Mary Kay Magistad

Mary Kay Magistad

Mary Kay Magistad has been The World's Beijing-based East Asia correspondent since 2002, focusing especially on a rapidly changing China and the impact of China's rise on the region and the world.

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Organic Farming in China

Organic Farmer with his Grapes (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

Organic Farmer with his Grapes (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

China may not be the first place that comes to mind when thinking about places that American organic farmers could learn from. But a group of American advocates of a safe and sustainable food chain learned a few things on their recent trip to organic farms near Beijing.

The chickens at this farm seem happy. They’re outside, with room to move around, and an airy, sunny coop to go into when they want to rest, or lay an egg.

Organics Free Range Chickens (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

Organics Free Range Chickens (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

The farmer who takes care of them, Yang Li, is pretty happy, too. He can get three times the normal price for these chickens and their eggs, because ever more Chinese are willing to pay a premium to have free range chickens free of antibiotics and chemicals.

Corby Kummer, food editor for The Atlantic magazine, who’s visiting this farm, comments that these Chinese chickens have it better than most in the U.S.

“In an American chicken house, they’re not allowed to go outside until they’re five weeks old. So they’re afraid to go outside,” Kummer said.

Another difference at this farm is that they repurpose the chicken manure. Some is used for fertilizer; the rest is put in a methane digester, which creates enough cooking gas for 1,700 households in seven villages.

Michael Pollan, author of “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” and “Food Rules,” asked how long it takes to go from manure to gas. He’s surprised to learn it only takes one week. What comes out is a liquid.

“It’s pretty amazingly good, considering,” said Robert Kenner, director of the film “Food, Inc.”

All three Americans food experts were just in Beijing for a US-China Arts and Culture Festival – and no culture is complete without its food.

From Left Yang Li, Michael Pollan, Corby Kummer, Robert Kenner (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

From Left Yang Li, Michael Pollan, Corby Kummer, Robert Kenner (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

But as Chinese culture has modernized, it’s taken a more industrial approach to producing food — more pesticides, more chemical fertilizers, and genetically modified crops. Meanwhile, middle-class Chinese have increasingly embraced the American habit of grabbing fast food and soft drinks, and obesity and diabetes in China are on the rise.

Still, Michael Pollan is heartened to see that at least some Chinese are looking for change.

“I think there’s a group of Chinese, still quite small, that’s beginning to question the industrial food system here, largely because of concerns over food safety,” Pollan said. “I’m amazed at the levels of distrust of food. There are people who ask, ‘are you eating at restaurants in Beijing?’ – as though they were talking about unprotected sex.”

Here on this farm, the vegetables are safe – no chemicals, no pesticides – though you might occasionally have to pick off a slug, or eat a leaf with a few holes nibbled out of it. We walk into a greenhouse – they call it a hoop house here because of the arched roof.

“You really just get hit with the aroma,” said Kenner, talking about the scent of tomatoes on the vine.

He and the others also notice that on one side of the greenhouse, there’s an earthen wall, 15 feet thick at its base. This helps store heat. The place is toasty, even though it’s in the 40s outside, and Corby Kummer is impressed.

Organics Inside Greenhouse with Earthen Wall (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

Organics Inside Greenhouse with Earthen Wall (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

“In Maine, where I live, they’re not as inventive about the architecture,” Kummer said. “There’s a lot New England could learn from this, though I don’t know that they could solve the brick or cement wall problem.”

By that he means that building these sorts of heat-storing walls would be more expensive in New England. Michael Pollan agreed, but said he does see other things that might be replicable.

“I’m really impressed with the diversity of these farms, how many different crops they have, and combining animals and plants, and taking advantage of the recycling abilities when you can produce manure to feed your crops, and produce feed for your animals,” Pollan said. “When you can close that nutrient loop, you can have real sustainable farming.”

Organics in a Chinese Supermarket (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

Organics in a Chinese Supermarket (Photo: Mary Kay Magistad)

But how to do that profitably, at scale, remains a challenge, in China as in the United States. This farm, at 100 acres, is on the large side for an organic farm in China – and there still aren’t many.

On the way back to Beijing, Pollan asked Chinese organic food advocate Zhang Yinghui how realistic she thinks an organic future is for China, given Chinese reliance on fertilizer.

“I can imagine,” Zhang said. “But I don’t know how long it would take. I hope it would happen.”

Even in the United States, where more people can afford to pay extra for organic food, industrialized farming still rules. In China, where most people can’t afford to pay a premium for organic food, eating is like breathing the polluted air – just don’t think too much about what you’re putting into your body, and hope for healthier options ahead.

Discussion

5 comments for “Organic Farming in China”

  • Chuck Palson

    There’s a big problem with your suggestion that it might be a good idea to at least provide accurate information on what constitutes healthy food: the absence of valid evidence that would support any dietary recommendations. Notwithstanding the constant stream of advice we hear from both self-appointed and officially declared experts, the health benefits of foods are nearly impossible to determine. 

    Experimental evidence? It’s one thing to precisely control the diet of rats and other captive animals over an appropriately long time period; but for obvious reasons it’s another thing to get people to willingly participate in such an experiment. While the media frequently implies or even claims outright that such research happens, it is invariably the case that the evidence comes from self reporting, a notoriously unreliable type of evidence. The much touted Harvard study of the diets of 80,000 nurses over 20 years nicely illustrates the problem. Nurses answered an annual questionnaire that asked them on average how much of each of 61 foods they consumed. Lots of us can’t even remember what we ate yesterday, never mind calculating an average of each for a whole year.

    What about correlating such an average for whole countries e.g. the Mediterranean diet? Can an average national diet actually be calculated? What about genetic differences thought to correlated with heart disease? 

    Let’s be honest about what we eat. We love to talk about the pros and cons about what we eat, and we get  most of our information from the media who never has a problem getting experts to tout whatever diet is the current rage. But I’ll follow the standard advice from the mouths of those with actual experience: chances are that eating what mom served up minus the processed foods she started serving in the 1950s is a good bet. Let the dietary experts who feed our journalists who in turn feed us more misinformation about our diets rattle on. There’s no stopping their steady flow of useless dietary advice because it contributes mightily to circulation and helps increase GDP. 

    But in the end, most of our moms learned from THEIR moms who in turn learned from THEIR ….. what worked remarkably well. Liver – I always hated liver day. But using a bit of common sense to modify some of choices, she didn’t do to badly!

  • Anonymous

    The pros of ‘health food’:
    Eating food that is laden with toxic chemicals and grown in toxic soil and water has already lead to poisoned people and skyrocketing rates of cancer.
    This is not rocket science and requires no rats.
    We are the rats.
    We are poisoning ourselves, our soil, our water, our air, our oceans, our animals, our fish, our pets and our children.
    Now we are paying for it.
    We need to go back to how our ancestors (grandma and grandpa) grew their food.
    Without poison.
    “Organic” is not just a trend, it is a requirement for the survival of all.
    Lets get on with it.

  • Gregory Bennett

    The quality of produce is limited by the factors the govern them. The lack of international standards makes organic produce form China a crap-shoot at best.

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