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Robert Bormuth's avatar

Dear Stacey,

Thank you for the start to this very interesting topic. For me, being an organic wine farmer this conversation holds a lot of interesting points!

I wanted to tackle something you and others in comments said that I find a bit strange in the conversation about organic and similar farming methods though:

You define organic farming (among other things) as the absence of synthetic chemicals for spraying. Now I understand what is meant by that, but I find this to be a bad way of framing it for multiple reasons. The sprays we use are also synthetic, it causes the belief organic farming is not using any sprays and it trivializes the effect of the fungicides we do have to use.

In the spirit of an open and honest conversation I think a better term can be found (just by someone smarter than me!)

Thanks again

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Green Ratings, The Full S.I.P.'s avatar

Great overview - the biggest issue is it's a confusing mess to consumers with so many different sustainable credentials. I would argue having something is better than nothing, and many producers are practicing but not certifying to save a crop if they need to - which may save their business. Few can afford to survive with little to no production - although some can and do (see Champagne's 2024 harvest and Drappier). It's incumbent on the industry to communicate sustainability better to consumers, not by criticizing others, but by using simple, clear messaging. Just to add to the cost point from @simon there are quite a few studies that show organic farming yields long term economic benefits; but there is a big upfront investment.

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