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What
food crisis?
Those
suffering most from the “current world food crisis” may not know
why they are but they probably do know that they can have very little
impact on the outcome as the world is structured currently.
Corporate
control
In
1921 36 companies were responsible for 85 percent of US grain
exports. By the end of the 70s six companies controlled 90+ percent
of Canadian, European, Australian and Argentinian grain and currently
Cargill and Continental each control 25 percent of the world's grain
trade. While 37 nations have been plunged into food crisis Monsanto
has had record sales from herbicides and seeds and Cargill's profit
increased by 86 percent. On the one hand these corporations use,
wherever there is a perceived advantage, the poorer countries for
cash crops, manufacturing using cheap labour, cheaper processing and
they take advantage of huge subsidies for which they lobby
constantly, and on the other show indifference to the employees and
labourers in these countries. Wages are kept as low as can be managed
and conditions of employment are almost non-existent. Long working
hours, enforced, often unpaid, overtime, no sick-pay non-existent or
poor compensation for accidents and no pension.
Of
the world's people as a whole, 70 percent earn their livelihood by
producing food, their own included. From these a growing number are
now producing crops for fodder or alternative fuels, reducing the
amount of land available for human food production and thereby
increasing its cost. Profit is the bottom line.
Monsanto
is huge in soy bean production having a virtual monopoly with their
'Roundup Ready' seeds. Genetically modified seeds grown to be used
for cattle feed, fish feed, all manner of industrial uses plus 80
percent of processed foods contain soy bean. Why would you promote an
oil-seed that has a relatively low oil yield – 18 percent, compared
with coconut (75 percent), groundnut (55 percent) and sesame (50
percent), if it wasn't simply linked to your ownership of the means
of their production? The health risks associated with soy bean
consumption are becoming clearer, especially an oestrogen problem.
One test revealed that soy-based infant formula yields a dose of
oestrogen equivalent to 8-12 contraceptive pills daily.
Monsanto
(originators of Agent Orange) acquired Unilever's European
wheat-breeding business in 1998. They have a large stake in India's
largest seed company and have also bought Cargill's international
seed operations in Central and Latin America, Europe, Asia and Africa
thus virtually monopolising production, limiting choice and pushing
genetically engineered wheat. Their intellectual property scams,
internationally infamous, banning the saving and trading of seed
(something done for thousands of years with no problems of ownership
attached) have been followed by many court cases usually to the
detriment of small farmers in both poor and ‘developed’ world.
The infamous 'terminator' gene which makes plants' seeds infertile
has perhaps been the most cynical invention, forcing farmers into
buying seed every year, putting them in hock to the big corporations
and resulting in penury.
Around
the world farmers have been pressured by large companies to grow cash
crops. Cotton started to displace food crops in India after trade
liberalisation was introduced in 1991. Aggressive advertising
campaigns were conducted by Monsanto, for one, to introduce hybrid
cotton seed which, being more vulnerable to pest attack, required the
use of more pesticide than the varieties traditionally grown. Having
borrowed on credit for both seed and pesticide and finding themselves
in unresolvable debt following crop failures, according to Vandana
Shiva in Stolen Harvest, many hundreds of farmers committed
suicide by ingesting the very pesticides that were supposed to have
protected their crops. Suicide deaths of Indian farmers continue to
be a huge problem.
Ecologically
unsound
There
are ecological issues surrounding the current world food system. Here
there are many links between this and the previous section. In their
pursuit of profit worldwide mega-corporations have been responsible
for some of the worst degradation of land, water, air and sea.
Particularly relevant to food production, however, it is being
recognised in more quarters that industrial farming damages the
environment (as well as concentrating profits in fewer hands) and
that small farms are actually more productive and much less damaging.
Only this year a UN commission of 400 agricultural experts concluded
that the world needs to shift from current agribusiness methods to a
more ecological and small-scale approach. It comes as no surprise to
learn that neither the US government nor agribusiness agreed to
endorse the recommendations. A US dairy farmer allied to Via
Campesina which is a global movement of peasant and farm
organisations said words to the effect that at last it's recognised
that industrial GM crops and globalisation methods have led to more
hungry people but why hadn't they listened to farmers instead of
corporations in the first place? Good question, to which we know the
answer.
The
(mainly GM) soy bean comes in for another attack here. To produce its
oil requires solvents – bad for the environment; producing it
creates saturated fats – bad for health. To ensure that maximum
benefit (i.e. maximum profit, not maximum nutrition) is derived from
the humble soy bean a US company is now also producing look-alike
pulses, lentils etc from some of this bulk. Mono-crops and intensive
farming by their very nature create havoc with the land, with the
soil, requiring an input of fertilizer to fulfil the role that mixed
farming does automatically. The soil gradually becomes impoverished
leading to the necessity for more fertilizer, itself a problem from
leaching into and contaminating water. Fertilizers, herbicides and
pesticides all alter the nature of the soil, the ecological balance,
ultimately denuding the area of the very plants, microbes, insects,
worms, birds, small animals etc that determine its replenishment in a
natural cycle. Traditional farming is shown to be far superior both
for the health of the soil and also for crop yield. Animals manure
the land, worms and other creatures turn and aerate it, insects
assist pollination, other insects, birds and small animals dispose of
many of the pests naturally whilst also replenishing the soil with
nutrients and crops of different types in rotation take nutrients
from and return nutrients to the soil. In many parts of the world the
'weeds' that grow among crops are crops themselves, not to be sprayed
and killed but to be picked and eaten by humans and animals or else
to be ploughed back into the ground returning natural organic matter.
One
obvious negative effect of growing mono-crops for export or as
non-food products such as biofuels is that it impacts on the amount
of land available for growing food for local consumption, pushing
small farmers off the land altogether or to patches of less
productive land. Aggressive growth in agricultural exports has been
linked to increasing poverty and hunger in the exporting country.
Examples include the Philippines where the acreage for growing cut
flowers was massively increased with a corresponding decline in
acreage for food staples resulting in the destruction of
approximately 350,000 livelihoods and increasing rice imports by a
factor of ten; Brazil, when soy bean exports increased dramatically
(1970s) as animal feed for Japan and Europe, hunger increased from
one third to two thirds of the population. By the 90s Brazil became
the third largest exporter of soy bean having increased acreage by 37
percent over 15 years displacing millions of small farmers and
decreasing rice production by 18 percent further exacerbating hunger
and poverty. On this topic Vandana Shiva gets right to the point,
“The food security of the US and other wealthy food-importing
countries depends largely on the destruction of other people's
security” (in Alternative Globalization, ed. By John
Cavanagh and Jerry Mander),
Other
ecologically unsound farming practices such as raising animals
intensively leads to massive problems for the animals, for the humans
raising them and eating them and for the environment in which they
are kept. For instance, as fish farms have become more extensive in
acreage and more intensive in production bacterial infections have
spread to fish in the wild. Whereas it used to be recommended to eat
fish regularly as part of a healthy diet there are now warnings to
limit drastically intake of farmed fish. Shrimp farming is known as a
'rape and run' industry because of its unsustainability and the
inevitability that after a handful of years the site will be
ecologically devastated and susceptible to massive outbreaks of
disease, leaving hectares of former good fishing coastline unfit and
unable to supply locals with a catch of any kind – coastal
wastelands.
Shrimp
farms and fish farms require more wet fish, processed into meal, pro
rata than they ultimately produce, consuming more resources than they
produce. The fish caught by trawling and purse-seining for the
production of meal deprives people of both food and livelihood,
depletes fish stocks drastically, kills all kinds of aquatic life –
and this to provide shrimp for people living a long way from the
devastation and knowing little about it. Mangroves, crucial in many
coastal areas for protection against storms, preventing erosion and
recognised as important habitat for much marine life have been
devastated around the world in order that some of us may eat shrimp.
Sri Lanka lost nearly half their mangrove area in 10 years; Vietnam
lost more than 100,000 hectares in 4 years; most of Ecuador's shrimp
comes from former mangrove swamps; a third of Thailand's lost
mangroves was as a result of shrimp farming over 30 years up to 1993.
Ecological and environmental man-made disasters. Intensive shrimp
farming also leads to permanent salinisation of groundwater and has
created water famine in formerly water abundant areas in India,
causing death of cattle and gradual contamination of former
productive rice paddies. Because of intensive shrimp production in
Bangladesh rice production fell from 40,000 to only 36 (not 36
thousand) metric tonnes between 1976-86 with similar losses reported
in Thailand. Shrimp and prawn have been 'farmed' traditionally in
India for hundreds of years without this serious adverse effect on
the ecology. The traditional methods have proved effective and have
produced good income for farmers combining paddy growing in the
monsoon season with shrimp 'farming' in other seasons when the fields
are filled temporarily with saline water. Whether aquaculture or
agriculture, natural methods prove to be more economical in terms of
input, more productive in terms of output showing biodiversity and
labour intensification to be both more efficient and sustainable.
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