Tips categories
Articles with tips for going green to help protect the environment we all affect!
 
Renewable energy - solar power, wind energy and hot water
 
Special offer
NEW - Green Deal Of The Day! Save 50 - 90% on earth friendly products!
::
Buy castile soap and save! Learn more about uses for eco friendly castile soap
Popular Articles
  1. Brown rice vs white rice
  2. Hydrogen peroxide tips
  3. Uses for eucalyptus oil
  4. Handy borax tips
  5. Recycling styrofoam
  6. White sugar vs raw sugar
  7. Castile soap
  8. 30 baking soda tips
  9. 24 handy lemon tips
  10. White bread vs brown bread
No popular articles found.
Get involved!
Feel free to add comments to tips and blog posts & build on the information or click here to submit new earth friendly tips and environmental news items!
 
Green Living Tips on Twitter
 
Green Living Tips on Facebook

 
bookmark or share this page
 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  Poisoned tomatoes
Poisoned tomatoes
By Green Living Tips | Published  07/6/2010
HTML clipboardAustralian tomato lovers may soon be facing hefty price rises for their favored fruit after millions of tomato seedlings plants were deliberately poisoned on two farms in the northern state of Queensland.
  
The company affected supplies seedlings for 30 of the region's growers and its entire stock of 4 million young tomato plants, 2 million young capsicums, melon, pumpkin and eggplant seedlings have been lost. A hydroponic farm where 16,000 mature tomato plants were growing have also died.
 
According to a report on ABC news, a herbicide was injected into irrigation systems and it's the fourth time crops in the region have been poisoned.
 
It's a shocking crime from a human and environmental viewpoint. People in the area will lose much needed work and abuse of herbicide on such a scale is never a good thing; along with all the resources that have already been put into raising the seedlings.
 
The region produces well over half Australia's entire tomato crop and during the colder months, that percentage increases. It's estimated the sabotage will cost anywhere from AUD 23 - 50 million dollars.
 
When you think about all the products made with tomatoes, this will hit many industries hard and more tomatoes will have to be imported - adding to "food mile" carbon emissions.
 
While no-one is going to die of starvation from lack of tomatoes, it will impact many people negatively and it does highlight just how fragile our food systems are - and the cost of demanding out-of-season produce. It's also another tap on the shoulder that establishing a back yard vegetable garden is a good idea; not just for environmental and health reasons, but with food security in mind.
  



Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
Article reproduction guidelines
 

 
blog comments powered by Disqus
Archived/old comments

  • Comment #1 (Posted by starbrite)

    The big question on my mind is, "Why in the world would anyone do this?" I don't ask it rhetorically. I want to know the motives behind the deed. What was the purpose of doing this? Was it a disgruntled employee? Someone from a competing grower? Someone who just thought it might be funny? I'll be very interested in seeing what information materializes on this matter.
     
  • Comment submission link (no longer in use - please use new form above)