Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Neon Leon: Neon Leon: Dinner for Nine Billion People

Neon Leon: Neon Leon: Dinner for Nine Billion People: Neon Leon: Dinner for Nine Billion People : "The best place to find God is in a garden.  You can dig for him there." --George Bern...

Sunday, June 25, 2017

Neon Leon: Dinner for Nine Billion People

Neon Leon: Dinner for Nine Billion People: "The best place to find God is in a garden.  You can dig for him there." --George Bernard Shaw  1856-1950 I agree with the pl...

Dinner for Nine Billion People

"The best place to find God is in a garden.  You can dig for him there." --George Bernard Shaw  1856-1950

I agree with the playwright. I grew up on a small farm near Morton, Washington, in the shadow of Mt. Rainier.  Our big garden was just below the milking barn, which produced a daily pile of manure. The resulting compost created a rich, black earth in which we grew all the vegetables and fruit for our table and cellar.  As a child, I remember sitting amidst the rows, with the juice from tomatoes, strawberries and raspberries dripping from my chin.  It was truly heaven. It was also a haven for me as an adolescent, as the hard work with a shovel and hoe also helped me to figure how to "weed" a path in life to manhood.

Six decades later, as I noted in my last blog, the subject of food has grown much more serious.  Some people grow fat while others starve. The world's population has increased to 6 billion and is projected to grow to 9 billion in 20 years. This continuing growth means that one third of arable land has been lost in the past 40 years ( Recent report by University of Sheffield's Center for Sustainable Future).

There is another story about food beyond the misery of starvation which is so prevalent in the news. It is a positive story about how people are striving, often heroically, to produce more food on a sustainable basis and succeeding with new and old technologies.

For instance, one portion of the last United Nations annual World Food Day (Oct. 16) report click here focuses on the International Atomic Energy Association's use of radiation to boost produce with radiation breeding (sometimes referred to as "variation breeding" or "mutation breeding").  It is the process of exposing seeds to chemicals or radiation in order to generate mutants with desirable traits to be bred with other cultivars. Wikipedia says "From 1930 to 2014 more than 3200 mutagenic plant varieties were released that have been derived either as direct mutants (70%) or from their progeny (30%). Crop plants (rice, wheat, barley, peas, sunflowers, peanuts, grapefruit) account for 75% of released mutagenic species with the remaining 25% ornamentals."  The UN report also notes the effect of  mutagenics in Iraq: "Iraqui scientists have developed four improved varieties of traditional crops that tolerate both drought and salty soil...".   In addition, the report revealed how nuclear techniques saved the citrus industry in  South Africa by large reductions in the insect pest population. Speaking of insects, how about chompin' down on some?  No kidding,  check out these tasty morsels  suggested by National Geographic Magazine.  There is a culinary review in the magazine of ants, stinkbugs, tree worms, beetles, butterflies and crickets, to name a few.  (This reporter dined on crickets in DC. They had a satisfying salty crunch, but were way too spendy).

Many countries are helping to increase food stocks.  Sweden has created a valuable source of nutrition called FoPo click here . It turns otherwise unusable produce into nutritional food powder which can "easily dropped into disaster zones to provide non-refrigerated goods."  

The WFP report on Nicaragua last year chronicles the increase in school gardens and the efforts to convince people to trust the land's ability to produce food. 

A brand new technolgy called Cold Hubs is now available to Developing Countries.  Small-scale farmers have historically produced the majority of the world's food on just 25% of farmland. The problem in the past has been the unavailability of electricity for refrigeration of fresh produce.  Cold Hubs provides solar powered cold rooms to preserve freshness up to 21 days.  The company promotions state that "Cold Hubs offers farmers with a flexible pay-as-you-store subscription model. In preparation for storage, farmers transfer their perishable foods into our reusable crates, which fit neatly onto the shelves. Farmers pay a daily flat fee for each crate of food they store."  

Check this link  to see how England "....is committed to creating 3 million high quality food and farming apprenticeships by 2020, including many more at degree level - with a target to ensure 2.3% of workers in the public sector are apprentices."

America is the most prolific contributor to increasing the availability of food at home and abroad.  Here are but a few of the ongoing efforts by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in promoting and funding the small family farms which make up a whopping 88 percent of the farms in America:

From a blog posting on Sept. 29, 2016 by Elanor Starmer  (a USDA Marketing Service Administrator):  "With sales of over $11 billion in 2014 and projected growth of 10 percent annually, local and regionally-produced food is the fastest growing sector of American agriculture. At USDA, we hear a lot from communities interested in strengthening the connection between farmers and consumers. That’s why we’re investing in projects across the country to help farm and food businesses tap into this growing market." 

Here are some of the resources available to American farmers:  
Farmers Market Promotion Program (FMPP)  click here and the Local Food Promotion Program (LFPP)  click here   are the backbone of the outreach programs for small farmers. FMPP
grants invest in marketing activities for farmers markets, roadside stands and other direct producer-to-consumer businesses. LFPP 
funds projects that support local food businesses that distribute and or store locally or regionally produced food products.  LFPP funding also targets a diverse rural economy through projects that develop, improve, and expand local and regional food business. 
communities. A significant number of these grants—82 percent—will help increase marketing opportunities for new and beginning farmers. 72 percent of the grants will help support women in agriculture.   And few would  deny the long history link here of  the USA World Food Program, in there efforts to save millions from famine.

My analysis of the types of food available world wide lead me to two conclusions.  (1)  For decades,  nations have supported some 30 traditional crops (such as sugarcane, rice, wheat, corn, potato, barley, oat, tomato, apple, and bean) with vast subsidies, tax advantages and research. But new advances in biotechnology are focused on major crops because it's the best way to increase returns on investment. (2) My research found that most plant experts have counted some 350,000 plant species of which it is estimated about 80,000 are edible. and only 180 species are actively grown, while only 30 produce 95% of human calories and proteins. What Professor of Horticulture Jules Janick at Purdue University said almost 20 years ago remains true: "We are, in fact, dependent upon Stone Age crops and animals."  

Some of the minor plant species are being utilized, primarily by poor people who have faced starvation or famine  famine food link here.  Here is a partial list on Wikipedia---
My next posting will place me smack-dab in the middle of the battle over GMO's and organic crops.  I will also report on what may be our true salvation--Agroecology.  

I will leave you with this:  "We still don't know one thousandth of one percent of what nature has revealed to us." -- Albert Einstein 

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Neon Leon: The Future of Food: Feast or Famine?

Neon Leon: The Future of Food: Feast or Famine?: "Even the simplest of food is a gift." -- Laurie Colwin Colwin (1944-1992) was an American writer and columnist for Gourmet m...

The Future of Food: Feast or Famine?

"Even the simplest of food is a gift." -- Laurie Colwin


Colwin (1944-1992) was an American writer and columnist for Gourmet magazine, and her quote succinctly expresses why, for so many people, their next meal will not be a matter of deciding what to eat; it is a question of whether they will have any food at all. Stories of famine and starvation have been seen on TV and other screens for so long, viewers have become enured of the subject. Tuning out is made easier, of course, by the astonishing array of food available to people in first world countries.  As an old farmer told me long ago, "They don't give a s..t,  cuz they ain't hungry." 

This posting will examine how well we are feeding the 7 billion people on the planet as well as the expected population of 10 billion in about 30 years (August 2016 United Nations report).  I will also report on how much food we waste and what is added to the food we buy at supermarkets.  

My next posting will focus on the inspiring efforts to feed the world by small farmers using Agroecolgy (the study of ecological processes applied to agricultural production systems), how Silicon Valley is becoming deeply involved in farming, and efforts to curb waste. I may stick my nose into the debate over organic foods and GMOs also.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that about 795 million people of the 7.3 billion people in the world, or one in nine, were suffering from chronic undernourishment in 2014-2016. Almost all the hungry people, 780 million, live in developing countries, representing 12.9 percent, or one in eight, of the population of developing countries.  In the USA, the percentage of U.S. households that were food insecure declined significantly in 2016 to 12.7 percent of U.S. households (15.8 million households, approximately one in eight) according to the non profit World Hunger Education Service.

There is some good news also-- the January 2016 UN Goals Report said "The world produces enough food to feed everyone. The principal problem is that many people in the world still do not have sufficient income to purchase (or land to grow) enough food or access to nutritious food...world agriculture produces 17 percent more calories per person today than it did 30 years ago, despite a 70 percent population increase." 

I still remember the large sign posted above the chow line in the Marine Corps boot camp in San Diego decades ago--TAKE ALL YOU WANT, EAT ALL YOU TAKE.  Similarly, as a child, I remember when my mother routinely issued this stern warning to my brother, sister and I: "You can't leave the table until you eat what's on your plate." My parents lived through the Great Depression and never forgot how food on the table was often very meager; a full stomach was truly a gift then.  

Two generations later, Americans now waste a hell of a lot of food (about 40 percent, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). The NRDC sadly notes click here how this waste creates methane gas, squanders energy sources (to make and transport the stuff) and does nothing to fill the stomachs of our hungry citizens.

The problem is not limited to the United States.  The NY Times published a report  a year ago from an English based, non profit called Waste and Resources Action program click here which detailed the alarming statistics about food waste world wide, including this:  "A third of all the food produced in the world is never consumed." 

One may quibble about the accuracy of all these numbers, but clearly, we have a nexus of issues (a warming climate, lack of   arable land, a growing population and the loss of fresh water resources) that must be resolved, before it is simply too late for too many.

What to do?  Perhaps a good start is to examine what we should and should not eat. The food in the developing world varies dramatically, but most still eat what their small farmers can produce and has historically proven adequate for needed calories unless crops are impacted by floods, drought or war.  The food in the developed world commonly is produced on huge commercial farms. Imported food allows many western countries to eat crops which are exotic or out of season at home. 

What makes the western world's (Europe, North America) diet unique is the prevalence of processed foods ( breakfast cereals, cheese, tinned vegetables, bread, savory snacks, meat products). In addition there are the "convenience foods", such as microwave or ready meals as well as soft drinks. The March 2016 issue of Time magazine published an analysis of  this trend click here noting that "Americans get less than 1 percent of their daily calories from vegetables."  Marketplace, which has recorded business and economic analysis for 800 public radio stations for 30 years, click here  has noted two astonishing numbers:  70 percent of the food we eat is processed and contains some 5000 hard to pronounce chemicals (used for long shelf life, taste and color enhancement, etc.).

Other than the few people who have been hiding in the deep woods or stranded on an island for years, most folks have known there is a lot of sugar and salt in our food.  Let's look at each separately. 
  
SPOONFULS OF SUGAR

Multiple national and world health organizations seem to agree that we should have a daily intake of about six spoons of sugar daily. We actually consume more than 22 teaspoons a day of added sugars (any added sugars of any of about 24 different types used in processing or preparation).  Research at the Harvard School of Public Health in 2012, for example, has tied sugary drinks to an epidemic of obesity in the United States. They reported "The average 12-ounce can of soda contains 10 teaspoons of sugar, and the average teenage boy consumes nearly three cans of sugary drinks a day. Is it any wonder that about two-thirds of Americans are now overweight or obese?  Obesity, in turn, raises the risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, arthritis and cancer. 

PASS (UP) THE SALT

Almost 80 percent of the salt in the American diet comes not from the salt shaker, but from processed or restaurant foods. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the average American on a 2,000-calorie-per-day diet devoured more than 3,400 mg of salt per day (mg/d). That’s substantially more than current dietary guidelines, which recommend that adults in general consume no more than 2,300 mg/d—about one teaspoon.
Meanwhile, studies have linked salty diets to high blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes, the first and third leading causes of death in the United States.  

For the last 10 years, under growing pressure from food agencies and an increasingly aware public, many countries have began to wage a war against sugar, salt and "lifestyle ills." According to the USDA, "Some food companies are making progress, but the numbers are still too high."  In November 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) organized, jointly with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), adopted the Rome Declaration on Nutrition and the Framework for Action, which recommends "...a set of policy options and strategies to promote diversified, safe and healthy diets at all stages of life." WHO is helping countries to implement the commitments with the help of local and state food agencies. 

The fight has claimed some victories. There are now thousands of new farmers markets.  New land for farming is slowly becoming available in former industrial areas.  Educational programs abound in public and private sectors teaching how to grow food and cook it from scratch in your own kitchen.  I believe these victories are critical because we are in a fight for our lives.  

Food is really more than a means to fill our bellies.  Eleanor Roosevelt put it this way:  "The freedom of mankind, I contend, is the freedom to eat."