Three Food Policies Essential to Solving the Climate Crisis:
1. Truth in Labeling --Tell Consumers How Food Choices Impact Climate Change
Local, organic & fair trade food and products are the climate-friendly,  humane and healthy choice, but consumers should have the same right to know when  their purchases have a negative impact on health, justice or sustainability. Food labels should reveal the presence of genetically engineered ingredients  and pesticide residues, the use of antibiotics and artificial hormones, the  product's carbon footprint and its country of origin.
2. Green Budget Priorities--Subsidize Solutions Not Pollution!
Voters want clean energy, green jobs, and a food system that's local, organic  and fair trade, but it's not going to happen as long as our tax dollars are  spent on industrial food and farming, fossil fuels, and war.
U.S. taxpayer subsidies to fossil fuels and industrial food and farming amount to $60 billion a year, while resource wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost us $200 billion annually. This wasted money is enough to fast-track the conversion of the U.S. and global economy to organic agriculture and clean energy and save the world from climate catastrophe.
3. Regulations That Promote Health and Sustainability--Protect Consumers and the Environment from Hazardous Agricultural  Practices
Consumers often complain that local, organic and fair trade products are too  expensive. Of course, you can economize on your organic food or green product  purchases if you can buy directly from the farmer or producer or buy in bulk  quantities with others in your community, but there's no denying that Food  Inc.'s "business as usual" practices - polluting the earth, destabilizing the  climate, using toxic chemicals, cutting corners on ingredients and nutrition,  and exploiting workers from the farm to the checkout counter - generate products  with lower sticker prices. However if you add in the hidden health and  environmental costs and collateral damage of GMOs, pesticides, antibiotics,  heavily processed and packaged foods, and the climate and environmental  "footprint" of chemical and energy-intensive food and farming, our cheap food  system is in fact dangerously expensive.
To level the playing field for healthy, organic climate-friendly foods and  products, we need to make the polluters and junk food purveyors pay for the  damage they are causing to public health and the environment. We need to demand  sensible and equitable regulations from our elected public officials that  protect consumers and the environment, and we need these policies now, not in  ten years. We can start by phasing out the inhumane confinement of animals in  factory farms and eliminating billion dollar subsidies for genetically  engineered crops and biofuels. We can phase out toxic pesticides, methane  generating chemical fertilizers, artificial hormones, the non-therapeutic use of  antibiotics, sewage sludge "fertilizer," and animal feed made from  slaughterhouse waste.
 
 
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