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Archive for articles filed in 'agriculture'

Big Soy: The Underside of the Industry

Angela Day | Posted on Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Canadian Dimension magazine, July/August 2008

Soy consumption in North America and Europe is increasing exponentially, these days, for reasons ranging from health consciousness to animal rights to a more mainstream acceptance of tofu. The incredible landmass devoted to soy, however, won’t make the hippies happy. While soy is increasingly promoted as a healthy alternative to animal products in the North, the soy industry is destroying homes, livelihoods, health and the environment across South America. In the context of a global food crisis, in both the North and South large-scale agribusinesses are tightening their grip and local alternatives are espoused as the only saving grace. (Keep reading…)

The (Not-So) Sudden Crisis of the Global Food Ecomony

Tony Weis | Posted on Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Canadian Dimension magazine, July/August 2008

Rapidly rising food prices are casting millions of the world’s poor into increasingly desperate circumstances of malnourishment and hunger. Various food-centred scenes of suffering and associated social tensions have become regular fixtures in the news in 2008: people staving off hunger pangs by eating mud in Haiti; guarded warehouses and grain shipments in the Philippines; export prohibitions in India; food rationing in Pakistan; and food-price riots in more than thirty countries across the Global South. Josette Sheeran, head of the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP), recently likened the scale and suddenness of this humanitarian crisis to the 2004 tsunami in Asia, while noting that it is a crisis in which poor people still can often see “food on shelves, but … are priced out of the market.” (Keep reading…)

Capitalism, Agribusiness, and the Food Sovereignty Alternative

Posted on Monday, May 12th, 2008

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(((( T h e B u l l e t ))))~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A Socialist Project e-bulletin …. No. 107 …. May 12, 2008 _____________________________________________________________ (Keep reading…)

Food Crisis

Ian Angus | Posted on Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~(((( T h e B u l l e t ))))~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A Socialist Project e-bulletin …. No. 102 …. April 28, 2008 _______________________________________________________________ (Keep reading…)

The Politics of Food is Politics: An Alternative Agriculture is Possible

DE CLARKE and STAN GOFF | Posted on Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

CounterPunch April 24, 2008

In recent days, we have seen the rising price of oil and the devaluation of the dollar create two quantum shifts in the economy: the beginning of the collapse of the air travel industry and a global crisis of food-price inflation. These are related in ways that are crucial to understand — because we are seeing the outlines of an historic opportunity to change the terms of theory and practice for a politics of resistance. As air carriers have gone bankrupt, the knock-on effects on travel agents, airports, airport-colocated hotels, “package” vacation resorts, etc. are considerable. (Keep reading…)

The World Food Crisis

John Nichols | Posted on Monday, April 28th, 2008

April 28, 2008 The Nation

The only surprising thing about the global food crisis to Jim Goodman is the notion that anyone finds it surprising. ‘So,’ says the Wisconsin dairy farmer, ‘they finally figured out, after all these years of pushing globalization and genetically modified [GM] seeds, that instead of feeding the world we’ve created a food system that leaves more people hungry. If they’d listened to farmers instead of corporations, they would’ve known this was going to happen.’ Goodman has traveled the world to speak, organize and rally with groups such as La Via Campesina, the global movement of peasant and farm organizations that has been warning for years that ’solutions’ promoted by agribusiness conglomerates were designed to maximize corporate profits, not help farmers or feed people. The food shortages, suddenly front-page news, are not new. Hundreds of millions of people were starving and malnourished last year; the only change is that as the scope of the crisis has grown, it has become more difficult to ‘manage’ the hunger that a failed food system accepts rather than feeds. (Keep reading…)

Red Alert on Green Fuels:Biofuels igniting global crisis for food, people and the planet

Cathy Holtslander | Posted on Saturday, April 19th, 2008

  Ottawa, April 17 2008.  The rush to get into biofuels production has ignited a major crisis for the planet.  This according to the Canadian and global farm leaders and agriculture specialists from around the world speaking across Canada April 28-May 1 at public forums entitled “Crops, Cars and Climate Crisis”.   The world is on the brink of a major food crisis, exacerbated by rising grain prices, seriously depleted food supplies, and land being used to produce ethanol fuel instead of food, the organizers say.  According to the UN World Food Programme, rising food prices are already causing conflict in 33 countries.    “Food-related clashes in Mexico, Haiti and the Philippines are clear signals that the world needs to wake up fast and deal with the problem”, says Pat Mooney of the ETC Group.  “We’re heading into a perfect storm without even an umbrella,” he says.  “Climate change, agrofuels and alarming food shortages are a deadly combination for the planet.  We’re going to see hunger and social unrest affecting hundreds of millions of people, at a scale not seen in decades.”    In Latin America, expanding soy monoculture is causing violence against farmers, and widespread human rights abuses.  “Where do companies get the land needed to produce agrofuels on a large scale?  In Colombia, Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, people are being kicked off their land to make way for soy, sugar and palm oil plantations for agrofuels,” says Javiera Rulli, of Base Investigaciones Sociale, based in Paraguay.    “Farmers in our countries pay with their blood so that people in rich countries can feed their cars,” says Rulli.  The grain used to fill one SUV tank with ethanol could feed a person for a year.   “To grow biofuels, agricultural corporations are eating up forests and water resources at an alarming rate,” says Ditdit Pelegrina of the Philippines-based organization SEARICE.   In Indonesia and Malaysia alone, millions of hectares of forest have been cut down for agrofuel production. Forests are our biggest defence against climate change since they absorb carbon, says Pelegrina.   Lucy Sharratt of the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network sees agrofuels as one more way our food supply is falling into corporate hands.  “Corporations claim they can fix the failing dream of agrofuels with ‘second generation’ technologies, like genetically engineered crops and trees,” she says.  “Genetic engineering and synthetic biology will only add to the nightmare of corporate control and environmental risk.”  Corporations are pursuing GE trees for ethanol at a time when there is an international call for a ban on transgenic trees, says Sharratt.   Pat Mooney says we need a whole new framework in which to view agrofuels.  “Instead of speeding ahead with mandatory agrofuel targets, subsidies and tax breaks, we’re asking governments and corporations to put the brakes on agrofuels,” says Mooney.  “Where are the policies and incentives needed to help Canadians, the world’s biggest energy consumers per person, face the global reality?”   CROPS, CARS AND CLIMATE CRISIS:  PUBLIC FORUMS ON AGROFUELS: Monday April 28:  Saskatoon Monday April 28:  Charlottetown Tuesday April 29:  Halifax Tuesday April 29:  Winnipeg Wednesday April 30:  Ottawa Thursday May 1:  Montreal     GUEST SPEAKERS:    Wilhelmina “Ditdit” Pelegrina, Southeast Asia Regional Initiatives for Community Empowerment (SEARICE), Philippines Javiera Rulli, Base Investigaciones Sociale (BaseIS), Paraguay Soledad Vogliano, CEPPAS, Argentina Alberto Gomez, La Via Campesina, Mexico Peter Rosset, Global Alternatives, US and Mexico Ousmane Samake, COPAGEN, Mali Melaku Worede, USC Canada/Seeds of Survival, Ethiopia Marilyn Machado, PCN, Colombia Helena Paul, EcoNexus, United Kingdom Sharon Labchuk, P.E.I Coalition for a GMO-Free Province, Charlottetown, Canada Devlin Kuyek, GRAIN International, Montreal, Canada Darrin Qualman, National Famers Union, Saskatoon, Canada Pat Mooney, ETC Group, Ottawa, Canada   - 30 -   For more information, and to arrange an interview with speakers:   Faris Ahmed, USC Canada  613-234-6827 ext. 223; fahmed@usc-canada.org fahmed@usc-canada.org   Lucy Sharratt, Canadian Biotechnology Action Network 613-241-2267; coordinator@cban.ca coordinator@cban.ca Eric Chaurette, Inter Pares  613-563-4801; echaurette@interpares.ca echaurette@interpares.ca     Presented by: Beyond Factory Farming, Canadian Biotechnology Action Network, ETC Group, Inter Pares, Partnership Africa Canada, The Ram’s Horn, USC Canada, and many local partners.   FOR MORE DETAILS VISIT  www.cban.ca/agrofuels http://www.cban.ca/agrofuels
    (Keep reading…)

The coming food catastrophe

Gwynne Dyer | Posted on Saturday, April 5th, 2008

Georgia Straight
April 3, 2008

“This is the new face of hunger,” said Josette Sheeran, executive director of the UN’s World Food Programme, launching an appeal for an extra $500 million so it could continue supplying food aid to 73 million hungry people this year. “People are simply being priced out of food markets. We have never before had a situation where aggressive rises in food prices keep pricing our operations out of our reach.” (Keep reading…)

Farmers Seek Defenses Against the Giants of Agribusiness

John Riddell | Posted on Friday, April 4th, 2008

(((( T h e B u l l e t )))) A Socialist Project e-bulletin …. No. 96 …. April 4, 2008

Around the world, farm income is plummeting, pushing farmers off the land and into destitution. At the very same time, soaring food prices are putting tens of millions onto starvation diets. (Keep reading…)

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