A once strong relationship between Whole Foods Market and organic farmers may slowly be eroding.
The high-end grocer’s new produce rating system rewards environmentally friendly farm practices such as those “that reduce air pollution and conserve energy,” according to the store’s website. But what seems like a progressive step may come at the expense of the very farmers with whom Whole Foods has, until now, enjoyed a mutually beneficial dynamic.
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According to an article in The New York Times, some organic farmers claim that the new system could convince customers that non-organic produce is “just as good — or even better — than their organically grown products.” That’s because under the program — called Responsibly Grown — produce of all kinds are labeled “good,” “better” or “best” based on a number of Whole Foods-created criteria, including “establishing a garbage recycling program, relying more on alternative energy sources, eliminating some pesticides and setting aside a portion of fields as a conservation area,” the Times reports.









