Overview
Organic farming has been one of the fastest growing segments of U.S. agriculture
for over a decade. The U.S. had under a million acres of certified organic
farmland when Congress passed the Organic Foods Production Act of 1990. By
the time USDA implemented national organic standards in 2002, certified organic
farmland had doubled, and doubled again between 2002 and 2005. Organic livestock
sectors have grown even faster. ERS collected data from USDA-accredited State
and private certification groups to calculate the extent of certified organic
farmland acreage and livestock in the United States. These are presented in
13 tables showing the change in U.S. organic acreage and livestock numbers
from 1992 to 2005. Data for 1997 and 2000-2005 are presented by State and commodity.
Data for 2000-2005 include the number of certified operations, by State.
Go to the data tables, or read more about organic
production below.
In 2005, for the first time, all 50 States in the U.S. had some certified
organic farmland. U.S. producers dedicated over 4.0 million acres of farmland1.7
million acres of cropland and 2.3 million acres of rangeland and pastureto
organic production systems in 2005. California remains the leading State in
certified organic cropland, with over 220,000 acres, mostly for fruit and vegetable
production. Other top states for certified organic cropland include North Dakota,
Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Texas, and Idaho. Over 40 States also had some
certified organic rangeland and pasture in 2005, although only 4 statesAlaska,
Texas, California and Montanahad more than 100,000 acres. USDA lifted restrictions
on organic meat labeling in the late 1990s, and the organic poultry and beef
sectors are now expanding rapidly.
Top 10 States, 2005 |
Number of certified operations |
Cropland acres |
Pasture acres |
California |
1,916 |
California |
223,263 |
Alaska |
1,460,000 |
Wisconsin |
580 |
North Dakota |
143,322 |
Texas |
241,353 |
Washington |
527 |
Montana |
126,450 |
California |
137,004 |
Iowa |
453 |
Minnesota |
116,813 |
Montana |
103,433 |
Minnesota |
433 |
Wisconsin |
91,030 |
Wyoming |
66,290 |
New York |
427 |
Texas |
87,124 |
Colorado |
60,766 |
Vermont |
366 |
Idaho |
81,220 |
North Dakota |
37,811 |
Oregon |
317 |
Kansas |
80,180 |
Wisconsin |
31,308 |
Pennsylvania |
308 |
Nebraska |
77,820 |
Idaho |
19,412 |
Maine |
288 |
Iowa |
64,158 |
Nebraska |
17,655 |
Data for all States and previous years are available here. |
While adoption of organic farming systems showed strong gains between 1992
and 2005 and the adoption rate remains high, the overall adoption level is
still lowonly about 0.5 percent of all U.S. cropland and 0.5 percent
of all U.S. pasture was certified organic in 2005. Obstacles to adoption by
farmers include high managerial costs and risks of shifting to a new way of
farming, limited awareness of organic farming systems, lack of marketing and
infrastructure, and inability to capture marketing economies. Still, many U.S.
producers are embracing organic farming in order to lower input costs, conserve
nonrenewable resources, capture high-value markets, and boost farm income.
Adoption Levels Vary by Sector
Government efforts to boost organic production have focused primarily on developing
national certification standards to assure consumers of consistent product
quality and on streamlining interstate commerce in organically grown products.
In addition, several States have begun subsidizing conversion to organic farming
as a way of capturing the environmental benefits of these systems. Also, many
USDA agencies have started or expanded programs and pilot projects to help
organic producers with production and marketing problems and risks.
Fifty-three organic certification organizations, including 19 State programs,
conducted third-party certification of organic production and handling in 2005.
USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service implements national legislation and implemented
rules in October 2002 that require all except the smallest organic growers
(less than $5,000 in sales) be certified by a State or private agency accredited
under USDA's national organic standards.
Organic farming systems rely on practices such as cultural and biological
pest management, and virtually prohibit synthetic chemicals in crop production
and antibiotics or hormones in livestock production. For example, organic farmers
provide habitat for predators and parasites of crop pests, calculate planting/harvesting
dates and rotate crops to maintain soil fertility, and cycle animal and green
manures as fertilizer. Organic livestock growers try to accommodate an animal's
natural nutritional and behavioral requirements.
Overall, certified organic cropland and pasture accounted for about 0.5 percent
of U.S. total farmland in 2005. Only a small percentage of the top U.S. field
crops—corn (0.2 percent), soybeans (0.2 percent), and wheat (0.5 percent)—were
grown under certified organic farming systems. On the other hand, organic carrots
(6 percent of U.S. carrot acreage), organic lettuce (4 percent), organic apples
(3 percent) and other fruit and vegetable crops were more commonly organic
grown in 2005. Markets for organic vegetables, fruits, and herbs have been
developing for decades in the United States, and fresh produce is still the
top-selling organic category in retail sales. Organic livestock was beginning
to catch up with produce in 2005, with 1 percent of U.S. dairy cows and 0.6
percent of the layer hens managed under certified organic systems.
Data Files
Organic production tables are in .xls format. Each workbook contains multiple
years of data in worksheets that are accessed through tabs. State-level tables
cover the years 1997 and 2000 through 2005. National-level tables also include
data from earlier years.
National Tables |
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Table 1. List of USDA accredited organic
certification programs. Certifiers' names, locations, and number
of producers certified in 1997, and 2002 through 2005. |
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Table
2. U.S. certified organic farmland acreage, livestock numbers, and farm
operations.
Data on acreage for pasture/rangeland and cropland, 1992-2005. Information
on number of certified organic animals by type (livestock and poultry)
is also provided. |
|
Table
3. Certified organic and total U.S. acreage, selected crops and livestock,
1995-2005.
Data on acreage for different grains, beans, oilseeds, vegetables, fruits,
and number of animals. |
State-Level Tables |
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Table 4. Certified organic pasture
and cropland. Total acreage of pasture and cropland by State, 1997
and 2000-2005. |
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Table 5. Certified organic livestock.
Data on cows, pigs, sheep, chickens and other poultry, by State,
1997 and 2000-2005. |
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Table 6. Certified organic grains. Acres
of corn, wheat, oats, barley, sorghum, rice, spelt, millet,
buckwheat, and rye by State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
|
Table 7. Certified organic beans. Acres
of soybeans, dry beans, dry peas/lentils by State,
1997 and 2000-2005. |
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Table 8. Certified organic oilseeds.
Acres of flax, sunflowers, and unclassified oilseeds by
State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
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Table 9. Certified organic hay and silage.
Acres of alfalfa hay, haylage/silage, and other hay/pasture by
State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
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Table 10. Certified organic vegetables.
Acres of tomatoes, lettuce, carrots, mixed vegetables, and unclassified
vegetables by State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
|
Table 11. Certified organic fruit.
Acres of tree nuts, citrus, apples, grapes, and unclassified fruits by
State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
|
Table 12. Certified organic herbs, nursery
and greenhouse. Acres of herbs, cut flowers, mushrooms, and greenhouse/nursery
by State, 1997 and 2000-2005. |
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Table 13. Certified organic acreage of
other crops.
Acres of cotton, peanuts, potatoes, green manure cover crops, trees for
maple syrup, fallow and unclassified by State,
1997 and 2000-2005. |
Glossary
Definitions
used in these data are drawn from the final rule for the
USDA's National Organic Program, administered by the Agricultural
Marketing Service.
Related Resources
Updates
The next update of the organic production data series is expected to contain
estimates for 2006 and 2007. We hope to have these data available by the end
of 2008 as an update to this data product.
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