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Survey
looks at links between local foods and
climate change, health, food safety
Newswise — A recent
survey shows that American consumers are
skeptical about the safety of the global
food system and many believe that local
foods are safer and better for their health
than foods from afar.
These are the views of
a representative, nationwide sample of 500
consumers who participated in a web-based
survey conducted by the Leopold Center for
Sustainable Agriculture in July 2007. Their
responses are summarized in a new Leopold
Center report, "Consumer perceptions of the
safety, health, and environmental impact of
various scales and geographic origin of food
supply chains." The paper was written by
Rich Pirog, who leads the Center's Marketing
and Food Systems Initiative, and Iowa State
University graduate student Andy Larson.
Objectives of the study
were to gauge consumer perceptions
regarding:
* Food safety,
* The impact that various scales and
production methods of the food system have
on greenhouse gas emissions,
* Willingness to pay for a food system that
achieves a net reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions and
* Health benefits from local and organic
foods.
Survey respondents
placed high importance on food safety,
freshness (harvest date), and pesticide use
on fresh produce they purchase, with
somewhat lower importance placed on whether
the produce was locally grown, the level of
greenhouse gas emissions it took to produce
and transport the produce, and whether the
respondent could contact the farmer who grew
it.
Pirog said that while
70 percent of the respondents perceived the
U.S. food system to be safe, concern was
raised when they were asked about the safety
of fresh produce from other continents.
Eighty-five percent and 88 percent of
respondents, respectively, perceived local
and regional food systems to be somewhat
safe or very safe, compared to only 12
percent for the global food system.
Health factors also
have an effect on consumer attitudes. More
than two-thirds of respondents (69 percent)
“somewhat” or “strongly” agreed that local
food is better for their personal health
than food that has traveled across the
country. This is in spite of the fact that
there is little or no research documenting
such benefits, Pirog noted.
Are consumers willing
to pay more for food from supply chains that
emit half as much greenhouse gas as
conventional chains? Nearly half of
respondents in the survey were willing to
pay a 10 to 30 percent premium, but a
similar percentage was not.
"With the dramatic rise
in popularity of local foods, the farmers
who grow these foods and the organizations
that champion both the farmers and the foods
will be called upon to prove the existence
of economic, environmental and health
benefits stemming from these products, and
to ensure their continued safety as part of
the food supply," Pirog said.
He pointed out that the
findings show a critical need for more
research. "Government agencies,
universities, health professionals, private
companies and non-profit organizations need
to work with farmers growing and processing
local foods to develop an appropriate
research agenda for these food supply
chains," he added.
In 2001, Pirog led some
of the first research in the United States
on the concept of "food miles," the distance
that food travels from where it is grown to
where it is purchased for consumption. He
also has investigated consumer perceptions
of local, place-based and organic foods.
The 45-page report is
available on the Leopold Center.
http://www.leopold.iastate.edu/pubs/staff/consumer/consumer.htm.
The Leopold Center also
offers a competitive grants program across
all three research initiatives in Marketing
and Food Systems, Ecology, and Policy.
Through its research and education programs,
the Leopold Center supports the development
of profitable farming systems that conserve
natural resources. Center funding comes from
state appropriations and from fees on
nitrogen fertilizer and pesticides, as
established by the 1987 Iowa Groundwater
Protection Act.
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