Cotton cooperative reaps rewards by growing organic
Texas Organic Cotton Marketing
Cooperative bucks biotech cotton trend to capture fast-growing market
When
describing the 7,000 acres of certified organic cotton grown by the
Texas Organic Cotton Marketing Cooperative (TOCMC), Terry Pepper, one
of the cooperative's founders, jokingly calls it "a gnat in the ointment" among
the three million acres of cotton grown on the plains of West Texas.
The description belies the
cooperative's importance in a fast-growing industry. TOCMC is the U.S.'s
largest supplier of certified organic cotton, a product found in a growing
number of products from clothing to furniture and valued by sportswear
companies such as Nike and Patagonia.
Found markets
In TOCMC's home in Lubbock,
Texas, cotton is king. Here, Terry Pepper and his wife, LaRhea, farm 1400
acres, 1000 of which is cotton with 600 certified organic. In 1993, the
Peppers and about 30 other farmers formed the cooperative to create a
central source for certified cotton fiber.
As TOCMC's creative marketing
force, LaRhea Pepper found and created market opportunities. She and
Terry launched Cotton Plus, a joint venture with a cotton mill to produce
organic cotton fabrics. In the mid-1990s, LaRhea started another company,
Organic Essentials, that used cotton rejected by textile mills to make
non-woven products, such as cotton balls, tampons, makeup rounds, and
nursing pads. This business alone has grown 20% to 30% per year. "The business has grown
itself," says Terry.
Growing demand
TOCMC primarily sells its
production to textile mills that make fabrics and sell them to clothing
manufacturers. "The demand is growing," says Terry Pepper. "Major companies
want organic cotton." The increase in production reflects the demand.
In 1991, a group of farmers produced 400 one-quarter ton bales. Today,
TOCMC produces from 3,000 to 6,000 bales per year.
However, the market demand
for organic cotton is about 4,000 bales. Still, Pepper sees major gains
coming. Nike, for example, uses more and more organic cotton in its garments,
and TOCMC is one of their major suppliers.
Non-GMO production
By producing organic, TOCMC
bucked the conventional cotton trend: just one percent of cotton grown
in the U.S. is organic. The cooperative bucked another trend: genetically
engineered cotton. According to U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates,
about 71% of the nation's 15 million cotton acres are now grown with genetically
engineered varieties Roundup Ready and Bt.
According to Pepper, contamination
from GM varieties through cross-pollination is not the problem as it
is with corn. "Cotton doesn't cross-pollinate well, in fact it has a hard
time cross-pollinating between rows," he says. Still, it does happen.
Contamination
mainly occurs during seed processing. After harvest, cotton is sent
to gins, which separate the seed from the fiber. The "fuzzy" seed goes to
delinters where the remaining fiber is "delinted" leaving the seed.
To
prevent seed contamination, TOCMC works with cotton gins and delinters
who understand the need for separation of organic varieties. "It takes
a team effort by everyone to maintain the separation," says Pepper. The
gins and delinters must follow organic standards established by the Texas
Department of Agriculture, which certifies TOCMC's production.
Pepper
believes zero tolerance cannot be achieved with organic cotton. "GMO-free
is not possible, but we can maintain non-GMO with some work," he says.GM
material can be detected in cottonseed but not in the lint, says Pepper.
Herbicide drift a problem
According to Pepper, the
biggest problem from GM cotton is herbicide drift. West Texas cotton producers
plant mostly Roundup Ready varieties, and Pepper says spraying of Roundup
is sometimes excessive with no consideration of neighbors' fields. Earlier
this year, Pepper was planting cotton in a field when he noticed a crop
duster spraying a neighbor's GM cotton with Roundup herbicide. "The wind
was blowing straight at our field," says Pepper. The spray killed a buffer
strip of oats as far as ½ mile away. Luckily the cotton had not
yet sprouted. "It would have been killed across the field," says Pepper. "Too
many people have an attitude of 'we can do what we want, this is no problem."
Are
farmers spraying less Roundup with GM cotton as is promised by biotech
proponents? No, says Pepper. "They are spraying lots of Roundup," he says. "The
more GMOs that are grown, the more spraying is done."
Available seed
Another challenge is finding
new varieties of non-GM seed. Fewer and larger seed companies who promote
GM varieties increasingly control cottonseed. Luckily, TOCMC works with
an independent seed company, Associated Farmers Delinting that provides
new non-GM varieties. AFD tests its seed for GM content and uses a system
of identity preservation to ensure its non-GM status. They also develop
new non-GM varieties at Texas Tech University that Pepper says promise
to improve quality, which he values. "AFD gives me security because I
know they are working on better quality varieties that will help us," he
says. In addition, TOCMC saves its own seed for replanting.
Does Pepper
think his operation can coexist with biotech cotton? Yes, but the key
is teamwork. "It will take local people who we know and trust and who
will work with us," he says. "If we have a seed breeder, ginner, and delinter
who understand what we need to do to maintain non-GM, we can do it."
(July 2002)