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100% Organic Pima Cotton / 100% coton biologique Pima
Why Organics?

Provided by the Organic Trade Association

Health of the Planet and its Inhabitants

"If people really understood the connection of environmental damage to their own lives, they would be much more motivated to preserve and protect the environment."
--Dr. Eric Chivian, director of Harvard's Center for Health and the Global Environment, in Veterinary World, Spring 1999.

Benefit of organic

Organic agriculture protects the health of people and the planet by reducing the overall exposure to toxic chemicals from synthetic pesticides that can end up in the ground, air, water and food supply, and that are associated with health consequences, from asthma to cancer. Because organic agriculture doesn't use toxic and persistent pesticides, choosing organic products is an easy way to help protect yourself.

Organic growers use biological and cultural practices as their first line of defense against pests. Methods include crop rotation, the selection of resistant varieties, nutrient and water management, the provision of habitat for the natural enemies of pests, and release of beneficial organisms to protect crops from damage. The only pesticides that allowed in organic agricultural must be on an approved use, with restricted use.

Source:"Greener Greens? The Truth about Organic Foods," Consumer Reports, January 1998, page 13.

Meanwhile, consumers are exposed to toxic and persistent chemicals due to current practices:

Source: "Nowhere to Hide: Persistent Toxic Chemicals in the U.S. Food Supply," by Kristin Schafer, Pesticide Action Network North America, 2000 (www.panna.org).

Source: Food for Thought: The Case for Reforming Farm Programs to Preserve the Environment and Help Family Farmers, Ranchers and Foresters, pages 12-13, found at www.environmentaldefense.org/pubs/Reports. Original source: Environmental Working Group, Overexposed: Organophosphate Insecticides in Children's Food, 1998, pp. 1-3.

Source: "Pesticides: Making the Right Choice, for the Protection of Human Health and the Environment," Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development, available on the Parliament of Canada web site (www.parl.gc.ca), or by calling 613-996-1483 (e-mail: envi@parl.gc.ca).

Source: Associazione Italiana per l'Agricoltura Biologica and Legambiente, Oct. 2, 2001, as cited in The Organic Newsline from organicTS.com, Vol. 2, Issue 38, Oct. 4, 2001.

Source: "Do you know what you're eating? An analysis of U.S. Government Data on Pesticide Residues in Foods," February 1999, Consumers Union of United States Inc., Edward Groth III, project director.

Source: "Update: Pesticides in Children's Foods," Consumers Union of United States Inc., May 2000.

Measurable effects of pesticides in the environment:

Source: "Deep Trouble: The Hidden Threat of Groundwater Pollution," by Payal Sampat, Worldwatch Paper 154, December 2000.

Source: Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, May 15, 2000, cited in a May 6, 2000, Associated Press article written by Philip Brasher.

Source: New Scientist, Oct. 7, 2000.

Source: "Endocrine, immune, and behavioral effects of aldicarb (carbamate), atrazine (triazine) and nitrate (fertilizer) mixtures at groundwater concentrations," by Warren P. Porter, James W. Jaeger, and Ian H. Carlson, Toxicology and Industrial Health:15, pages 133-150, 1999.

Source: "National Report on Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, March 21, 2001.

The government has proven lax in its promises to address pesticide-related problems:

Source: "Agricultural Pesticides: Management Improvements Needed to Further Promote Integrated Pest Management," U.S. General Accounting Office, August 2001.

Source: The Organic Newsline from organicTS.com, Vol. 2, Issue 38, Oct. 4, 2001

Known effects of pesticides on humans and other living beings:

Source: Agricultural Pesticides: Management Improvements Needed to Further Promote Integrated Pest Management, U.S. General Accounting Office [GAO-01-815, Page 4, August 2001].

Source: Technical Report, April 2001, Beyond Pesticides/National Coalition against the Misuse of Pesticides, Washington, D.C.

Source: "Pesticides: Their Multigenerational Cumulative Destructive Impact on Health, Especially on the Physical, Emotional and Mental Development of Children and of Future Generations-Canadian Government Responsibilities and Opportunities," February 2000, Environmental Illness Society of Canada (www.eisc.ca/pesticide_moratorium.html).

Source: Technical Report, August-September 2001, Beyond Pesticides/National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides.

Source: The Lancet, Dec. 18, 1999.

Source: American Bird Conservancy, Washington, D.C. (www.abcbirds.org).

Rate of usage of toxic pesticides is still significant:

Source: Donella H. Meadows, "Our food, our future," in September/October 2000 issue of Organic Gardening.

Source: "FAO Warns: Toxic Pesticide Waste Stocks Dramatically Higher than Previously Estimated-Calls on Countries and Industry to Speed Up Disposal," Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Press Release 01/28, May 9, 2001.

Source: The Toxic Treadmill: Pesticide Use and Sales in New York State 1997-1998.

Source: Worldwatch press release for the 92-page paper, Why Poison Ourselves? A Precautionary approach to Synthetic Chemicals, November 2000.

Source: California Environmental Protection Agency's Department of Pesticide Regulation (www.cdpr.ca.gov), October 2001.

Source: "Atmospheric Deposition of PAH, PCB, and Organochlorine Pesticides to Corpus Christi Bay," cited in ScienceDaily Magazine, Sept. 21, 2001.

Organic Trade Association, July 2002.

© The Organic Cotton Company Inc. 2005