You
don't have to
eat boiled turnips
Regional
variety Fresh, local and seasonal food
is better for you, reduces the environmental impact
of transport and is good for the local economy.
Buying straight from the farmer can do you, your
family, the farmer and the planet a world of good.
Farmers
markets A survey of British farmers markets
in the Southwest showed that equivalent products
were 30 to 40 per cent cheaper than those in the
local supermarkets. Best value were seasonal organic
vegetables which were up to 50 per cent cheaper.
Many goods, like local varieties of cheese, were
not available in supermarkets at all.
Australia:
Jane Adams, the Australasian Farmers Market Association
jacom@bigpond.net.au
Britain:
National Association of Farmers Markets www.farmersmarkets.net
Big
Barn (The Virtual Farmers Market) www.bigbarn.co.uk
Community-supported
agriculture brings the consumer into
direct contact with the producer. Consumers commit
in advance to buying farm produce regularly. In
the process they discover seasonality, freshness
and the cost of food production. Some subscribers
contribute farm labour in exchange for part of
the harvest, and children are often welcome to
visit the farm and find out where their food comes
from.
Australia:
Friends of the Earth (Brisbane) PO Box 5702, West
End, Qld, 4101. email: foebrisbane@uq.net.au
Britain:
Foundation for Local Food Initiatives www.localfood.co.uk
North
America: www.localharvest.org
www.foodshare.net

Ethical
shopping
The
Good Shopping Guide
is a handy tool for ethical shoppers, with a large
'Good Food and Drink' section. NI
readers in Britain can order it at a special price
of £10 (including p&p). Send a cheque made
out to: The Ethical Marketing Group, New Internationalist
Reader Offer, The Good Shopping Guide, 240 Portobello
Road, London W11 1LL (write your address on the
back of the cheque so they know where to send
your copy). Or buy online www.thegoodshoppingguide.co.uk
Fair-trade
brands guarantee a fair price for farmers
in developing countries. To find fair-trade organizations
in your country contact the International Federation
for Alternative Trade (IFAT), 30 Murdock Road,
Bicester, Oxon OX6 7RF, UK www.ifat.org
Organic
food systems aim to avoid the use of
artificial chemicals, pesticides and fertilizers.
Buying organic is the only way to guarantee you
won't be eating genetically modified foods or
food with antibiotics. It is better for soil quality
and for wildlife. If the organic food you buy
has been flown half-way round the world, however,
it's probably more eco-friendly to go for local,
non-organic food.
Australia:
The Organic Federation of Australia www.ofa.org.au
Britain:
Soil Association
www.soilassociation.org.uk
North
America: The Organic Consumers Association
www.purefood.org
Co-operatives
started supermarkets as we know them today in
19th-century Britain. Independent local retailers
were controlled by their consumer members, who
sold food at prices working people could afford.
The only supermarket that maintains the co-op
tradition in Britain is the Co-op network, with
a strong social-responsibility brief and fair-trade
brands. Recently it put a penny on the price of
milk to aid ailing British dairy farmers (see
page 10). Its home-shopping website is www.co-op2u.com,
www.co-op.co.uk/index
has links to international food co-ops worldwide.
Contact
your local environmental group to find other ideas
for ethical food sourcing.
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