Organic foods, yes, but organic underwear? (Agencies) Updated: 2004-05-25 08:42
Some of Scott Leonard's cotton sweaters come in a red called "watermelon" and
greens called "mint" and "herb."
The similarities to things people eat do not end there.
The cotton in the sweaters is organic grown like organic foods, without
chemical pesticides and fertilizers. Those who believe such chemicals are bad
for health and the environment can stack organic alternatives in their closets
as well as their pantries.
"There are no nasty chemicals being put into the cotton," said Leonard,
marketing director for Indigenous Designs.
The Santa Rosa, California, company, which sells clothes to stores as well as
directly to consumers, displayed its products at the Organic Trade Association's
exposition in Chicago this month.
While the cotton may be 100 per cent organic, Leonard acknowledges that his
company uses chemical dyes. "Plant dyes, the colour fastness is horrible," he
said.
Organic clothing, including cotton and wool, had a small part in the All
Things Organic show, which was dominated by foods. But the organic label is
important to some clothes buyers.
These consumers are "concerned about doing something right for the
environment," said Matt Hyde, senior vice president for merchandising at REI,
the outdoors retail chain based in Kent, Washington.
Some fans of organic clothes take the position that whatever chemicals remain
in conventional cotton could get through the skin and affect a person's
biologically
"A lot of the buyers go organic for health reasons," said Raya Newbold,
president of Round Belly Clothing of Shoreview, Minnesota, which sells maternity
and children's wear. Newbold, pregnant with her fourth child, believes "there is
no way to go but organic."
The conventional cotton industry disputes that idea.
"The processes that a fabric goes through prior to and during dyeing and
finishing would remove any traces of crop-protection products," said Phillip
Wakelyn, a senior scientist with the National Cotton Council in Washington.
"From a residue-free standpoint, there is no difference between conventionally
grown cotton and organic cotton."
As for the environment, conventional cotton growers are sparing with their
pest-control chemicals, to control costs, Wakelyn said. Some modern biotech
cotton plants even produce their own insecticides.
For most people, however, the bottom line is how the style looks, so REI
treats organic as "a bonus," Hyde said. "It's not the No 1 selling angle we
take."
At REI, organic cotton items are single digits or low double-digits compared
to overall cotton sales, Hyatt said.
Some customers care a lot and others are mostly interested in something that
looks nice, said Jill Vlahos, director of environmental analysis for Patagonia.
At the Ventura, California-based outdoors clothing and gear company, the
entire cotton product line is 100 per cent organic.
According to the Organic Trade Association's survey of manufacturers, the
overall organic fiber market, including clothing and home textiles, grew almost
23 per cent in 2003, accounting for about US$85 million in US sales.
The amount of organic cotton available is relatively small.
An Agriculture Department cotton expert, Leslie Meyer, said industry
estimates are that organic cotton accounts for less than 1 per cent of all US
cotton.
Leonard said the higher cost of organic cotton fiber, plus the inability to
mass produce on the scale of conventional cotton clothing, keeps prices for 100
per cent organic clothes as much as 10 per cent to 15 per cent above
conventional clothing.
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