Environmental
Leadership
EARTH is engaged in an ongoing effort to develop new techniques
to increase quality, profitability, and worker well-being while
reducing negative environmental impact. Over the past 15 years,
EARTH has developed environmental management techniques that have
become industry standards worldwide and the university continues
to innovate. What follows is a representative sample of environmental
practices in place at EARTH’s banana farm.
Solid Waste Management
Recycling – EARTH pioneered the
recycling of the plastic bags that protect fruit from insects and
sunburn while growing in the fields. These bags are often infused
with insecticides and were frequently discarded in the fields where
the bags and the chemicals on them would end up contaminating land
and local water supplies. EARTH began to recycle the bags (as well
as the nylon cords used to prop up banana plants during production)
despite negative reaction from the wider banana industry. Today,
recycling, or at least appropriate disposal of the bags and cords,
is industry standard.
Organic Waste Management
Natural Fiber Paper – In 1991,
EARTH began making paper from banana stems (or pinzotes, in Spanish),
the baseball-bat sized backbones of individual banana bunches. Pinzotes
are the largest source of organic waste from commercial banana production
and proper disposal of the stems continues to present a serious
environmental challenge in banana producing regions.
EARTH developed the paper project to create a means of recycling
this waste material into a valuable new product. The paper plant
currently recycles all recyclable paper from the university and
approximately 50% of the stems from the banana plantation into a
variety of paper products including EARTH University business cards,
letterhead, and envelops.
Bokashi – EARTH recycles organic
waste from the banana farm and from university operations into bokashi,
a type of compost made from organic waste, sawdust, and effective
microorganisms (EM). The bokashi is then applied in the fields to
enhance effects of and reduce the need for traditional fertilizers.
Reduced Use of Chemicals
Elimination of Herbicides – After
more than a year of tests and research, EARTH was recently able
to eliminate all use of herbicides on the banana farm without sacrificing
yield. This represents a major reduction in the use of chemicals
on the farm. Manual weed control is more expensive than chemical
control, but the practice will improve the quality and quantity
of soil on the farm.
The photo on the left shows
EARTH´s farm during use of herbicides.
The photo on the right shows the farm after elimination of herbicides. Organic Bags in the Fields – Two
years ago EARTH eliminated the highly toxic chloropyrophos from
the plastic bags it uses to cover the fruit in the fields. In January
2007, EARTH converted to use of organic bags on 50% of the farm.
The organic bags are treated with pepper and garlic instead of a
mixture of chemicals to repel insects. By early 2008, EARTH plans
be using organic bags on 100% of the farm.
Organic Post Harvest Treatment –
When bananas are cut from the stem, the crown that holds a hand
of bananas together is a raw wound on the fruit and is exposed to
attack by fungi and insects. All banana farms apply a fungicide
to protect the fruit after cutting during the long ride to the market.
An EARTH professor developed an organic formula which EARTH uses
on all bananas for Whole Foods Market. This organic mixture removes
another chemical from the packing house and production process.
Conservation of Ecosystems
Native Species – EARTH plants native
species in drainage ditches on the banana farm. The practice helps
trap accidental spray drift, reduces erosion, and enhances biodiversity
in the area by attracting amphibians, reptiles, and birds.
Habitat Protection – EARTH’s
campus and banana farm are surrounded by EARTH’s 2,471 acre
forest and biological preserve. EARTH’s banana operation is
commited to protecting water supplies and endangered species and
habitats through conservation and maintenance of buffer zones.
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