USDA Organic Honey – What Does It Mean?

Organic Label from the United States Department of Agriculture

We’ve All Seen It

We have all seen the USDA certification symbol on some honeys.  But what does it really mean?  It can mean a lot, or it can mean nothing at all.  Confusing?  Yes.  And that’s the best term for honey labeled “organic”.

According to an email correspondence I had with the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service “, honey can be certified organic using the organic livestock standards… However, NOSB {National Organic Standards Board} recommendations are not part of the regulations until/unless the National Organic Program adopts through rulemaking process.”

In more normal words: Your honey can be certified organic by the US government, although they have no regulations to define organic honey.  You got to love the federal government.

WHO CERTIFIES IT ORGANIC?

UNITED STATES HONEY:

The federal government does not inspect for organic honey. In the US there are certifying agencies that will certify honey as organic.  They seem to use the NOSB recommendations.  But as I mentioned before the USDA has never accepted the recommendations.

IMPORTED HONEY:

If the honey is harvested outside of the US it is considered Organic if it meets that country’s organic standards as well as the US standards.  Remember, there are NO U.S. STANDARDS, so compliance on that point is quite easy.  In some countries Organic standards are rough: the UK, the European Union, Canada, Singapore…they all have tough standards.  In other places, “organic” honey is not so “organic”.

WHAT MAKES IT ORGANIC IN THE US?

The independent certifying agencies in the US do pretty much follow the NOSB’s recommendations.  It’s not easy to make the grade, and it’s not cheap for large producers.

Small producers who make less than $5000 worth of organic honey in a year have it easier.  They can just put on the USDA Organic Label.  Someone might come round to check your records, but who knows when.  After all, there are no government regulations.

For all other organic honey producers the check list offered by most agencies is extensive.  And everything must be documented.  Just a few items covered are:

1) Forage: What the bees eat and drink

2) Where they live and what they live in and on.

3) What the beekeeper feeds them

4) How the beekeeper treats them for parasites

5) How the beekeeper processes the honey they produce

6) How the beekeeper labels that honey

7) How the beekeeper keeps records

FORAGE: What and Where The Bees Eat

Honeybees fly an average of 2 miles from their hives in their search for nectar and pollen.  A hive would have to be in the center of a minimally 16 square miles of organic plants.  Wild plants sound good but there could be an issue there if the hives are near any land where herbicides are used, which includes much of the Dept of Natural Resources lands.  The list of prohibited places goes on to include such places as non-organic farms, golf courses, residential neighborhoods, and industrial areas.  Places where water may contain chemicals is off-limits.  In a bow to our present form of agriculture, genetically modified crops are a no-go zone, one to which an even greater buffer zone is added.   Basically if the bees can reach any area that has chemicals, synthetic fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides, or sludge, they cannot produce organic honey.  This requirement alone will make the production of organic honey impossible for most beekeepers (If you live in a place like this: 16 square miles of no chemicals, please share where that is.)

HOW THE BEES LIVE

Let’s say you have the perfect place to put your hives.  Now you have to give them an organic environment in which to live.  The hive boxes are pretty simple: wood.  But the foundation is a bit more of a challenge.  Beeswax foundation must be organic.  That’s really, really hard to find.  You can make your own, but it has to be from your organic hives, which you can’t have until you get that organic foundation – Catch 22.

Strangely, to me, plastic foundation can be used, as long as it’s coated with organic wax.  Organic wax is difficult to find.   Smaller apiaries that meet all the other organic recommendations could start with foundationless hives, and use that wax.  We are talking about a lot of time here.

TREATMENTS FOR PARASITES

Chemicals are out; no real surprise there.  So it’s screened bottom boards, physical traps, and other integrated pest management techniques.  Some of the milder miticide treatments are considered OK: The thyme based ApiLifeVar and ApiGard as well as Formic Acid.  The recommendations I’ve seen are considering including Oxalic Acid in the mix.  None of the ingredients in these are organic, but they are natural (not synthesized chemicals).

TOO MANY RECOMMENDATIONS TO MENTION

There are far more recommendations, they can be found In a PDF at:

www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-11-08/pdf/2011-28800.pdf

The recommendations range from the type and temperature of equipment used during extraction (stainless steel and cold knives) to how the honey is labeled as well as how, when, and what records must be kept and where the bees come from – and how long they have lived in organically certified hives.

Before any agency will certify the apiary has to have a record of being organic for one year.  My hat’s off to any beekeeper who actually does the work to meet all the recommendations.  Sadly, after all that work, they’ll still be competing with “organic” honey from countries that have lesser organic standards and from companies that will simply put a USDA Organic label on their honey without going though a certifying agency (remember, that’s not a government agency because the US government does not have any Organic Honey Standards).

WHAT IF YOU JUST PUT ON THE LABEL?

It’s a $10,000 fine.

BROOKFIELD FARM BEES?

Hives At Brookfield Farm, Maple Falls, WA

Some Hives At the Farm

Nope, we’re not organic and could never be.  My down-river bee yards are in agricultural areas; you can bet pesticides are in used in some of those fields.  My mountain bee yards are all within 2 miles of Washington Dept of Natural Resource lands, where herbicides are routinely used to knock down Alders and Maple Trees that grow in the clear cuts.

I don’t use antibiotics and have always used natural pest control methods.  But I do use beeswax foundation – I just don’t like plastic, even if our government recommendations say it’s OK if you cover it in organic wax.  That just doesn’t make sense to me.  So no USDA Organic Honey from us, just wonderful honey from hives where only natural treatments are used.  It rather fits my philosophy: Do as little harm as possible as we stumble though this world.  And always tell your customers how you manage your bees.

Hope you all had a wonderful holiday season and the new year brings great joys.

About brookfieldfarmhoney

Brookfield Farm, a small off-grid apiary in Maple Falls, WA focuses on the beauty and bounties of Washington’s wilderness. I sell honey from our bees, whose naturally-treated, antibiotic-free hives are home to bees who fly Washington’s mountains and farmlands. Herbal salves and lip balms from Brookfield beeswax. Delicately infused honeys and vinegars. Varietal honeys from independent Washington beekeepers. Karen Edmundson Bean: beekeeper, photographer. Her love of the wilderness inspires her to discover new ways of bringing the wonders of nature to others. Brookfield Farm : the tastes, textures, sounds, and images of nature.
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28 Responses to USDA Organic Honey – What Does It Mean?

  1. Kasey says:

    Hi, this is kasey from Atlas Foods Distribution company, I would like to have your products to distribute to our customers,
    we distribute to restaurants and markets and catering companies. Please send me your products list as well as wholesale prices and your requirements as soon as you can. you can e-mail me or call me at the 713-530-4125 or kasey@atlasfoods.us
    Thanks,
    Kasey

    • I’ll drop you a line via my farm email (the library where I can get WiFi has a wall that affects my company email (so I get to read those outside a gas station!). I’m flattered, but I think I’m way too small. Your products look wonderful

  2. Sabrina M Bowen says:

    Here is my question… Most in-store honey brands are NOT real honey. 98%+ have a ZERO pollen count. They are made up mostly of corn syrup, but are marked (and legally sold) as “honey.” IF something is marked “USDA Organic” does that mean it has to be honey? Or could it just be “organic corn syrup” playing at being honey?

    • This is just my opinion but here’s my answer: There are no official Organic Standards in the US for honey (just suggestions). However, the amount of hoops and cash that people jump though and pay to get the Organic seal for HONEY PRODUCED IN THE U.S. are pretty high, so if they’re going to go though all that, my bet is that their product is probably honey. Now, if you talk about USDA Organic on a product from another country, you need to research the organic standards in the COUNTRY OF ORIGIN and how business is done in those countries. A producer in another country must only meet their own country’s organic standards to receive a USDA organic seal. Best bet: talk to the beekeepers from whom you buy honey – this way you can get honey and support your local beekeepers

  3. Nicholas says:

    I think since the USDA does not want to get involved with organic honey, that the organization bodies of beekeeping associations all should form a “industry organic” label and have specific requirements as well as some proof of testing in order to test and approve organic honey. This is 2014 and the USDA is lacking on this department? Wow! Hopefully they will get it all together someday. Great blog btw. -Nicholas http://kybeeco.com

    • There are companies that will oversee the USDA suggestions – which is how the approved US companies can get a label. The aspects that drive me a bit mad (as if all beekeepers aren’t there already) is that 1) the USDA just doesn’t issue a set of standards – but that bureaucracy for you and 2) if and when they do — and even now to get overseen for suggestions– it costs a fortune. More like a money-making scheme than trying to keep food labeled correctly. Glad you like the blog.

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  5. Reblogged this on My Adventures in Beekeeping and commented:
    A great overview that explains why organic honey is a moving target. The short answer, in my opinion, is that it doesn’t exist, no matter how you play with the terminology.

    • I pretty much agree with you. I figure that somewhere in northern Scotland there might be bees making organic honey (plus UK organic standards are amazingly strict)…but in general – you can’t tell a bee where to go (I’ve certainly tried, but they just don’t listen).

      • It’s amazing to me that you can slap a USDA Organic on something that can’t really be organic. It’s not surprising to me, but still disturbing!

        • I know, it’s beyond me. I’d qualify for “organic” but I know what the organic farmers and ranchers have to go though, so I think that until they day we can tell the bees where to fly (or live in 16 square miles of nothing but organic plants with no paved roads), that Treatment-Free or Naturally-Treated are better description than organic.

  6. P says:

    (If you live in a place like this: 16 square miles of no chemicals, please share where that is.)
    This comment was such a good laugh. Brilliant. Thank you:):):)

  7. CLIFFORD MWALE says:

    I would like to learn about how the certification process is done. How honey producers in Malawi Africa sale honey or organic honey to USA?

    • I don’t know the ins and outs of importing to the US – but I do know that for honey coming to the US from other nations, must qualify in the nation of origin for that country’s organic certification, then that automatically makes it organic here. Hope that helps

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  9. cubawashere says:

    I’m only commenting, to thank you for your honesty! Such a rare occurrence in today’s world. I completely agree with you. On a plus side, I will receive notifications when other people comment. I also want to know of such an area pesticide & chemical free! Lol God bless, Merry Christmas (due to the time of year) & hope you continue to thrive!

  10. crblock says:

    If a bee flies an average of 2 miles from its hive, it will cover on average a square area of pi*(r)(r) or pi*(2)(2) = 12.6 sq miles; however, a honey bee may fly up to 4 miles from its hive, so in reality the honey bees of a single hive could cover pi*(4)(4) or over 50 sq miles!

    • I could be wrong here, but put hive in center of grid (I do this in a square – I know a circle is better – your pi r-squared) 2 miles on each side of the hive totals 4 miles total (left to right, or east to west), 2 miles above and below hive totals 4 miles (up and down or north to south) 4X4 = 16 square miles (with a bit off on the corners, which is why yours is more precise – if they only covered 2 miles from the hive) – but I agree, it’s way more in reality…I’ve heard 25 square miles is now the accepted distance the bees might cover — but thanks for the math

  11. Tom Oppeneer says:

    Karen, yes there is such a place and it exists in the sandhills of Nebraska. I currently have
    bees on such a place, with over 30 square miles of pesticide free land. Hopefully I can create
    a somewhat organic honey product. I still use your burlap method on the tops of my beehive
    frames, might have to check if the burlap is organic? I enjoy your blogs, keep up the good
    work. Hope you have a good season.

  12. That is fabulous. I shall now site that when people ask me at Market. You are going to have one of the most unique and exlusive products in the US, truly Organic Honey.

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  15. Claudia says:

    Can honey collected from wild beehives – the colonies that grow inside hollow tree trunks, ground etc – not in wooden boxes – be considered and sold as organic or even be sold for human consumption?

    • There is a clause that I don’t quite get that will allow a hive’s honey to be sold as organic even if it does not meet federal suggestions (no rules on organic honey) – I’ve tried to get the USDA to explain this, but have not gotten an answer so far. But to the question is a wild hive’s hone organic – it would depend on the location of the hive. If it’s in a location with 25 miles of organic around it, then I’d say it’s organic. If it’s in a location where bees could get to any chemicals in a 2.5 radius of the location, then it’s not organic. The wild hive would be considered a treatment free hive, and the honey would thus be from a treatment free hive.. No restrictions on selling it…the labeling is the question. I’d just go with Wild Bee Honey, Treatment Free Hive. Hope that makes sense.

  16. A W H says:

    Great article! I’m starting to see a lot more US companies using imported honey from places like Brazil and India to meet demands and I’ve been growing quite skeptical that these products are organic and have started searching out US companies with honey from US raised bees with natural practices.

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