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Thursday
May072009

reclaiming farming

We're discussing agriculture and farming in Wales on 27 May at Hay on Earth, and this article by Kevin Kelly captures many of the issues that we'll be discussing to create a food plan for Wales:

Farming has become an occupation and cultural force of the past. Michael Pollan’s talk promoted the premise — and hope — that farming can become an occupation and force of the future. In the past century American farmers were given the assignment to produce lots of calories cheaply, and they did. They became the most productive humans on earth. A single farmer in Iowa could feed 150 of his neighbors. That is a true modern miracle. “American farmers are incredibly inventive, innovative, and accomplished. They can do whatever we ask them, we just need to give them a new set of requirements.”

The benefit of a reformed food system, besides better food, better environment and less climate shock, is better health and the savings of trillions of dollars. Four out of five chronic diseases are diet-related. Three quarters of medical spending goes to preventable chronic disease. Pollan says we cannot have a healthy population, without a healthy diet. The news is that we are learning that we cannot have a healthy diet without a healthy agriculture. And right now, farming is sick.

Pollan outlined what this recovery for American farmers and food producers should be. First a post-modern food system should be “resolarized.” Right now it takes 10 calories of fossil fuel to manufacture 1 calorie of food on average, and 55 calories to produce 1 calorie of beef. If any industry should be solar-based it should be food, which was the “original solar economy.” Instead, right now “we are eating oil.” Cheap oil and farm policies subsidize the 5 main crops (and only those crops), upon which the rest of our cheap food system is based. These main crops are planted as monocultures, which require cheap pesticides and fertilizers and produce wastes that are all problems in themselves. Pollan’s solution is not to dismantle the food system but to redirect it. Because of the long-term planning and learning that stewarding land requires, he believes subsidies of some type are essential for agriculture. Agriculture, he stated, should not be a freemarket. By picking the proper incentives we can re-localize, re-solarize, and revive the healing power of balanced farms and wholesome gardens.

Governments should reward farmers for diversifying away from monocultures. Pollan gave a few examples of where this has worked at scale. They should be rewarded for growing cover crops with the benefit of reducing erosion. Rewarded for returning animals to the mix. Rewarded for the amount of carbon they sequester in soil. Rewarded for halting urban sprawl by keeping farmland intact. In fact farmland should find a similar status as wetlands; developers and communities get “credit” for retaining farmland. Farmers should be rewarded for localize food provision. If only 2% of government contracts for food (as in school lunch programs, or government-run hospitals) required that the food be produced within 100 miles, it would transform the food system.

How might such change happen? Only if consumers and citizens demand it. One thing that might help is if web cams and images of the actual feed lot, or slaughterhouse, were required to be available for food that flowed through it. Imagine getting a carton of milk that showed not a metaphorical alpine meadow, but the real cages of the real dirty cows that produced that liter of milk. Or put a second calories count on labels, this one showing how many calories of energy it takes to deliver the item to you.

The major problem with his vision? He says there are simply not enough farmers. Only 1 million now feed the US and other people of the world. Many more people, many more college educated people, many more innovators and entrepreneurs, and many more backyard gardeners need to produce this new food system. Start in educational programs, such as one promoted by Alice Waters, where kids learn to grow food, cook, and eat smarter. “Make lunch an academic subject.” Follow the lead of Michelle Obama and make turning lawns into organic gardens fashionable, respectable.

Make farms and farmers cool again.

-Kevin Kelly

 

Thursday
May072009

Tick tock

Yesterday saw the first of three Welsh Assembly Government Community Climate Change events with a good starter in Llangollen's International Pavilion. Chaired by Steve Harris from Science Shops, with contributions from me on Million Minds, Doversity and biomimicry, Ken Peattie on his research into social change and digital communications and Rachel Nunn from Carbon Neutral Stirlingshire Project on the excellent progress that she and colleague made from a front-room project to a fully funded 20 year journey to 89% CO2 rediction.

The key to progress for us was the launch of the Do Connect - the project to map out the complex, connected actions that need to happen in the next three years to lay down the routemap for carbon reduction and sustainability. Emma Metcalf and Emma-Louise Hardman ran the workshop session which resulted in 100 action suggestions which will be built on at the next two events in 10 days' time.

Tick tock. 500 days to make the plan. 6 events in the next three weeks to get it populated. Join us.

Tuesday
May052009

Tour of Presteigne

This weekend sees the launch of one of the world's most unusual and interesing cycle events, when electric bicycle enthusiasts, manufacturers, developers and supporters get together for two days in the Welsh border country to celebrate, share, and compete in a friendly way. www.tourdepresteigne.co.uk.

"

This is the fourth year of the Tour de Presteigne and Green Wheelsshow and each year its International reputation grows so that it is now seen as THE most important date in the Electric Bike calendar.This year all the most important manufacturers will be showing bikes at the Industrial Estate in Presteigne which is an ideal venue for people to try out all the latest makes and models.There will be bikes on show from eZee, Powabyke, Wisper, Kalkhoff, Emotion, Urban Mover,PowerSmart, Airnimal, Nano, Heinzmann and lots more. The organisers also expect to have examples of the brand new groundbreaking design from ex -MclarenFormula 1 engineer Richard Thorpe who has just launched a brand new British lightweight portable two wheeled electric transport machine, The GoCycle. In addition visitors to the show will also be the first in the country to try out a new range of electric sports bikes from the renowned Spanish bike maker BH. These sporty pedelec machines branded Emotion are probably the most handsome electric bikes ever made and are being imported by the tiny Presteigne firm OnBike.

It is a mark of how important this small Mid-Border show has become that they have also been chosen alongside the Geneva Motor Show as a venue for people to come and see the fabulous Morgan LIFE Car. This prototypewas developed with the aid of local hydrogen engineer, Hugo Spowersthrough his company Riversimple. It is powered by a hydrogen fuel cell and emits only water vapour. The car is expected to accelerate from 0 to 60 in under 7 seconds with a top speed of 80 to 85 mph and a range of 250 miles. The LIFECar is a very efficient vehicle - the fuel consumption is claimed to be the equivalent of 178 mpg. If the hydrogen it uses is produced using renewable energy, say from hydroelectricity, this makes the Morgan a true zero emissions vehicle. The car on display is not a production vehicle, but Morgan is planning to put into production a car which is derived from it, using hybrid power."


Monday
May042009

Wake Up, Freak Out

I watched this again the other day, and once again thought that it's a film that should be seen by everybody before the leave school. And if they didn't catch it there, watch it now.

Wake Up, Freak Out - then Get a Grip from Leo Murray on Vimeo.

 

Monday
May042009

UK Transition to Low Carbon

The UK's Energy Research Council have produced a report on the Transition to a Low Carbon Economy,  - which has some valuable perspectives in it that show the path to an 80% reduction by 2050. My main concern is that whilst this may be deliverable with a small impact on GDP, that's not likely to be the case with the scientific (from Tyndall Centre for Climate Research) as opposed to the political target - it's important not to get the two mixed up.