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9-11-07
LEOPOLD CENTER CONSUMER SURVEY LOOKS AT LINKS BETWEEN LOCAL FOODS AND CLIMATE
CHANGE, HEALTH, FOOD SAFETY
AMES, Iowa -- A recent survey shows that American consumers are skeptical about
the safety of the global food system and many believe that local foods are safer
and better for their health than foods from afar.
These are the views of a representative, nationwide sample of 500 consumers who
participated in a web-based survey conducted by the Leopold Center for
Sustainable Agriculture in July 2007. Their responses are summarized in a new
Leopold Center report, "Consumer perceptions of the safety, health, and
environmental impact of various scales and geographic origin of food supply
chains." The paper was written by Rich Pirog, who leads the Center's Marketing
and Food Systems Initiative, and Iowa State University graduate student Andy
Larson.
Objectives of the study were to gauge consumer perceptions regarding:
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Food safety,
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The impact that various scales and production methods of the
food system have on greenhouse gas emissions,
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Willingness to pay for a food system that achieves a net
reduction in greenhouse gas emissions and
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Health benefits from local and organic foods.
Survey respondents placed high importance on food safety, freshness (harvest
date), and pesticide use on fresh produce they purchase, with somewhat lower
importance placed on whether the produce was locally grown, the level of
greenhouse gas emissions it took to produce and transport the produce, and
whether the respondent could contact the farmer who grew it.
Pirog said that while 70 percent of the respondents perceived the U.S. food
system to be safe, concern was raised when they were asked about the safety of
fresh produce from other continents. Eighty-five percent and 88 percent of
respondents, respectively, perceived local and regional food systems to be
somewhat safe or very safe, compared to only 12 percent for the global food
system.
Health factors also have an effect on consumer attitudes. More than two-thirds
of respondents (69 percent) “somewhat” or “strongly” agreed that local food is
better for their personal health than food that has traveled across the country.
This is in spite of the fact that there is little or no research documenting
such benefits, Pirog noted.
Are consumers willing to pay more for food from supply chains that emit half as
much greenhouse gas as conventional chains? Nearly half of respondents in the
survey were willing to pay a 10 to 30 percent premium, but a similar percentage
was not.
"With the dramatic rise in popularity of local foods, the farmers who grow these
foods and the organizations that champion both the farmers and the foods will be
called upon to prove the existence of economic, environmental and health
benefits stemming from these products, and to ensure their continued safety as
part of the food supply," Pirog said.
He pointed out that the findings show a critical need for more research.
"Government agencies, universities, health professionals, private companies and
non-profit organizations need to work with farmers growing and processing local
foods to develop an appropriate research agenda for these food supply chains,"
he added.
In 2001, Pirog led some of the first research in the United States on the
concept of "food miles," the distance that food travels from where it is grown
to where it is purchased for consumption. He also has investigated consumer
perceptions of local, place-based and organic foods.
The 45-page report is available on the Leopold Center web site at:
http://www.leopold.iastate.edu/pubs/staff/consumer/consumer.htm.
The Leopold Center also offers a competitive grants program across all three
research initiatives in Marketing and Food Systems, Ecology, and Policy. Through
its research and education programs, the Leopold Center supports the development
of profitable farming systems that conserve natural resources. Center funding
comes from state appropriations and from fees on nitrogen fertilizer and
pesticides, as established by the 1987 Iowa Groundwater Protection Act.
For more information,
contact:
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