Or. Admin. Code § 603-059-0060 - Definition of Labeling Terms
(1)
For labels and labeling, the State Department of Agriculture uses the following
definitions:
(a) Organic. Organic materials
are the remains, residues, or waste products of any organism, have a carbon
base, are 100% natural, and are allowed as inputs in organic crop production
under the USDA National Organic Program. If mixed with synthetic materials,
such as processing aids for extraction, stabilization, or isolation, the
combined material is no longer considered organic. An example of an organic
material would be ground kelp meal to which nothing has been added. An example
of a non-organic material would be kelp extract, processed with potassium
hydroxide, as the added potassium hydroxide is not an organic
material.
(b) Natural. Natural
materials exist in nature and have been altered from their original structure
only by physical manipulation (e.g. ground, screened, or pelletized), and may
or may not have a carbon base. Natural materials are allowed as inputs in
organic crop production under the USDA National Organic Program and must not be
mixed with synthetic materials. Examples of non-carbon based natural materials
would be mined limestone and mined potassium sulfate, to which nothing has been
added.
(c) Organic-based.
Organic-based materials are a mixed product in which more than half of the
materials are organic. If it is an organic-based fertilizer, more than half of
the sum of the guaranteed primary nutrient percentages must be derived from
organic materials. If it is an organic-based agricultural mineral, more than
half of the sum of the guaranteed nutrient percentages must be derived from
organic materials. If it is an agricultural amendment, more than half of the
total materials (by weight) must be derived from organic materials.
(d) Natural-based. Natural-based materials
are a mixed product in which more than half of the materials are natural. If it
is a natural-based fertilizer, more than half of the sum of the guaranteed
primary nutrient percentages must be derived from natural materials. If it is a
natural-based agricultural mineral, more than half of the sum of the guaranteed
nutrient percentages must be derived from natural materials. If it is an
agricultural amendment, more than half of the total materials (by weight) must
be derived from natural materials.
(e) Natural and Organic. Products containing
both natural and organic ingredients may be listed as "natural and organic."
Product labels may list the proportions of these materials, i.e., "95%
organic." As an example a product made of 30% blood meal, 20% bone meal, 20%
kelp meal, and 30% greensand could be described as "70% organic."
(f) Organic Input. A product in which all
ingredients comply with the requirements for producing organic agricultural
products under the USDA National Organic Program Final Rule, 7 CFR Part
205.
(g) Synthetic. A substance
that is formulated or manufactured by a chemical process or by a process that
chemically changes a substance extracted from naturally occurring plant,
animal, or mineral sources, except that such term shall not apply to substances
created by naturally occurring biological processes.
(h) Biotic or Bioactive. A product with a
guaranteed content of microbiological inoculum.
(i) No Phosphate Fertilizer. Fertilizer
products with less than 0.5% available phosphate (P2O5). This definition also
applies to other acceptable phrases used as descriptors which include, but are
not limited to, "phosphate free" and "phosphorus free".
(j) Low Phosphate Fertilizer. Fertilizer
products with available phosphate levels (P2O5) equal to, or greater than,
0.5%, but less than 1%.
(k)
Non-toxic. Materials incapable of causing harmful effects to living organisms.
As determined by the department, the claim must be adequately substantiated by
supporting data.
Notes
Stat. Auth: ORS 561.190 & ORS 633 as amended by Ch. 514 OL 2015 Stats.Implemented: ORS 633 as amended by Ch. 514 OL Stats
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.