What is organic honey?

What is organic honey? What is raw honey? What’s the difference between them? These are frequent, yet justified questions. I asked them myself and here is what I have found about organic honey and why it is that expensive.

standards and conditions for organic honey

There is a set of standards and conditions that must be fulfilled in order to certify honey as “organic”. They consider:

– honey bees foraging area
The hives should be placed near clean water, within an area of 4 miles radius of natural organic crops (maximum distance bees travel from their hives), synthetic chemical-free vegetation, and away from polluted areas like industrial zones, cities etc.

– bee management: 
• all medical treatments necessary to combat the bee parasites must be made of natural products that leave no chemical  residues in honey.
• during winter, the bees should eat honey, but if too much honey is taken, then they should be fed only organic supplements (honey, sugar, fruit concentrate etc).

– honey management
• Hives must be made of natural materials and if painted, using non-toxic paint, kept free of mites, spiders, mice and other pests.
• The entire process of extracting the honey, processing temperature, packaging materials, storage and transportation should follow the standard rules and be made using natural organic materials.
• Analyses must be made to prove that there are no chemical residues (synthetic pesticides or other materials such as cleaning products or repellents, antibiotics or synthetic medicine etc. A single gram of antibiotics can contaminate 100 tons of honey!)
• No additives should be added to the original honey. E.g.: sugar, corn syrup, sweeteners, non-compliant honey etc.

According to An Analysis of Industry Developments and Growth Forecast 2023-2030, made by Bezinga.com, “The global Organic Honey market size was valued at USD 765.43 million in 2022 and is expected to expand at a CAGR of 5.87% during the forecast period, reaching USD 1078.01 million by 2028.” We are on the right path, I would say.

some organic certifications

All these standards were first stated by the EU and then by many other countries. In the United States, there are no specific standards for organic honey, and thus the labeling is done following the standards for organic farming. These are helpful, but they don’t guarantee anything about honey.

They say it is impossible to give explicit organic guidelines, because it is impossible to test ALL honey for residue. Moreover, hives can be placed in the middle of a field that covers 3 miles of natural, organic flowers, but can anybody know for sure, that one day, there wasn’t a wind that took pests from proximity and spread it on the natural field?

Can anybody tell for sure that the bees, in their search for good pollen, didn’t cross the border of those 3 miles and collected pollen from some flowers that were sprayed with harmful chemicals or from industrial sources?

Nevertheless, in other countries the testing does show the specific chemicals and their residue levels. And it seems that harmful pesticides are seldom found, somehow the bees don’t bring contaminated nectar into the hive.

In fact, bees die because of pesticides, as we all know it happened in the US in the latest years. This is the reason many countries have outlawed many of these pesticides. They were proven to be toxic and have disastrous effects on bees.

In US,  the USDA 100% organic seal is not a guarantee for organic honey. There are few federal standards for honey, but no government certification and no consequence for making false claims. (Instead, there are other alternative certification programs, as shown below.)

From the USDA Rules and Regulation:

  “…honey does not require official inspection in order to carry official USDA grade marks and since there are no existing programs that require the official inspection and certification of honey,…”

The USDA procedures say that a honey producer can label his honey as organic without a certification process if he sells less than $5,000 per year and follows the USDA organic guidelines and government standards. This is done to support and encourage small beekeepers.

So, if you want to buy honey from a local producer, it’s better to ask about the process and techniques used and check their websites. Subsequently, you can tell if the honey was organic, from your personal tests, and decide if you enjoyed and benefited from it. Then buy again from that producer.
For many small bee farmers, the process of getting certification from the government is time-consuming and expensive. Yet, there are alternative certification programs for the smaller organic beekeeper who wants to preserve high organic standards and remove financial barriers.

Quality Assurance International offers good guidelines for organic farming and participating in the alternative certification program.

Examples of standards and conditions in different countries:

In United States, from the standards for organic farming:
– USDA Organic Labeling and Marketing Information
– USDA Organic Certification: Required by farms wishing to label food, “Organic”
– USDA Organic Production and Handling Standards
In European Union: COMMISSION REGULATION (EC) No 889/2008
In Canada: Organic_Production_Systems_General_Principles_Canada; Organic_Agriculture_032_0310_1999-e_Canada
In United Kingdom: Compendium_of_UK_Organic_Standards
In Germany: COUNCIL REGULATION (EEC) No 2092/91
In Australia: NATIONAL STANDARD FOR ORGANIC AND BIO-DYNAMIC PRODUCE

For organic honey there are other Alternative Certification Programs like:
Certified Naturally Grown Apiary Certification Standards  (In USA)
WFA Honey Producer’s Pledge (in UK)

If we think of all the pesticides used today in agriculture then it seems obvious that organic honey is an illusion. Of course, in the remote pristine areas of the world where honey is still traditionally produced, organic is possible.

Besides the pesticides that poison the flowers, we also depend on beekeepers’ performance of being able to keep bees using only natural stuff. And the law should definitely be improved. If an American beekeeper sells under $5,000 per year, even if he uses antibiotics and  chemical treatment for the bees’ parasites, he can still brag that he is selling organic honey. That doesn’t help the consumer, who pays good money for a healthy product.

So, how can we know for sure? We can’t really. Only if the beekeeper is your acquittance and you trust him. If you don’t, then at least ask about where they have placed their hives.

In the USA, one example of the closest organic honey one can get is Raw Adirondack Wildflower Honey from the Mohawk Valley Trading Company. They place the bee hives in areas “deep in the Adirondacks” of New York State where there is an abundance of wildflowers.
Their jars are filled with unprocessed honey plus cappings, small particles of propolis, flecks of honey comb and grains of pollen that pass through the sieve when the honey is strained.

organic certifications in different countries

In 2023 here are the most reliable companies that produce organic honey, according to Bezinga,com: Barkman Honey, Heavenly Organics, Conscious Food, Little Bee Impex, ComvitaY.S. Organic Bee Farms, Langnese, Nature Nates, Rowse, GloryBee, Manuka Health, Sue Bee, Madhava Honey, Dutch Gold. You can find the majority of them on Amazon.

Further reading: Are there pesticides in honey?

Organic honey vs regular honey

references:
http://www.honeytraveler.com/types-of-honey/organic-honey/
http://www.bioapis.pt/index.php/en/organic-honey