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by beebeepka 1783 days ago
I am still amazed some parts of the world have no problem with the label "organic" when it comes to food. People are well aware anything that is considered food is, in fact, organic but have accepted the marketing.

The rebuttals I've heard boil down to me being ignorant about farming and other food production practices.

3 comments

FTA:

> Without artificial fertilizers, hydroponic equipment from the Soviet Union was no longer usable. Instead, this was converted for the use of organic gardening. The original hydroponic units, long cement planting troughs and raised metal containers, were filled with composted sugar waste, thus turning hydroponicos ("hydroponics") into organopónicos.

So it seems the name might come from the composted sugar waste that was used as an organic substrate for the plants to grow on (as opposed to the prior water-based hydroponics systems).

Therefore it seems the name might not be related to "organic farming" etc. as we tend to see in the West.

"Organic" is just a word, and like many words has multiple meanings depending on context. In the context of farming / food production it means primarily not using inorganic NPK fertilizer, so it makes perfect sense that way; organic fertilizer (compost, manure) as opposed to inorganic fertilizer (for example Urea, Phosphoros Pentoxide, Potassium Chloride). So, sure, all food is made of organic matter, but not all of it is grown with exclusively organic fertilizer.

On the other hand, meeting the legal requirements to call your crops "organic" doesn't guarantee that they are of higher quality or that the farming methods are much more sustainable.

The one thing I like about it is that it is generally a decent proxy for “we didn’t spray this with questionable pesticides”.

I’m grateful to have that option but otherwise I agree.

The other part that drives me nuts is the hate for GMOs.