USDA and Agribusiness Conspire to
Mislead Consumers
"
Raw"
Almonds Must Soon be Steam-Heated or Treated with Toxic Chemical
CORNUCOPIA, WI: Small-scale farmers, retailers,
and consumers are outraged over a new federal regulation that will require all
almonds grown in California
to be sterilized with various “pasteurization” techniques.
The rule, which the USDA quietly developed in response to outbreaks of Salmonella
in 2001 and 2004, traced to raw almonds, mandates that all almonds undergo a
sterilization process that includes chemical and/or high-temperature
treatments.
Although the final rule was just published in the Federal Register, The
Cornucopia Institute, a Wisconsin-based farm policy research group, is asking
the USDA to reopen the proceeding for public comment. Cornucopia contends
that the rule was never effectively announced to the public, and that the
reasoning behind both the necessity and safety of the sterilization processes
should be questioned before the rule goes into effect this September.
“The new rule is unwarranted and could have many harmful
impacts," said Mark Kastel, senior farm policy analyst at
Cornucopia. “The costs of the chemical and heat treatments, in
addition to the costs of transporting and recording the new procedures, will be
especially onerous on small-scale and organic farmers, and could force many out
of business.”
The only exemption to these new regulations will be organic “raw”
almonds that will not be fumigated, but will undergo the steam-heat treatment,
and small-scale growers who can sell truly raw almonds but only direct to the
public from farm stands.
Although foodborne illnesses have garnered headlines in recent years,
including contamination of California-grown spinach and lettuce, raw produce
and nuts are not inherently risky foods. Contamination occurs when
livestock manure or fecal matter is inadvertently transferred to food through
contaminated water, soil, or transportation and handling equipment. Raw
foods can also be infected by poor employee sanitation either on the farm or in
processing facilities.
Glenn Anderson, a small-scale organic almond farmer in the central
valley of California,
worries that “This could be one more way for the big companies and the
government to put us small farmers out of business.”
The equipment to sterilize almonds is very expensive. A propylene
oxide chamber costs $500,000 to $1,250,000, and a roasting line can cost as
much as $1,500,000 to $2,500,000.
Anderson
also questions the scientific logic behind the rule. He and some other
growers believe that the sustainable farming methods they use, such as mowing
and mulching, rather than controlling weeds by chemical herbicide applications,
protect biodiversity and naturally prevent the spread of harmful bacteria more
effectively than the artificial process of pasteurization
(sterilization)—which attempts to mitigate contamination after the
fact. According to growers practicing sustainable farming methods, the
USDA plan ignores the root causes of food contamination—the dangerous and
unsustainable farming practices on industrial farms.
Consumers who oppose the new regulation also worry about its impact on
the quality and nutrition of pasteurized almonds, since the Almond Board of
California (a marketing arm of the USDA) has conducted the only study on the
practice. Their research concluded that “there was no
significant degradation in the
quality” of the almonds. “The validity of these findings is
questionable given the vested interests of the research panel,” Kastel
stated.
The most common method of sterilizing almonds is by propylene oxide
fumigation. Propylene oxide is a genotoxic chemical and is listed as a
possible carcinogen by the International Agency on Cancer Research. In
lab experiments, the chemical leads to gene mutation, DNA strand breaks, and
neoplastic cell transformation. It is listed as a “possible”
carcinogen because no long-term studies have been done with humans. Its
use for treating food for human consumption is banned in the European Union, Canada, Mexico, and most other countries.
It is The Cornucopia Institute's contention that even if independent
research concludes that treated almonds are in fact safe, labeling them as
“raw” is misleading and deceptive to consumers, many of whom wish
to purchase
truly raw,
unprocessed almonds. “Raw foods are increasingly in demand.
The new rule is another case of the public being deprived the opportunity to
intelligently choose their food supply,” said Jimbo Someck, who owns and
operates four of the country’s leading independent natural food stores,
in the
San Diego
area.
The new regulation to sterilize almonds coincides with the recent
announcement by the Food and Drug Administration that it intends to relax its
labeling requirements for irradiated food. The FDA proposal will also
allow irradiation, the controversial ionization process, to be called
pasteurization—a reference that is
troubling many food safety watchdogs.
“Consumers deserve
to know how their food has been processed,” said Food and Water Watch
Executive Director Wenonah Hauter. “Mislabeling irradiated food as
‘pasteurized’ or treated food as ‘raw’ is an industry
attempt to make consumers buy products that they otherwise might
avoid.”
In light of heightened public concern, the Cornucopia Institute has
appealed to USDA Secretary Mike Johannes to postpone implementation of the new
regulatory requirements and reopen the almond docket to public comment.
Only 18 public comments—all from the almond industry—were received
on the proposal. Unlike consumers, retailers, or other organizations
concerned with food safety, all almond handlers received a personal letter or
fax from the USDA alerting them to the sterilization proposal and inviting them
to comment.
"The industry and the USDA tried to slip this through quietly,
under the radar, without adequate public scrutiny," Cornucopia's Kastel
lamented. "We are asking the Secretary of a unit of government that
Abraham Lincoln referred to as the ‘
People's
Department’ to intervene so concerned citizens can have a
say. The close collaboration, away from the eyes of the citizens and the
media, we are sure, is not something the Secretary will feel good about."
An action alert with instructions for contacting the USDA, and a sample
letter interested consumers can send to the USDA and California Almond Board,
can be found on the Cornucopia Institute Website:
www.cornucopia.org.
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MORE: According to Andrew
Kimbrell, the Director of the Center for Food Safety, “The decision to
foist fumigants on unsuspecting almond consumers is just another example of an
agency out of control.” Adds Kimbrell, “USDA is being run lock,
stock, and barrel by agribusiness and has abandoned its duty to protect the
public and the farming community. This USDA decision, along with
FDA’s long-standing refusal to label genetically engineered food, and its
recent decision to attempt to label irradiated foods as
“pasteurized,” is a conscious effort by the Administration to leave
consumers in the dark about the dangers lurking in their food.”
FDA regulations currently require that all single-ingredient foods that
have been irradiated and are sold by retailers must be labeled as
“treated with irradiation” and must display the
radura symbol.
A comprehensive fact sheet on the almond issue can be viewed at www.cornucopia.org/Almond
_FactSheet.pdf
and a sample letter for interested individuals to send to the USDA can be found
at www.cornucopia.org/Almond
_SampleLetter.doc.
The Cornucopia Institute
is dedicated to the fight for economic justice for
the family-scale farming community. Through research, advocacy, and economic
development, our goal is to empower farmers both politically and through
marketplace initiatives.