| Finland: Jaana Husu-Kallio, the new Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, has set her sights on improved organic food production in Finland Source: hs.fi OrganicPortal NewsRoom Toxic stuffed olives, dioxins, salmonella, EHEC bacteria, mad-cow disease, avian flu... Jaana Husu-Kallio’s name seems inevitably to surface every time something unfortunate occurs related to food. And in the past few years this has happened with alarming frequency. Most recently Husu-Kallio has been consulted and quoted, for example, in connection with the fuss surrounding the treatment of pigs on Finnish pig farms, or the selling of contaminated kebab meat. “Someone has even asked me what I thought I was doing when I chose a profession where I always have to explain things when someone else has messed up”, says Husu-Kallio, the outgoing Director General of the Finnish Food Safety Authority EVIRA. A couple of small boxes on the floor and a painting of a pig on the wall in Husu-Kallio’s former office in the Viikki district of Helsinki await to be transported to the premises of the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry in Kruunuhaka. From tomorrow, Wednesday, Husu-Kallio will commence her duties there as the ministry’s new Permanent Secretary. Until she has familiarised herself with the ministry, Husu-Kallio prefers to refrain from commenting on her concrete future tasks. Still, she is aware of the main guidelines. For example the renewal of the Animal Welfare Act and the EU negotiations on agriculture are among the issues currently on the table at the ministry. According to Husu-Kallio, the promotion of the production and availability of organic foods is also at the very top of the agenda. This does not sound like a particularly novel thing. Husu-Kallio does not think so, either. In the opinion of the new Permanent Secretary, years have been wasted in Finland in unnecessary debating over the bottlenecks in organic food production. “I am sick and tired of hearing that the problem is always either with the consumers not buying enough organic food or with the inadequate supply”, Husu-Kallio says. “I firmly believe that we can come up with a functioning organic food chain. Let’s just quit whining.” The Pro Luomu (“Pro Organic”) organisation financed by the government is currently preparing suggestions for concrete steps for the ministry. The producers, commerce, industry, and various organisations are all taking part in the effort. One restrictive factor to this is that there is not enough domestic organically-produced protein feed available to facilitate the increase of production. On the other hand, some of such feed ends up in conventional food production. So, the chain is not working. Still, in Husu-Kallio’s view the greatest obstacle continues to remain with people’s attitudes. Meat processing firms lack enthusiasm, and the producers have doubts about the lucrativeness of the organic sector. The notion that organic farming can be an economically-viable alternative has not yet sunk in. “I do feel that the meat processors, especially the big ones, have been particularly obstinate in this.” Tip: OrganicPortal UK - Organic Food 12.02.2012 TOP 3 most read news: UK: ‘Jamie Oliver Generation’ Emerges From Foodie Revolution - 26% of shoppers under 35 expect to buy more organic food over the next... Besuchen Sie OrganicPortal Newsroom Deutschland
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News - Finland: Jaana Husu-Kallio, the new Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, has set her sights on improved organic food production in Finland
Written by Niels Thrap
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