NY Times Exposes Wal-Mart’s Ability to Sell Cheap Organic Milk–It’s Coming from Factory FarmsMany organic foods have been popping up on the shelves of Wal-Mart in recent years, but none have been as popular as organic milk. For many shoppers, particularly mothers with small children, it is the first organic product they try. Now organic milk is about to become much more widely available, as Wal-Mart rolls out its own organic brand, which will be cheaper than similar milk on the market. But critics worry that what consumers will be getting is adiluted form of organic milk. Sold under Wal-Mart’s popular Great Value label, half-gallon cartons of the milk have been quietly introduced at 1,200 supercenters and Neighborhood Markets, according to a Wal-Mart spokeswoman, Karen Burk. Wal-Mart’s own organic milk is likely to create stiff competition for many Harvey Hartman, president of the Hartman Group, a market research firm "They're creating incremental users because they're removing one of the big inhibitors to buying organic, which is price," he said. Last year, organic milk sales increased by 25 percent from the year before and Mr. Hartman predicts that Wal-Mart's brand could lift annual growth to as much as 35 percent. Currently, organic dairy represents 3.5 percent of all dairy products sold in the United States, according to the Organic Trade Association. The organic milk Wal-Mart is selling under its own label comes from Aurora Organic Dairy, which also supplies Safeway, Costco, Target and Wild Oats with their store brands of organic milk. But Wal-Mart¹s entry into the market stirs greater attention from critics. Activist groups, as well as some organic food retailers and dairies, contend that the company where Wal-Mart and the other big retailers get their milkoperates large factory farms that are diluting the principles of organic agriculture and delivering customers a substandard product. They argue that Aurora's cows do not spend any significant time roaming pastures and eating fresh grass; instead they live on a diet high in grains. "They are trying to cut corners in the interest of producing milk as cheaply Wal-Mart and its supplier say that those allegations are misleading and that Aurora's two farms in Colorado and Texas are in full compliance with Executives at Aurora, which is based in Boulder, Colo., acknowledge that Wal-Mart's buying power is certainly cutting the cost of its organic milk. At Aurora's Platteville operation, about 40 miles north of downtown Denver, 4,000 cows are put on grass only when not being milked or when they are nearing the end of a lactation cycle. That totals about two to three months a year. The rest of the time they stay in dirt-lined outdoor pens where they eat from an ample trough filled with a mixture of hay, silage, corn and soybeans. Clark F. Driftmier, head of marketing at Aurora, said the company planned to reduce the number of cows in Platteville to 1,000 by next summer so all the animals could graze. In addition, he said, the number of acres of pasture at the Texas farm will triple by next spring. The company, he added, is opening a 3,200-cow dairy farm in Kersey, Colo., that has been designed to allow for year-round daily access to pasture. Mr. Driftmier acknowledges these changes are being made partly in anticipation of the Agriculture Department's plans to tighten rules requiring more grazing for milk to be called organic. Mr. Kastel of Cornucopia calls Aurora's efforts "greenwashing." He says the farm's acreage per cow will still be low and that the company is overtaxing its animals by milking them three times a day instead of twice, which is the norm at organic farms. John Mackay, chief executive of Whole Foods Market, the nation's largest While a 4,000-cow farm is not large among conventional dairies, which can hold as many as 25,000 cows, it dwarfs most organic farms. Jim Riddle, organic outreach coordinator for the University of Minnesota and former chairman of the National Organic Standards Board, said that putting thousands of cows on pasture is almost impossible. Wal-Mart would not say how much it was paying Aurora for its milk and Mr. Driftmier at Aurora says that grass feeding should not be the only In accordance with organic standards, Aurora cows also get no hormones or antibiotics and all their feed is grown organically. Many in the organic industry, however, say that Wal-Mart, in its push to Mr. Riddle, the organic coordinator, points to subsidy programs that dairy "These programs are going to help alleviate the organic milk shortage by Related Articles
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