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On March 25 and May 10th I posted articles about the USDA’s
annual Pesticide Data Program (PDP) that takes a look at chemical residues on
various commodities in the US food supply (mainly fruits and vegetables). I described the program and its various
levels of published summaries as a valuable example of a transparent data
resource, which it certainly is.
Unfortunately I made an error in my analysis, using the wrong year’s
“sample table” (10,365 rows) to identify which of the residue detections in the
“results table” were from organic or conventional sources (31,981 rows drawn
from a 2.2 million row table).
This meant that I erroneously overstated the number of pesticide
detections on organic samples. I
had reported an average of 2.6 detections/organic sample and the actual number
is 0.75 detections per sample vs 3.2 detections/sample for conventional. Journalist Tamar Haspel brought this
issue to my attention. She was
skeptical about the similarity of detection frequencies I had described for
organic and made the effort to check the original data. I very much appreciate her persistence
on this question. I want to
apologize for that error and any wrong conclusions that came from that. I do this analysis of the data each
year as a personal project unrelated to my consulting and ag communications
jobs, so the responsibility for this error rests entirely on me. I am striving to remove the content that
was based on the error, let people know about the mistake, and with this post,
get the analysis right. (Revised Forbes posts here and here)
Fortunately there is no change in the most fundamental
conclusion that should be drawn from the USDA’s data: our food supply and
particularly the fruits and vegetable are very safe and so we can all enjoy
them and benefit from their health-promoting characteristics. This is fully true for both organic and
conventional options. What also
remains true is that analytical chemists are capable of finding tiny trace
levels of chemicals, but finding those does not mean something is dangerous.
So, what has changed based on getting the data right is that
the data shows a distinctly lower number of synthetic pesticide detections on
organic samples (~1/4 as many).
That fact has to be balanced with the reality that there are many
natural pesticides commonly used on organic farms, which are not detectable
with of the testing technologies used in this particular USDA program. For the most part these materials have
very low mammalian toxicity, but that is also true for a great many of the
synthetic pesticides that are part of the testing. Conventional farmers also use these same pest control
options, but possibly not as extensively as would be needed in organic
production. Again, if there was
testing for these particular pesticides, it would almost certainly do nothing
to change the paradigm of overall safety of the food supply.
One retained conclusion that is of interest is that 80% of
the residues detected on conventional crops are at levels low enough so that
they would not be considered as a violation of the organic rules because they
are 20 times lower than the EPA tolerance. In the case of organic (for which this statistic is 84%) the
assumption is that the presence of such low level residues is “inadvertent.” For conventional it means that by
following the EPA label requirements, growers can even exceed the safety
factors for which those requirements were designed through a rigorous risk
assessment process by EPA.
The data does show that even though there are fewer residues
detected on organic, 16% of those are of synthetic chemicals at levels that
exceed what is acceptable under the organic rules (the corresponding number for
conventional is 20%). This
certainly does not represent any kind of health risk, but it isn’t consistent
with the organic “brand” or with the convenient fiction that organic means “no
pesticides.”
Finally, the Environmental Working Group’s “Dirty Dozen
List” remains a misleading and science-free publication. It is corrosive for trust in the food
supply and if believed, has the potential to make consumers pay more than they
need to, or even worse, be less likely to consume the quantity of fruits and
vegetables that health experts would recommend.
Once again, I apologize for my earlier error with the data.