Showing posts with label organic food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label organic food. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Health is Wealth

The ill health of our economies and our natural systems are battling for first on the global agenda. Governments are trying to decide whether to invest in climate change mitigation or economic stimulus. Car companies are getting billion dollar bail outs while others suffer the economic downturn without aid. Treating the problems of the natural environment and the problems of the economy seperately is a mistake, economy and ecology are the same, the shared etymological root is oikos. Ecological health and economic health are inextricably linked. Boosting the economy without considering the natural consequences is addressing the symptom and not the problem. These global health issues must be treated holistically utilizing sustainable practices.

We must find ways to localize and reduce our ecological impacts. Our health and the health of our environment depends on it. As in the Son’s Flesh Sutra where a couple has to eat their own child to survive crossing the desert, if we continue to destroy the environment in order to feed the economy we have no chance of really surviving.

The good news is that holistic medicine for ill economies and natural systems are known and are being utilized. It starts with small communities. The benefits of community action in terms of management of natural resources and food production are incredible. When a community starts an organic garden or a sustainable forestry project they have healthy work, they promote natural systems, ecological tourism, hunting and harvesting, they make money or save some money by producing food for the table and reducing health risks.

On the global scale there are many effective and responsible organizations helping to make a greener future. The Forest Stewardship Council promotes international economically and ecologically responsible forestry management. The We can Solve It Campaign, The International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements, 350.org and The Slow Food Movement are more examples of socially, ecologically and economically responsible movers and shakers on an international scale.

TTD: I have just finished writing to the newly redesigned US Presidential Office of Public Liaison about the potential of organic and local food for supporting economies and mitigating climate change. The office of Public Liason is accepting and using information and suggestions from everyone. Write them a note about how you feel the US should approach these issues in a more holistic way.

Cory's Dr Green Blog Posts:
Small is Beautiful
Give Organic a Chance
Beekeeping
No Work Farming
Growing Organic



View Cory Whitney's profile on LinkedIn

Sunday, January 11, 2009

You Gotta Kill to Eat ‽

Way up here in the little mountain village of Andermatt I found myself having a mild argument about our practice in Maine of cooking lobster alive. The World's Finest Lobster Comes From Maine (Maine Lobster Council). I grew up with it and cannot bring myself to think of it as cruel. Many of my family and friends are fisherman and our meager economy is dependent on lobster. Likewise when I hear people grumbling about foie gras I think of the Besse family in Southern France. The Besse family makes the best foie gras you ever tasted (check out Dan Barber's Foie Gras Parable on Ted.com). They hosted me on their little farm for several days and showed me the warmest hospitality I am ever likely to experience. In France as in most other western countries the buyers of agricultural products are so big that it has become impossible for a small farm to survive on anything but a niche market.

The careful issue here that many of us feel uncomfortable admitting is that being alive necessitates death. This is one part of life: Life is suffering (many Buddhists eat animals) Even the tofu and the rice requires killing not only plants, but animals too - those harvesting machines don't pause to let snakes and rodents get clear before they cut, even if it did there would be the insects to consider and all the displaced species tat would otherwise live in the place of those fields.

I feel there is a partial solution for this moral dilemma, which is to know the life before it is taken. Meet the sheep and the cows, walk in the fields and get out on the water. Get to know the farmer and the fisherman who bring that food to your table and help them by supporting their business. Get to know their practices and lend a hand. In all likelihood when you meet that local farmer, fisherman, hunter or gatherer you will come to enjoy your food more and you will certainly have a better sense of what it takes to keep you alive.

For more information about locally grown food check Out Meet Your Local Farmer from Mother Earth News and Sustainable Table. For information and resources about seafood check out Sustainable Fisheries from MarineBio, Sustainable Fisheries from WWF and Sustainable Seafood from Earth Easy. To meet a local fisherman or Farmer go for a walk, ask around and encourage your neighbors to do the same.




View Cory Whitney's profile on LinkedIn

Cory's Dr Green Blog Posts:
Small is Beautiful
Give Organic a Chance
Beekeeping
No Work Farming
Growing Organic

Friday, September 5, 2008

Small is Beautiful; How Local Organic Can Steer Us Away from Catastrophe

By Cory Whitney (First Published in Ecology and Farming Issue 43)

CNN announced in May that Wal-Mart, now the world's largest corporation, has also become the largest retailer of organic milk. There was a time when organic farmers and producers wouldn't have expected their products to end up in a big box store, now even the largest food markets have organic sections. These sales boosts represent both successes and failures for organic. The success is that more farm land is being managed organically. The benefits to the watershed, the farmers, and all the immediately associated biotic and social communities are immeasurable. The failure is that intensified production and increased food-miles have negative effects on these same communities. Large retailers selling organic products may be undermining the high ideals that got the Organic Movement where it is today.
There is a guilty pleasure that comes with eating fresh fruits and vegetables year round. Ripe bananas and strawberries can be purchased when snow is still on the ground - lush greens and melons in the middle of a dry season. The problem is that those organic goods go through a lot to get to us, and it is a system of distribution that does not echo the standards and original ideals of organic agriculture. The greens for our organic salads are trucked from a farm to a processor, who packages and ships that produce to a distributor, who then sends the produce to other distributors or to market. The still perky, fresh greens meet us at the opposite end of a long food supply chain that covers many thousands of miles. The associated biotic and social communities for this 'beyond production' impact are easy to overlook, the distribution process is designed to be invisible.
There is no doubt; organic is the way to grow. The benefits of supporting organic agriculture outweigh the negative aspects of shipping in many cases. The positive environmental impacts of ecological farming practices are the impetus of the organic farmers and consumers. The organic farm consumes nearly no fossil fuel, yet it has the potential to produce food at nearly the same rate as an industrial farm while maintaining a diversity of crops. It is not only better for the farmers, the farm life, and consumers; it mitigates global climate change. Organic agriculture minimizes the release of greenhouse gasses. It does not use nitrogen fertilizers; therefore no nitrous oxide is released into the atmosphere. It does not use pesticides and therefore supports biodiversity. By composting and crop and animal grazing rotations organic contributes to further reductions in the releases of significant greenhouse gasses. Carbon sequestration takes place in the thick, healthy soil and surrounding biotic life. Organic agriculture actively improves the health of ecosystems beyond the farm by encouraging agro-forestry and forbidding the clearance of primary eco-systems.
Buying our food is an opportunity to ‘vote’ for the practices which we most agree with. This vote that we make with our investment in sustainable production can outweigh the impact of transportation. Even when accounting for the long distances that the products have to travel we may still effect positive change through our purchases. When Europeans choose to buy organic cotton from cooperative producers in India rather than conventional genetically modified cotton from a closer source they make a statement with their purchase. They pledge a vote for biodiversity, seed diversity, for the inherent community health of traditional organic farming rather than modern industrial methods, and for the livelihoods of hard working, environmentally conscientious people.
Buying organic and local is consistent with the moral standards of the organic movement. Among the many benefits of this choice is the decrease in food-miles. The shorter the supply chains the greater the profits for the farmer. Small farms with sales within the district they are grown are more economically viable and ecologically sustainable. With a strong emphasis on local food production economies can rely less on imports for sustenance.

There is a problematic blurring taking place today. The (altruistic) organic, and the (economic) industrial ideals are blended together in marketing models around the world. The unfortunate trend, now well established in the United States and catching on globally, is for demand at supermarket level to change the way food is grown. Markets with sales as large as Wal-Mart and McDonald's cannot do business with small producers. Even the smallest dairy operation demands thousands of gallons of milk per day from a farmer in order to justify a relationship with a supplier. Because of this market demand and consequent strain on the producer, the shift in production from small to industrial becomes inevitable. Having no options but to 'go big or go home' small farms around the world are disappearing.
Among the many victims in this system is the word 'organic' itself. In places, like California, with large industrial operations 'organic' has taken on a different, even slightly ominous meaning. Food is produced in California's rural central valley at a super-industrial level and then shipped to distribution centers all over the US. This kind of organic production on an industrial scale, with shipping long distances after production seems to miss the 'big idea'.
In the interest of making informed shopping votes we must ask fundamental questions about our food. This requires initiative on our part to be sure we understand the costs and benefits of different foods available at the local market.
We should ask ourselves these basic questions each time we walk down the produce aisle, through the bazaar, around the farmers market, or into the deli: Where did this food come from? (A few hundred miles of shipping must be weighed against the production methods and practices. A shorter supply chain usually equates to a smaller carbon footprint.) How much was it processed? (Stewing, grinding, baking and fermenting are all secondary processes which require another level of infrastructure, transportation, and storage for the food.) How is it packaged? (Much of the packaging is unnecessary and can negate the benefits of eating organic.) If we take these into account, and actively research our food sources, we will make substantial changes in our individual and communal ecological impacts.
Choosing local organic produce is voting for fair practices and standards for our whole Earth community. Organic agriculture's decreased use of fossil fuels and lack of fertilizers and pesticides all lead to a system that is helping to change the relationship between people and their natural environments. Choosing local foods further reduces ecological impacts by decreasing the transportation costs. Everyone has an important role to play in realizing this critical transformation. Governments should be supporting local and sustainable practices, encouraging and rewarding small scale transformation from conventional to organic. Donor and development agencies should have organic agriculture programs based on outreach, awareness, and best practices, especially in ecologically sensitive regions. More funding should be invested in research to improve existing farming and local marketing techniques. Farmers should grow organic for their communities rather than for large suppliers. Finally, and most importantly, we consumers should be choosing locally grown organic food.

View Cory Whitney's profile on LinkedIn