Tag Archives: Food Security

Paul Krugman in New York Times: Droughts, Floods & Food Crisis

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From New York Times – Feb 7, 2011

by Paul Krugman

We’re in the midst of a global food crisis — the second in three years.
World food prices hit a record in January, driven by huge increases in
the prices of wheat, corn, sugar and oils. These soaring prices have had
only a modest effect on U.S. inflation, which is still low by
historical standards, but they’re having a brutal impact on the world’s
poor, who spend much if not most of their income on basic foodstuffs.

The consequences of this food crisis go far beyond economics. After all,
the big question about uprisings against corrupt and oppressive regimes
in the Middle East isn’t so much why they’re happening as why they’re
happening now. And there’s little question that sky-high food prices
have been an important trigger for popular rage.

So what’s behind the price spike? American right-wingers (and the
Chinese) blame easy-money policies at the Federal Reserve, with at
least one commentator
declaring that there is “blood on Bernanke’s hands.” Meanwhile,
President Nicolas Sarkozy of France blames speculators, accusing them of
“extortion and pillaging.”

But the evidence tells a different, much more ominous story. While
several factors have contributed to soaring food prices, what really
stands out is the extent to which severe weather events have disrupted
agricultural production. And these severe weather events are exactly the
kind of thing we’d expect to see as rising concentrations of greenhouse
gases change our climate — which means that the current food price
surge may be just the beginning.

Now, to some extent soaring food prices are part of a general commodity
boom: the prices of many raw materials, running the gamut from aluminum
to zinc, have been rising rapidly since early 2009, mainly thanks to
rapid industrial growth in emerging markets.

But the link between industrial growth and demand is a lot clearer for,
say, copper than it is for food. Except in very poor countries, rising
incomes don’t have much effect on how much people eat.

It’s true that growth in emerging nations like China leads to rising
meat consumption, and hence rising demand for animal feed. It’s also
true that agricultural raw materials, especially cotton, compete for
land and other resources with food crops — as does the subsidized
production of ethanol, which consumes a lot of corn. So both economic
growth and bad energy policy have played some role in the food price
surge.

Still, food prices lagged behind the prices of other commodities until last summer. Then the weather struck.

Consider the case of wheat, whose price has almost doubled since the
summer. The immediate cause of the wheat price spike is obvious: world
production is down sharply. The bulk of that production decline,
according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data, reflects a sharp
plunge in the former Soviet Union. And we know what that’s about: a
record heat wave and drought, which pushed Moscow temperatures above 100
degrees for the first time ever.

The Russian heat wave was only one of many recent extreme weather
events, from dry weather in Brazil to biblical-proportion flooding in
Australia, that have damaged world food production.

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Bruce Swift of BC-based Swift Aquaculture discusses his closed-containment salmon famring business at the recent global Seafood Summit

Closed-Containment Salmon Farming Highlighted at Seafood Summit

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Last week Vancouver played host to the annual Seafood Summit, a global conference that brings together fishermen, seafood buyers, chefs, scientists, conservationists, and just about anyone interested in discussing the future of global fisheries. My film “Farmed Salmon Exposed” – which documents the myriad problems with open net pen salmon aquaculture – screened at last year’s conference in Paris; this year I had a chance to hear about potential solutions to the industry’s problems when I attended the panel discussion on land-based closed-containment salmon farming.

The discussion, which featured short presentations from a number of leaders in the emerging industry, highlighted both the encouraging progress of closed-containment salmon aquaculture and the real challenges it faces to becoming a competitive large-scale player in the marketplace. Most importantly, it reinforced a recent shift in the tone of the closed-containment discussion. As panel co-moderator Eric Patel summarized, “The conversation has gone from, ‘Is it feasible?’ to ‘Where is it going to happen, how soon, and how much can it grow?'”

There are a number of concepts and designs for closed-containment salmon farming, but they all share a basic premise of separating farmed fish from the environment by enclosing them in some form of tank system. These methods carry commercial advantages for operators, such as being able to protect their farmed fish from wild parasites, diseases, and other problems like low oxygen events and algae blooms that threaten their stocks; they also allow farmers to better regulate feed, and the fish waste they capture can be converted to fertilizers for sale or used to cultivate other crops as part of a poly-culture system.

Among the Seafood Summit panel were the representatives of three existing and future closed-containment operations. Of particular interest was Per Heggelund, CEO of Washington State-based AquaSeed Corporation. His company has been rearing and selling proprietary breeds of land-based coho for several decades and in 2010 was named official supplier to the Pattison Group’s supermarkets, which include Overwaitea and Save-on-Foods. The decision by the Western Canadian grocery titan to begin phasing out open net pen farmed salmon in favour of closed-containment was an important milestone in the development of the industry.

Also on the panel was Bruce Swift of Swift Aquaculture – a land-based closed-containment farm in Agassiz, BC. Swift is a small family-run operation that raises coho in freshwater tanks, while using the water and waste fertilizers to grow a number of other agricultural products – including crayfish, wasabi, watercress, and garlic – all without pesticides, chemical fertilizers, or antibiotics. They mostly supply local restaurants, including famed Vancouver chef Robert Clark’s C, Nu, and Raincity Grill. Clark, who also presented at the conference on sustainability in the restaurant industry, has been an important customer and supporter of Swift.

The Swift family had a rough go of things initially, unable to escape the stigma of their open net pen counterparts – customers didn’t appreciate the distinction between their farmed product and the rest of the industry. Their experience raises another key challenge to closed-containment salmon aquaculture moving forward: the need to develop a third category of salmon in the marketplace, positioned somewhere between open net pen and wild. Through perseverance and cultivating the right allies, the Swifts have been able to overcome this hurdle. But the industry needs to be able to do the same on a larger scale – which likely requires both consumer education and developing a unique certification to distinguish their product.        

Finally, Chief Anne Mack of the Toquaht First Nation, near Uclulet on the west side of Vancouver Island, told the audience of her community’s plans to develop closed-containment farms on their territory (The Namgis First Nation are working on a similar pilot project near Port McNeil on Vancouver Island). Chief Mack discussed how her people are no longer able to live off wild salmon and other now-depleted natural food sources in the way they used to – which explains their interest in closed-containment salmon farming. “This project could help us return to living sustainably off our own territory,” she told the audience. Chief Mack also described the location as ideal in many ways for land-based farming, with good freshwater and brackish groundwater sources. The band is exploring alternate energy systems to help power the farms as well. While they’re still in the planning stage, the Toquaht seem committed and well-positioned to move forward. If they and the Namgis are successful, they could provide a model for other First Nations and similar community-based projects.   

Closed-containment salmon aquaculture faces several key challenges, made abundantly clear in the Seafood Summit session. First among these is scale. Can the industry grow enough – and fast enough – to replace, in part or in whole, its much better established open net pen counterpart? It’s clear that demand for the product will long outstrip supply – which is both good and bad. Any developer of a new product would envy the kind of demand closed-containment farmers enjoy from the outset – where the likes of Jimmy Pattison are saying they’ll take as much as you can sell them.

But the industry faces significant challenges to scaling up its operations – including technology, venture capital, and regulatory barriers. Swift Aquaculture may be the ideal model for the future of food production – a small-scale poly-culture system with a low eco-footprint, directly supplying local restaurants – but it’s an entirely different model than the current industrial-scale salmon aquaculture feed lots. And therein may lie the rub. Twenty years from now the only thing that makes sense may be small-scale, low-footprint, local food production – while unsustainable industrial feedlots prove to be a thing of the past. But that may mean years of continued environmental impacts from the open net pen industry before the likes of Marine Harvest collapse or evolve – an unwelcome prospect for those concerned about wild salmon and marine ecosystems today.

On the topic of scale, there is one closed-containment start-up whose system has the potential to compete with open net pen operations. Absent from this panel – but actively involved in the conference in other ways – was BC-based closed-containment pioneer Agrimarine Holdings, which I profiled in a recent video documenting the construction and installation of the world’s first marine closed-containemnt tank. This particular discussion focused on land-based systems, while Agrimarine has developed tanks that sit in near-shore marine waters, anchored to the ocean floor. The company began their research and development well over a decade ago with land-based tanks, but discovered that the energy required to pump salt water uphill was environmentally and cost-prohibitive (both Aquaseed and Swift Aquaculture have chosen to use freshwater for their coho tanks). Already bringing product to market in China, where they installed their first set of tanks last year, and soon to do the same in Canada, Agrimarine is bright spot in the emerging industry. And unlike the much smaller Swift and AquaSeed operations, a group of Agrimarine’s tanks – which range from 50,000-75,000 fish each at this stage – offers a production capacity that approaches large-scale open net pen farms.  

On the matter of economic viability for closed-containment salmon, there is much debate. A recent report by Dr. Andrew Wright (available here – second item down) surveyed existing off-the-shelf technology and concluded: “There is no technical or economic barrier to closed containment salmon farm aquaculture for the production of salmon. Moreover, B.C. is advantageously provisioned for catalyzing an industrial change and for retaining the new emergent industry in B.C.”

Predictably, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans – whose support of the Norwegian open net pen industry has constituted a major conflict of interest in the opinion of myself and many others – responded with their own report, downplaying Dr. Wright’s rosy outlook. But this is to be expected from DFO, which continues to ramp up its support of open net pen farms while denying the problems associated with them. While these various small-scale innovators in the closed-containment field may have a ways to go in terms of their unit cost for fish and their overall profitability, continued technical development and economies of scale will only improve their bottom line.

In the q&a session following the presentations, David Lane of BC-based conservation group the T. Buck Suzuki Foundation addressed the other elephant in the room, which is the impact of all salmon aquaculture on the world’s forage fish, needed to feed carnivorous farmed salmon. This subject was discussed in detail at an earlier session that day. Depending on which apples and oranges you’re comparing – and whom you believe, as the numbers are all over the map – it takes anywhere from a couple pounds to 5 or more pounds of wild forage fish, such as anchovies, sardines, and krill, to raise a single pound of farmed salmon. This is a challenge for the industry, whether you’re talking about open net pen or closed-containment farms.

Yet, considerable advances have been made in recent years to improve these feed ratios, and more are in the works. Soy and barley proteins are being used to substitute feed fish; and fish oils essential to boosting Omega-3’s in farmed fish can potentially be derived from algae. By-catch from other fisheries and leftovers from processing fish that would otherwise go to waste are also being used sensibly in farmed salmon feed. Moreover, by enabling less feed waste, closed-containment farms can help in this area as well. But much more needs to be done regarding the feed issue before any farmed salmon product can be touted as truly sustainable.

The most telling commentary at the closed-containment conference session came from Petter Arnesen, Vice-President for Feed and the Environment for Marine Harvest (global) – by far the biggest player in the salmon farming business and owner of roughly half of BC’s farms. Arnesen is a skilled operator who made the trip from Oslo to provide message control for his company – a task he performs far more effectively than the industry’s local PR flaks. His comments here were an interesting departure from what has up until now been the party line for the Norwegian industry with regards to closed-containment – that is, largely brushing it off as a wild-eyed pipe dream. On this occasion, Arnesen was considerably less dismissive: “Closed-containment is not the solution to all the problems of industry…The future of salmon farming is a combination of solutions.” He maintained companies that want to produce the kind of volumes of fish that his does will continue to rely on current methods – but even leaving the door open to some mix of closed-containment was a significant and telling concession from the world’s biggest salmon farmer.

My feeling is that – besides the daunting capital costs and challenges of reproducing the same scale of production via closed-containment – the Norwegian-dominated open net pen industry is reluctant to embrace this new technology because it could undermine the monopoly they currently enjoy in the market. Their vague declarations of “exploring” closed-containment call to mind General Motors’ experience with the EV-1, chronicled in the documentary Who Killed the Electric Car? Like GM didn’t want the electric car to succeed, Norwegian fish farmers really don’t want closed-containment to work – for now, anyway. 

Today, these companies enjoy the technical advantages of decades of research and development of their open net pen systems and the ability to externalize many of their costs onto the public and marine environment. Moreover, as ocean tenures are increasingly hard to come by for new farms, the Norwegians face very little prospect of competition from new open net pen players in the future. Were closed-containment to become the norm, opportunities would emerge for farms near urban consumption centres like California, New York and Tokyo – which could open up the market to other players. On the flip-side of this equation, however, is the fact that publicly traded companies such as Marine Harvest and Cermaq/Mainstream don’t just need to sustain themselves – the need growth to satisfy their shareholders. And given these barriers to expansion of the open net pen industry, they may eventually have to turn to closed-containment to provide that new production they crave. It’s a catch-22 you can be sure the industry is grappling with in light of these advances in closed-containment.

The key take-away for me from this Seafood Summit panel discussion and my recent observations on the emerging closed-containment industry is that while it faces an uphill climb and likely many years of continued development to compete head-on with or supplant the open net pen industry, it’s headed in the right direction. The market demand and technical advances for closed-containment are encouraging to say the least. The other piece of the puzzle – much-needed investment capital – would help take things to the next level, though it remains to be seen from where and how much of it will be available in the near future.

Most of the people and companies involved in the closed-containment game came to it because they experienced firsthand the challenges and limitations of open net pen farming. It’s a solution that grew out of a very real problem. Whether or not closed-containment can ultimately work on a large scale (or whether smaller, more local operations are the way of the future anyway), the status quo of open net pen farming is unsustainable in the long-term – politically, environmentally, and economically.

If the Marine Harvests of the world wait too long to evolve with this new technology, they may well find themselves left behind.

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Metro vs. mansions: Province asked to help curb sprawl on ALR land

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From the Vancouver Sun – Feb 4, 2011

by Kelly Sinoski

Mega-sized homes could eat into land reserved for food production, officials fear

How much did the value of your Metro Vancouver home rise in the last five years? Find out in our pictoral analysis here.

METRO VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver has asked the provincial government to help curb a proliferation of mega-sized estate homes that continue to sprawl across the region’s prime agricultural land.

The issue was part of a discussion Thursday about the region’s draft food strategy.

Metro directors fear the large homes, some as big as 15,000 square feet on five- and 10-acre lots and often coupled with tennis courts, swimming pools and illegal secondary suites, will lead to the loss of valuable agricultural land for future food production.

“When you have huge mansions, you can’t do anything with that, and potentially that land will never be farmed again,” said Pitt Meadows Mayor Don MacLean, who also sits on Metro’s agricultural committee. “We don’t have an issue with estate homes — if they’re in the city. But we really think that if this continues we’ll lose critical mass for farming.

“If the ALR is there for a purpose, [the province] should be defending the uses of it.”

The B.C. Agriculture Ministry said it agrees with Metro’s concerns and last month released a draft discussion paper aimed at helping local governments regulate residential uses on ALR land.

The paper, considered by Metro’s agriculture committee Thursday, suggests limits could be applied to the size, scale and siting of the farm’s “home plate” — the footprint for residential uses and the house itself. A large house not only increases the cost of agricultural property — making it unaffordable for new farmers — but if it’s in the middle of the parcel, rather than at the front of the lot near the road or in a corner of the property, there’s less land available for farming.

Metro has asked staff to come back with recommendations on the home plate issue by March 3.

“We do share [Metro’s] concerns, particularly if large homes in a community can only be built in farming areas,” said Bert van Dalfsen, the agriculture ministry’s manager of strengthening farm programs. “We don’t want to have a lot of large homes on farmland.”

At the moment, Metro municipalities take an ad hoc approach when it comes to ALR land. Although Delta restricts homes in the ALR to the maximum size permitted in urban areas, others are at a loss when residents apply to build a mega home in the middle of a five-acre lot, an illegal suite over a barn or to cover prime farmland with a tennis court.

Yet any attempts to put restrictions in place are met with vocal opposition from residents, many of whom have built the larger homes for recreation or hobby farms.

Pitt Meadows, for instance, abandoned its plans to impose a home plate limit of 11,000 square feet on a 10-acre property after a public outcry. It has since approved a bylaw requiring all applications for secondary homes on ALR land to undergo an agrologist assessment to justify the claim that they’re needed to house farm workers.

“We have very, very good land and we want to maintain that land,” MacLean said, adding 85 per cent of Pitt Meadows is in the ALR. “People are looking at this as a property rights issue. We’re saying, ‘You’re in a special use area. If you tried to put up a home that went corner to corner to corner in Vancouver, somebody would come along and say you can’t have a permit for that.”

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Greenpeace Canada ranks canned tuna brands

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From CBC.ca – Feb 1, 2011

Greenpeace Canada says a survey of 14 major tuna fish brands sold in
the country suggests most of them come from destructive fishery
practices.

A report by the environmental organization gives a passing grade to
only two brands — Wild Planet Foods and Raincoast Trading — because they
use more selective fishing gear, support more locally owned operations
and provide clearer labelling for consumers.

Ocean Fisheries took third place, while several house brand tuna sold by grocery stores followed down the ranking list.

Popular brand Clover Leaf, which holds the largest market share of
Canada’s canned seafood, was ranked 11th and didn’t respond to the
survey.

“Unico came in last after not responding to Greenpeace’s
questionnaire and having no publicly available information suggesting
any type of policy or sustainability commitment,” the report authors
said.

Greenpeace said tuna stocks are on the decline and are plagued by
overfishing and harvesting techniques that threaten other marine life,
including turtles, sharks and sea birds.

The organization said it wants supermarket chains and canned fish
brands to provide tuna from sustainable sources and avoid illegal and
destructive fisheries.

“Canned tuna is a staple in many Canadian homes and is found in every
supermarket chain, but that could change if tuna sourcing doesn’t,”
Greenpeace oceans campaigner Sarah King said in a statement.

A report released by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization on
Monday said global fish consumption hit record levels in 2008, thanks in
large part to the growing fish-farming industry. However, the report
also noticed that many fisheries — including most tuna stocks — are
still struggling due to overfishing.

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Systemic Thinking and Big Pictures

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We are please to begin publishing at TheCanadian.org Ray Grigg’s weekly Shades of Green series. A warm welcome to Ray from The Common Sense Canadian.

Systemic thinking reveals the complexity of almost everything. A careful and methodical examination of most subjects exposes an intricacy far greater than mere details – how the details relate to each other and conjoin with seemingly diverse factors are as important as the details themselves. Delving into such interactions is necessary to understand the world around us and to manage the outcomes of the things we do.

Consider the ordinary biological act of a man and woman conceiving a child. Thomas Malthus, the 19th century clergyman and political economist (1766-1834), calculated the rate of human reproduction, measured it against the food production of his time, and anticipated an eventual catastrophe as the number of people eventually exceeded their ability to feed themselves. Fortunately, Malthus’ prediction did not occur as anticipated because of industrial agriculture, the so-called “green revolution” and the distribution of the food being produced. But our population has risen to meet this increased supply, and an anticipated 40 percent increase in our numbers to about 9.5 billion by 2050 may combine with other factors to confound our ingenuity.

Because systemic thinking explores beyond simplicities to complexities, a study of food production for such an enormous population must also consider the constraints imposed by limited supplies of water, an essential agricultural ingredient that is now becoming scarce as demand continues to rise beyond availability. Oil is another constraining factor. Huge quantities are required for fertilizing, planting, harvesting, transporting and processing. If oil supplies replicate the situation with water, the price of food will rise and the economic costs will unleash disruptive and unmanageable social and political complications.

Soil presents another challenge to global food production. Just as demand is rising, erosion and degradation are reducing the amount and fertility of soil, a handicap that has to be combatted with ever more oil-based fertilizer. Even the anthropogenic increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide is changing the way plants grow and produce crops – small increases in carbon dioxide seem to assist growth but do not necessarily yield more of the crops we want from plants. Political and economic stability are also factors that can enhance or curtail food production. Apply systemic thinking to any process and the simple rapidly becomes complicated.

Traditional economic theory, for example, seems to be based on the principle of indefinite growth. Systems thinking exposes the inherent contraction of perpetually expanding consumption, profit and wealth on a planet of rising populations and finite resources. Logic would argue that some kind of homeostasis or equilibrium must eventually be reached between human enterprises and nature’s limits. Indeed, we may now be experiencing this anticipated limit with resource scarcity, habitat loss, species extinction, endemic pollution and global warming, all of which can be taken as indications that we are approaching unsustainable levels of growth. Simple biological and physical limits are defining what we must accept as “sustainable development”.

Apply systemic thinking to climate matters and the insights are even more complex and challenging. Our massive carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels are not only increasing global temperatures but are also acidifying our oceans. The same process that is causing extreme weather, inflicting extensive property damage, altering plant growth, creating refugees, instigating social turmoil and inciting political unrest is also impairing oceanic food production precisely at a time when we need to be aiding rather than handicapping its productive capacity. Systemic thinking can help us understand complications, define sustainability and engineer outcomes beneficial for ourselves and the environment that supports us.

If we consider only disconnected details and don’t employ systemic thinking, we get misleading answers to simple questions. Why, for example, are parts of North America, Europe and China having such cold winter weather if global warming is occurring? The details seem to contradict the theory.

In keeping with systemic thinking, the answer is complex. Essentially, large areas of exposed ocean from melted Arctic ice seem to have created high pressure bulges of warm air that are deflecting the usual west-to-east “polar vortex”, the jet stream loop that keeps cold Arctic weather separated from balmier southern weather. The destabilized and fractured polar vortex is now moving in giant inverted U-shapes, sweeping warm air northward to the Arctic and returning chilling winds southward. These “meridional flows” are becoming more common as Arctic sea ice melts. The result is bitter cold and snow in southern areas. “The jet stream breakdown last winter,” writes James Overland of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, “was the most extreme in 145 years of record. Loss of sea ice is certainly not the whole story behind cold mid-latitude winters, but it’s a constant push in that direction” (Globe & Mail, Dec. 31/10). As parts of North America, Europe and China shiver, parts of the Arctic, such as Iqaluit, bask in temperatures 15°C above normal. The average global temperature continues to rise but the heat gets distributed abnormally.

People who like tradition, predictability and simple answers don’t like systemic thinking. Neither do people who place their personal ambitions above ecosystem and societal interests – systemic thinking results in complex insights that invariably challenge narrow biases, discredit shallow perspectives and deflate the credibility of individual certainty.

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Site C dam “not required”, NDP leadership hopeful John Horgan says

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From Straight.com – Jan 18, 2011

by Matthew Burrows

The B.C. NDP’s only Vancouver Island–based leadership candidate has said he believes the proposed Site C hydroelectric dam is unnecessary at this point in time.

“Each pulp mill or sawmill that shuts down, that’s more power that’s available to B.C. Hydro through the existing supply,” John Horgan, long-time NDP energy critic, told the Straight
by phone today (January 18). “Housing starts have not been what they
were projected to be in 2005-2006, so residential demand is not growing
at the rate that B.C. Hydro projected. So my view is that Site C is not
required at this time, and there are other potentially lower-cost,
best-use options available to the corporation.”

In a wide-ranging interview, Horgan confirmed the NDP still supports a moratorium on any new run-of-river power projects.
If the NDP forms government, it would review the power-purchase
agreements made by B.C. Hydro and private power producers in order to
ensure they are in the “public interest”, according to him.

“If it’s determined that they are not in the public interest, after the
light of day has been shone upon them, then we would take action to
rectify that. What that action is would depend on what the deficiencies
are,” Horgan said.

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Vertical Farming: Does it Really Stack Up?

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From The Economist – Dec 9, 2010

WHEN you run out of land in a crowded city, the solution is obvious:
build upwards. This simple trick makes it possible to pack huge numbers
of homes and offices into a limited space such as Hong Kong, Manhattan
or the City of London. Mankind now faces a similar problem on a global
scale. The world’s population is expected to increase to 9.1 billion by
2050, according to the UN. Feeding all those people will mean increasing
food production by 70%, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture
Organisation, through a combination of higher crop yields and an
expansion of the area under cultivation. But the additional land
available for cultivation is unevenly distributed, and much of it is
suitable for growing only a few crops. So why not create more
agricultural land by building upwards?

Such is the thinking behind vertical farming. The idea is that
skyscrapers filled with floor upon floor of orchards and fields,
producing crops all year round, will sprout in cities across the world.
As well as creating more farmable land out of thin air, this would slash
the transport costs and carbon-dioxide emissions associated with moving
food over long distances. It would also reduce the spoilage that
inevitably occurs along the way, says Dickson Despommier, a professor of
public and environmental health at Columbia University in New York who
is widely regarded as the progenitor of vertical farming, and whose
recently published book, “The Vertical Farm”, is a manifesto for the
idea. According to the UN’s Population Division, by 2050 around 70% of
the world’s population will be living in urban areas. So it just makes
sense, he says, to move farms closer to where everyone will be living.

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Farmlands on the Brink: Tsawwassen’s Southlands

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Hemmed in by Delta to the east, Point Roberts to the
south and the Salish Sea to the west, Southlands is a 538-acre farm that
has been in the middle of a tug-of-war between developers and farmland
defenders for nearly four decades.

The president of the development company
that owns Southlands has proposed a plan that he says could serve both
interests equally. Proponents argue that it could serve as a model for a
new form of planning — agricultural urbanism — where people and farms
can co-exist. Opponents fear it will only drive up the prices of
already expensive, and scarce, farmland in the region.

Read the full Tyee article here

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The Tyee: Welcome to Farm School

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“The agriculture that we should bring about substantially is local
scale, human intensive, ecologically sound,” says Dr. Kent Mullinix from
Kwantlen Polytechnic University. The director of Sustainable Agri-food
Systems acknowledges that, “The fact of the matter is this post
industrial agri-food system is going to require a lot of people, in
particular a lot of farmers.”

Mullinix references the work of Richard
Heinburg from the Post Carbon Institute whose research suggests that the
United States will need up to 50 million new farmers to work the land
and feed the people in a post carbon world. That’s roughly 17 per cent
of the current population. Applying that number to British Columbia
suggests that three quarters of a million of us will need to take up the
hoe. At the moment, I’m feeling woefully unprepared.

Read full Tyee article here


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Tourism Threatens Water Security in Okanagan

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Article by Remy Scalza in BC Business. “The need for wineries to conserve has never been more acute. On the heels of a drought last year, the South Okanagan is anticipating another dry summer. For the second consecutive year and the sixth time in the last decade, dry conditions have prompted a drought declaration on Osoyoos Lake. Even outside the dry South Okanagan, water woes are evident.” Read article

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