from organic operations.

“Certified organic seafood is still only a tiny percentage of seafood,” Bergleiter said. “It’s far less than one per cent.” If broad standards develop sensibly with input from certifiers like Naturland and groups like the WWF, perhaps that can change as consumers feel more confident - and less confused - about organic seafood.

Send your comments to: editorial@organicwellnessnews.com

Cocktails

Posted - May 1, 2008

Organic Twist in Cocktails

By Adrian Larose - as printed in O.W.N. Summer 2008

To reach a generation addicted to the fast energy of sugary drinks, conscientious firms are offering organic, better-for-you beverages to appeal to fun-seeking young adults.

Many popular energy drinks are a nutritionist’s nightmare, with synthetic ingredients and uncertain health effects. Even worse, some are regularly mixed with alcohol despite packaging labels that warn against it.

Such alcohol consumption is quite common amongst the young. Almost 40% of US adults aged 18-25 engage in binge drinking - consuming more than 4-5 drinks quickly - according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. In Britain, alcohol-related hospital admissions among the under 18 rose 20% between 2000 and 2005, the BBC reported, to reach 7,500 in 2004-2005.

What organic products do beverage companies offer up that are healthier, tastier and appealing to such a market? Voelkel’s organic Pina Colada, a pineapple and coconut blend, won the 2008 BioFach Jury Award. The fruit-filled drink is a sure bet for health-conscious youngsters. “It was a new and ground-breaking idea to bring out an organic cocktail without alcohol in a longneck bottle,” says Roswitha Kutzner, with Voelkel’s marketing department .”Particularly young people like this.” The Germany-based firm is a leading producer of “direct juices” fresh-squeezed from fruits and vegetables.

Also in Germany, and now coming to North America, is BIONADE. The dynamic firm produces a non-alcoholic, bubbly brew in longneck bottles. Available in flavours like Lychee and Herbs, the organic drink has a light sweetness instead of alcohol. “BIONADE appeals to young and old, children and health conscious and it is a great mixer”, says Eike Buschmann, sales director. Targeting mainstream, hip markets with attractive packaging, rather than focusing on only health food markets, was key to BIONADE’s success in the general European market.

In North America, Costco Wholesale Corporation is a giant of mainstream retail. The USDA organic energy drink Sea2o is now sold in its stores, as well as at Whole Foods Market. Sea2o’s organic conversion came after Costco suggested an earlier version of the drink would sell better as certified organic, says Kent Lindor, executive vice president of Sea2o Inc.

Sweetened with agave for a slow energy boost and flavoured with organic fruit, the product’s demographic is usually left out of energy drink marketing: women 35-54. “We’re bringing people into the energy drink market that never would have gotten there before,” says Lindor.

Also seeking mainstream markets is The Organic Beverage Company. Its agave-sweetened Syzmo energy drinks tested a 30 on the glycemic index in a Canadian lab, says Jeff O’Neal, company president. Colas test about a 60 on the GI scale. Lower numbers indicate slower, healthier sugar digestion.

“It’s important to go after the mainstream market, because that’s where the obesity is,” O’Neal says. Syzmo’s energy rush comes from organically-extracted tea caffeine. The drink is sold in 3 flavours in the United States, with Canada likely to launch later this year.

Infinite Energy drinks and Infinite Wellness drinks from Kaboom Infinite are based on natural fruit juices without carbonation. USDA certified organic, “we don’t spare any expense in terms of the ingredients we source,” says company President Richard Symington. The Wellness line comes in attractive frosted glass bottles, while Energy comes in tall, slim cans lately associated with hip drinks.

Focused on purity is Frützzo’s line of high-antioxidant fruit juices, sold in organic and all-natural qualities in innovative, rounded bottles. All contain no artificial ingredients, nor added sugar. Leading the trends in super-fruits, its juices include the appealing hues of pomegranate, blueberry and yumberry. Frützzo’s has hit the shelves of large retailers including Costco and Whole Foods Market.

The certified organic variety of wines, beers and spirits is also expanding, as seen at BioFach and Expo West this year. Try an organic pint from Neumarkter Lammsbraü, an almost 400-year-old brewery that has followed eco-friendly methods since the late 1970s. The brewery launched Europe’s first certified organic beer in 1992, gluten-free and an alcohol-free beers and all products are now certified organic. The total production of about 6 million litres makes this Europe’s largest organic brewery.

For a more exotic tipple, try organic cachaca. Fazenda Santa Rosa is introducing Canaan Organic Cachaca, a fermented drink from organic certified molasses. The Brazilian firm handles every production step, including growing the sugar cane. An if you get a craving for a Pisco Sour, 300-year-old Peruvian firm La Caravedo has the world’s first organic Pisco, certified since 2004.

With more organic choices like these at the main fairs and retail shelves, consumers can relax with a tasty drink and rest assured the organic brew does both their health and the environment good.

Send your comments to: editorial@organicwellnessnews.com

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