The FSA is planning a major review of the science surrounding organic food, after a 12 m [pounds sterling] independent study concluded organic produce contains overwhelmingly more nutrients than conventional produce.
The most recent claims stem from a five-year study being conducted by Newcastle University examining the differences between conventional and organic wheat, cabbage, lettuce, tomato and olives.At present, the FSA website simply notes that "the valance of scientific opinion does not support the view" that organic food is safer or more nutritious.The diesel engine is especially impressive, massive torque makes light work of shift the big 6 along and once you hit cruising speeds it remains as quiet and as smooth as any of the petrol models.Exceptional comfort and refinement melds seamlessly with incredible agility through the corners and massive grip."There is now enough evidence to show that the level of good things is higher in organics," he said.Regenerative braking (using the energy from braking to charge the battery) now features on the 6-series as does a host of other minor tweaks to lessen environmental impact."We're tendering now for an independent review of the science and would expect to get a handle on it by the end of the spring," she said. "Then we'd get input from independent experts."
Back in March, three independent European projects concluded organic tomatoes, peaches and processed apples were nutritionally superior.
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