Food & agriculture - July 6
by Staff
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And this is why Allen is so fond of his worms. When you’re producing a quarter of a million dollars’ worth of food in such a small space, soil fertility is everything. Without microbe- and nutrient-rich worm castings (poop, that is), Allen’s Growing Power farm couldn’t provide healthful food to 10,000 urbanites — through his on-farm retail store, in schools and restaurants, at farmers’ markets and in low-cost market baskets delivered to neighborhood pickup points. He couldn’t employ scores of people, some from the nearby housing project; continually train farmers in intensive polyculture; or convert millions of pounds of food waste into a version of black gold. With seeds planted at quadruple density and nearly every inch of space maximized to generate exceptional bounty, Growing Power is an agricultural Mumbai, a supercity of upward-thrusting tendrils and duct-taped infrastructure. Allen pointed to five tiers of planters brimming with salad greens. “We’re growing in 25,000 pots,” he said. Ducking his 6-foot-7 frame under one of them, he pussyfooted down a leaf-crammed aisle. “We grow a thousand trays of sprouts a week; every square foot brings in $30.” He headed toward the in-ground fish tanks stocked with tens of thousands of tilapia and perch. Pumps send the dirty fish water up into beds of watercress, which filter pollutants and trickle the cleaner water back down to the fish — a symbiotic system called aquaponics. The watercress sells for $16 a pound; the fish fetch $6 apiece. Onward through the hoop houses: rows of beets and chard. Out back: chickens, ducks, heritage turkeys, goats, beehives. While Allen narrated, I nibbled the scenery — spinach, arugula, cilantro. If inside the greenhouse was Eden, outdoors was, as Allen explained on a drive through the neighborhood, “a food desert.” Scanning the liquor stores in the strip malls, he noted: “From the housing project, it’s more than three miles to the Pick’n Save. That’s a long way to go for groceries if you don’t have a car or can’t carry stuff. And the quality of the produce can be poor.” Fast-food joints and convenience stores selling highly processed, high-calorie foods, on the other hand, were locally abundant. “It’s a form of redlining,” Allen said. “We’ve got to change the system so everyone has safe, equitable access to healthy food.” Propelled by alarming rates of diabetes, heart disease and obesity, by food-safety scares and rising awareness of industrial agriculture’s environmental footprint, the food movement seems finally to have met its moment.
Congratulations to Ezra, one of the most widely respected political bloggers out there. More food-politics columnists, please! It’s fantastic to see an august newspaper, still widely read by policymakers in the capitol, take the topic this seriously. It would be nice to see the column take its place on the Op-ed page with the quote-unquote serious opinion (it currently resides in the food section); but we’ll take what we get. My advice to Ezra is this: Don’t submit to the creeping Broderism that haunts your new editorial home—a Beltway-centered worldview that hones in on narrow details within tightly defined debates, incapable of asking broader or even interesting questions. I would argue that it is Broderism—named after the hallowed and unreadable Post columnist—and not the Internet that has pushed the newspapers to the brink of irrelevancy. Food is such a beguiling, attractive, and vexing topic precisely because it is so broad and far-reaching. It refuses to stay between the lines. In your inaugural column, you write: [I]t’s not that something is wrong with our food. It’s that particular things are wrong with our food. And knowing what those things are is the first step toward fixing them. As you investigate the “particular things [that] are wrong with our food,” I think you’ll find yourself wandering into broader fields, including political economy (to speak nothing of science!). Our food system doesn’t exist, and wasn’t created in, a vacuum. And it won’t be “fixed” in a vacuum either. To put it crudely, if we’re going to be a nation populated largely by Wal-Mart workers earning near-poverty-level wages, then our food conglomerates had better know how to profitably crank out extremely cheap food—and they’d better employ a team of food scientists who know how to make it taste good. That situation can’t be “fixed” by merely tweaking the Farm Bill or any other D.C. policy mechanism (as much as those mechanisms need tweaking). New food systems (note the plural) will require new economic models. It might be more fruitful to stop looking for for big fixes and start looking for alternatives—which are being constructed on the ground all over the nation and world. At any rate, welcome to the table, Ezra. Bon appetit! And here’s to yet more new food-system voices in the media—especially ones from people-of-color communities who remain largely marginalized in these vital debates. Like farm fields and much else, public debate thrives on diversity.
Fresh news on sustainable food is popping up everywhere online these days, but consistency is a virtue. As the editor of a food policy blog, I rely on these sites to inform and feed my own work. But anyone, from an ag policy wonk to a newbie just learning about the perils facing the food system, can find something here. A look at 10 of my favorite regular reads: The Ethicurean has been a leader, churning out hard-hitting stories on food policy, food safety and the models for improving the food system. Featuring the writing of editor Bonnie Powell, Elanor Starmer and others, the newly redesigned site has also come to be known as the place to catch up on the weekly food policy news via their well-sourced digest. Check out Powell’s recent look at the allotment system in Britain.
New reports from the UN and analysts in India, Washington and London estimate that at least 30m hectares is being acquired to grow food for countries such as China and the Gulf states who cannot produce enough for their populations. According to the UN, the trend is accelerating and could severely impair the ability of poor countries to feed themselves. Today it emerged that world leaders are to discuss what is being described as "land grabbing" or "neo-colonialism" at the G8 meeting next week. ... De Schutter said that after the food crisis of 2008, many countries found food imports hit their balance of payments, "so now they want to insure themselves". "This is speculation, betting on future prices. What we see now is that countries have lost trust in the international market. We know volatility will increase in the next few years. Land prices will continue to rise. Many deals are even now being negotiated. Not all are complete yet." He said that about one-fifth of the land deals were expected to grow biofuel crops.
In the past year, the smallholder retailer Countrywide has seen a 40 per cent increase in net sales across all poultry products in the past year. Simon McEwan, editor of Country Smallholding magazine, said: “Many suppliers report that business has been very brisk over the past year. From humble beginnings in the 1970s, the grow-your-own revolution is gathering pace. “Concerns about food security, climate change, food miles and the energy crisis are also considerations. No doubt the credit crunch is having an effect too.” RASE’s Sarah Beveridge said: “Keeping chickens is just the start. We will be offering advice and practical demonstrations on beekeeping, milking goats, and even spinning the wool from your own alpacas – not to mention how to prepare a pig for slaughter or the artificial insemination of goats.”
“Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?,” asks the title of an article by Lester Brown in Scientific American (May 2009). Just a few years ago, such a question would have seemed almost laughable. Few will be surprised by it today. In 2008 people woke up to a tsunami of hunger sweeping the world. Although the prospect of rising hunger has loomed on the horizon for years, the present crisis seemed to come out of the blue without warning. Food riots spread through many countries in the global South as people tried to obtain a portion of what appeared to be a rapidly shrinking supply of food, and many governments were destabilized.
... This issue of Monthly Review has two parts: the first deals with the history, politics, and economics of the food and agriculture crisis — how it developed and its characteristics in selected countries. Articles in this issue by Philip McMichael, Walden Bello and Mara Baviera, Utsa Patnaik, Sophia Murphy, and Deborah Fahy Bryceson offer a mix of historical and contemporary outlooks on the underlying roots of the crisis, as seen from a variety of international perspectives. The second part of this issue discusses the possibilities for improving systems of food and farming as well as attempts to develop more secure food supplies for all people. David Pimentel addresses questions concerning energy and agriculture while Miguel Altieri discusses better ways to grow crops, organize production, and feed people. Christina Schiavoni and William Camacaro describe how Venezuela is working to reach food sovereignty, and articles by Peter Rosset and Eric Holt-Giménez explore the struggle for food through social movements and the push for meaningful land reform. |
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