Taking a quote from an earlier post - "the only effective solution: a shift from a globalised, industrial food
system governed by corporations in search of profits to one that is
determined democratically and based upon production for people’s needs
rather than the market" - published below are recommendations or demands addressing the problems caused by the capitalist profit system.
Now just imagine that the system is determined democratically and based upon production for people's needs - so much to gain for our shared planet and all of its inhabitants. Socialism is that other system.
5 steps to cool the planet and feed its people
1. Take care of the soil
The food/climate equation is rooted in the earth. The expansion of
unsustainable agricultural practices over the past century has led to
the destruction of between 30-75% of the organic matter on arable lands,
and 50% of the organic matter on pastures and prairies. This massive
loss of organic matter is responsible for between 25% and 40% of the
current excess CO2 in the earth's atmosphere. But the good news is that
this CO2 that we have sent into the atmosphere can be put back into the
soil, simply by restoring the practices that small farmers have been
engaging in for generations. If the right policies and incentives were
in place worldwide, soil organic matter contents could be restored to
pre-industrial agriculture levels within a period of 50 years – which is
roughly the same time frame that industrial agriculture took to reduce
it. This would offset between 24-30% of all current global greenhouse
gas emissions.
2. Natural farming, no chemicals
The use of chemicals on industrial farms is increasing all the time, as
soils are further depleted and pests and weeds become immune to
insecticides and herbicides. Small farmers around the world, however,
still have the
knowledge and the diversity of crops and animals to farm productively
without the use of chemicals by diversifying cropping systems,
integrating crop and animal production, and incorporating trees and wild
vegetation. These practices enhance the productive potential of the
land because they improve soil fertility and prevent soil erosion. Every
year more organic matter is built up in the soil, making it possible to
produce more and more food.
3 Cut the food miles, and focus on fresh food
The corporate logic that results in the shipment of foods around the
world and back again, makes no sense from an environmental perspective,
or any other perspective for that matter. The global trade in food, from
the opening of vast swaths of lands and forests to produce agricultural
commodities to the frozen foods sold in supermarkets, is the chief
culprit in the food system's overweight contribution to GHG emissions.
Much of the food system's GHG emissions can be eliminated if food
production is reoriented towards local markets and fresh foods, and away
from cheap meat and processed foods. But achieving this is probably the
toughest fight of all, as corporations and governments are deeply
committed to expanding the trade in foods.
4. Give the land back to the farmers, and stop the mega plantations
Over the past 50 years, a staggering 140 million hectares – the size of
almost all the farmland in India – has been taken over by four crops
grown predominantly on large plantations: soybeans, oil palm, rapeseed
and sugar cane. The global area under these and other industrial
commodity crops, all of them notorious emitters of greenhouse gases, is
set to further grow if policies don't change. Today, small farmers are
squeezed onto less than a quarter of the world's farmlands, but they
continue to produce most of the world’s food – 80% of the food in
non-industrialised countries says the FAO. Small farmers produce this
food far more efficiently than big plantations, and in ways that are
better for the planet. A worldwide redistribution of lands to small
farmers, combined with policies to help them rebuild soil fertility and
policies to support local markers, can reduce GHG emissions by half
within a few decades.
5. Forget the false solutions, focus on what works
There is growing recognition that food is central to climate change.
The latest IPCC reports and international summits have recognised that
food and agriculture are major drivers of GHG emissions and that climate
change poses tremendous challenges to our capacity to feed a growing
global population. Yet there has been zero political will to challenge
the dominant model of industrial food production and distribution.
Instead, governments and corporations are proposing a number of false
solutions. There is the empty shell of Climate Smart Agriculture, which
is essentially just a rebranding of the Green Revolution. There are new,
risky technologies such as crops genetically engineered for drought
resistance or large scale geo-engineering projects. There are mandates
for biofuels, which are driving land grabs in the South. And there are
carbon markets and REDD+ projects, that essentially allow the worst GHG
offenders to avoid cuts in emissions by turning the forests and
farmlands of peasants and indigenous peoples into conservation parks and
plantations. None of these "solutions" can work because they all work
against the only effective solution: a shift from a globalised,
industrial food system governed by corporations to local food systems in
the hands of small farmers.
from here
No comments:
Post a Comment