100% Organic Pima Cotton / 100% coton biologique Pima
Why Organics?
Provided by the Organic Trade Association
Here are some reasons why organic cotton production is important to the long-term
health of the planet.
- Cotton uses approximately 25% of the world's insecticides and more than 10% of the
pesticides (including herbicides, insecticides, and defoliants.). (Allan Woodburn)
- Approximately 10% of all pesticides sold for use in U. S. agriculture were applied
to cotton in 1997, the most recent year for which such data is publicly available. (ACPA)
- Eighty-four million pounds of pesticides were sprayed on the 14.4 million acres of
conventional cotton grown in the U.S. in 2000 (5.85 pounds/ acre), ranking cotton second
behind corn in total amount of pesticides sprayed. (USDA)
- Over 2.03 billion pounds of synthetic fertilizers were applied to conventional cotton
the same year (142 pounds/acre), making cotton the fourth most heavily fertilized crop
behind corn, winter wheat, and soybeans. (USDA)
- The Environmental Protection Agency considers seven of the top 15 pesticides used on
cotton in 2000 in the United States as "possible," "likely," "probable," or "known" human
carcinogens (acephate, dichloropropene, diuron, fluometuron, pendimethalin, tribufos, and
trifluralin). (EPA)
- In 1999, a work crew re-entered a cotton field about five hours after it was treated
with tribufos and sodium chlorate (re-entry should have been prohibited for 24 hours).
Seven workers subsequently sought medical treatment and five have had ongoing health
problems. (California DPR)
- It takes roughly one-third of a pound of chemicals (pesticides and fertilizers) to
grow enough cotton for just one T-shirt. (SCP)
Sources
Allen Woodburn Associates Ltd./Managing Resources Ltd., "Cotton: The Crop and its
Agrochemicals Market," 1995.
American Crop Protection Association, "1997 Total U. S. Sales by Crop Protection Product
Type and Market," 1998 ACPA Industry Profile.
California Department of Pesticide Regulation, "DPR Releases Data on 1999 Pesticide
Injuries," 2001.
Sustainable Cotton Project, "Cleaner Cotton Campaign Tool Kit," Oroville, CA.
U. S. Department of Agriculture, "Agricultural Chemical Usage: 2000 Field Crop
Summary," 2001.
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, "List of Chemicals Evaluated for Carcinogenic
Potential," 2001.
Copied from the Organic Trade Association
© The Organic Cotton Company Inc. 2005