[BCFSN] a couple of foodie gleanings - organic produce | farmland getting gobbled up in BC

Rosemary Plummer rosemaryplummer at hotmail.com
Tue Jul 15 14:05:02 EDT 2014


Thank you, Pamela for these two articles. The one about organics versus conventional produce seems ambiguous.  The one about land is depressing, and they are both about what keeps us working to resist the wheels of so-called progress.
Rosemary Plummer
From: adamah at telus.net
To: food at bcfsn.org
Date: Tue, 15 Jul 2014 08:29:48 -0700
Subject: [BCFSN] a couple of foodie gleanings - organic produce | farmland	getting gobbled up in BC

Two articles tackling some contentious issues. Study finds organic produce is more nutritious: Organic produce certainly costs more than conventionally grown food, but is it better for you? Existing evidence suggests there are no real health benefits from eating organic food compared to conventionally grown produce. Now a review of the scientific literature concludes that organic consumers may be getting their money’s worth; it claims that organic food is more nutritious than conventionally grown fodder. http://blogs.nature.com/news/2014/07/study-finds-organic-produce-is-more-nutritious.html Priced Out, Farmland Edition. As fertile land becomes juicy investment, multinational players sit on Robson Valley farms. All over the world, people are buying up farmland, says Dr. Lenore Newman, the Canada Research Chair of Food Security and Environment at the University of the Fraser Valley. http://thetyee.ca/News/2014/07/09/Priced-Out-Farmland-Edition/    Pamela Zevit, R.P. Bio 
Adamah Consultants Coquitlam BC Canada
604-939-0523 adamah at telus.net Re-connecting People & Nature Science World - Science in the Classroom Ambassador No virus found in this message.

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