Friendly Blooms
Sustainably grown flowers are good for your health -- and for workers
September / October 2005
Ross Wehner Utne magazine
Denver resident Jenny Ward buys organic when she's shopping for
vegetables, body products, and cotton clothing. But what about
flowers? 'When I think about organic, I mostly think about the
things that I am putting into my body,' she says. 'I haven't been
educated to think about flowers.' That's where Gerald Prolman comes
in. The green entrepreneur is taking organics a step further with
Organic Bouquet, the world's first online organic flower company,
based in Novato, California. 'Buying an organic flower means
thinking about not only your own health but also that of workers
and ecosystems around the globe,' Prolman says. 'It's
evolutionary.'
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Studies show that flowers, one of the most pesticide-intensive
crops in the world, cause health and environmental problems in
Ecuador and Colombia, which produce more than two-thirds of all
flowers sold in the United States. Evidence of pesticide poisoning
among flower workers in Ecuador and Colombia surfaced in 2002 in
Environmental Health Perspectives, a peer-reviewed journal
of the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. In
Ecuador, nearly 60 percent of flower workers surveyed reported
nervous system problems, including headaches, dizziness, hand
trembling, and blurred vision.
Sales of organic flowers are growing with consumer awareness but
still represent a fraction of the $19.5 billion U.S. floral
industry. Americans bought $8 million worth of organic flowers in
2003, and the market is expected to grow 13 percent each year
through 2008. Growth may be faster thanks to Veriflora, a
sustainable-flower label that began popping up in select Whole
Foods supermarkets this summer. 'Green label' programs for flowers
already exist in Europe, where consumers are more aware of flower
problems, and in South America and Africa. But Veriflora is the
first that leads flower growers toward organic practices as the
know-how and earth-friendly products become available. Veriflora
also ensures immediate compliance with a range of sustainable
principles, including fair treatment of workers, ecological
responsibility, water conservation, and waste management. Workers
in Veriflora-certified farms must receive overtime pay and health
benefits and have the right to organize. Auditors arrive
unannounced to test everything from compost to the streams running
off the farms.