Ethical Consumer

Ethical Consumer

Buyers' guide to honey

   

This is a free buyer's guide from Ethical Consumer, the UK's leading alternative consumer organisation. We research the social and environmental records of companies.

 

More detailed versions of this guide are available. See the links at the bottom of the page.

   

Best Buys as of February 2006
Best Buys logo

As our ratings are constantly updated, it is possible that these companies will not always come out top on the Ethiscore table.

Locally-produced honey will always be good options - particularly organic honey.
Equal Exchange (0131 554 5912) and Biofair score best for honey. Both are Fairtrade and organic.

Links

Brand
Rating
Equal Exchange organic honey [O,F]17
Equal Exchange honey [F]16
Biofair honey [F,O]15
Traidcraft honey [F]14.5
Swallows organic fairtrade honey [F,O]14
Tropical Forest Zambian honey [F,O]14
Rowse fairtrade honey [F]13.5
Rowse organic honey [O]13.5
Tiptree organic honey [O]13.5
Suma honey13
Swallows fairtrade honey [F]13
Swallows organic honey [O]13
Rowse honey12.5
Tiptree honey12.5
Streamline honey12
Swallows12
Tropical Forest honey12
Gales honey6.5

The higher the rating the more ethical the brand. This whole scorecard was last updated from our database on 14 October 2009 but some individual company ratings may have changed since then. Up to the minute information can be seen by subscribers using Ethiscore.
Learn more about our ratings.

It could be sweet

Honey making may conjure up images of rural idylls, but Lindsay Whalen finds that it's not always that way.

There has been a flurry of activity in the organic and fair trade arenas. There is even a choice of brand if you want to purchase Fairtrade organic honey! So is all this choice good?

Critics have argued that it's environmental madness to import foods that we can produce in the UK, such as fruit for preserves and honey, from the other side of the world. The resulting pollution adds to the menace of global warming. But what if we are also similarly concerned with the plight of impoverished producers in the Third World?

Cutting edge environmental thinking suggests that if we're to manage climate change equitably in the long-term, then everybody on the planet should be given an equal right to pollute, by giving them a fairly distributed carbon ration.


Fairtrade, organic or local?

This means that consumers wishing to support workers in the Third World can ignore the food miles issue and look out for brands that carry the Fairtrade mark.

Companies offering Fairtrade products are indicated by an F next to the brand name in the table. The Fairtrade label only applies to suppliers from the Third World. Therefore, honey and fruit preserves travelling from places like Australia, the US and New Zealand should probably be avoided. Consumers wishing to support regional producers can buy honey and preserves locally or from local farmers markets.

Commercial beekeepers, however, may use synthetic pesticides and antibiotics to combat pests, and this can lead to toxicological hazards for beekeepers and bees, and to risks of honey contamination.5 No UK produced honey can currently be labelled organic, because of problems of cross-contamination. Natural wholefood supplier Suma has chosen to provide UK honey rather than an organically certified one. Nicola Roebuck from Suma explained that currently to receive Soil Association "certification for honey, the bee hives must be on certified organic land and have a four mile radius of organic or uncultivated land." In the absence of an organic label for local honey, the only other option for consumers concerned about these issues is to talk to the producer directly. For reasons of space, this report does not include national listings of local honey suppliers.


Packaging

The best environmental option will be to buy spreads in glass jars. There is an increasing trend to package honey especially in squeezy plastic bottles. But glass is much easier to recycle than plastic, and glass jars are eminently reusable (for your own jam-making!). Most of the companies who responded to our request for information used some recycled glass content in their jars. This averaged at around 40%. By far the best was Tropical Forest, who claimed to use a minimum of 70% recycled glass content.


Animal Issues

Honey will always be off the cards for vegans as it is an animal product. According to the Vegan Society, bees "can go through routine examination and handling, artificial feeding regimes, drug and pesticide treatment, genetic manipulation, artificial insemination, transportation (by air, rail and road) and slaughter."(5) For example, queen bees can be artificially inseminated with sperm obtained from decapitated bees and may be slaughtered every two years because over time their egg producing abilities decline.(5) The Vegan Society also points out that smoke is puffed into the hives to calm the bees down, and handling can lead to bees being harmed.(5)


References

1 'Jam, jellies and chutneys,' BBC Food, www.bbc.co.uk viewed 13/1/06
2 'Sweet Smell of Excess,' The Ecologist 11/03
3 'What not to feed your child,' The Observer 10/4/05
4 'Response to the Policy Commission on the Future of Food and Farming,' Friends of the Earth 10/01
5 Vegan Society website, viewed 11/1/06
6 'Is it ok ... to drink orange juice?' The Guardian 10/1/06
7Conversation with Vegetarian Society representative 13/1/06
8 Food Magazine: No 71 2005
9 Greenpeace Shoppers Guide to GM, www.greenpeace.org 4/1/06
10 ENDS Report, 369 10/05



   

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3 comments so far...

Vegan Honey Dilemma

Since the new year I’ve converted to veganism for environmental and sustainability reasons and was glad to see that this choice has been supported by scientific research. (Vegans Save Planet - EC99 March/April 2006). But something has been bugging me about the vegan policy of not eating honey because it is an animal product.

I understand that if you’re vegan for animal welfare reasons, this policy applies, but if you’re vegan to reduce your environmental impact, surely it makes more sense to source your sweet stuff from honey? By this I mean that honey production generally requires less land than sugar production. In fact if it's sourced carefully, it could be described almost as a wild harvest requiring only the presence of both wild and/or already cultivated flowers. It can also be sourced locally to further reduce environmental impact. It’s also worth mentioning that bees perform the frequently overlooked yet fundamentally important ecological function of pollination.

I’m aware that hives require treatment with antibiotics if disease breaks out among the bees, but compare this relatively minor environmental drawback with the notorious drawbacks of sugar production (e.g. land clearance, pesticide production, erosion, workers’ conditions, transportation emissions) and I find it increasingly difficult to justify my choice to have golden syrup with my porridge rather than honey! Can you help?

Rebecca Smith, Northampton

By EC Letters Editor on   07/05/2008 12:11

Re: Buyers' guide to honey

Don't let your awareness - and you have a magnificient one from what I've read - be condicioned in any way. Because you can see the big picture and have dared to put something in question that many take for sure without reflecting deep enough you are way ahead: Do what you think is the right thing to do!

Take Care
Nicola Silva, Switzerland

By Nicola on   30/07/2008 08:52

Re: Vegan Honey Dilemma

While many think that honey is a natural product, it can be just as ethically suspect as any product derived from animals. Honey is not the substance it used to be; as it is more likely to come from hives that will be slaughtered at the end of the season to reduce costs and maximise profit. It should also be noted that honey is effectivly 'bee vomit'. Taking wild honey results in hives being destroyed and collonys killed and as it takes a mature hive many seasons to form wider ecological questions as to the validity of this type of harvesting have to be discussed. As for me I have managed to live without honey for the last 16 years, don't miss it and think that it's better off left to the bees!

By Paul Maxwell, Bristol on   30/08/2008 16:40

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