Feeling the heat of food security
Reforming the economics of food production and supply would be
beneficial for a number of environmental and social problems, argues
Peter Baker.
A key issue, he says, is understanding the energy involved in putting
food on your plate.
Global development, global debt, global warming, food miles, food
security, food riots, peak oil, peak water...
What’s this got to do with small farmers and global food chains?
The answer is that all the issues mentioned above intersect over
small farmers.
If we can’t quite get a grip on what is happening to the world, we
won’t be able to do a good job for them, and we’ll waste a lot of
resources in the process.
It’s perfectly reasonable to want to assist farmers to build a better
life by adding value. It’s also perfectly reasonable to expect their
produce to be fresh and non-toxic. And it’s only natural to want to
facilitate this process through aid, technical assistance, capacity
building and the like.
But the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
I had originally planned to call this article Supermarkets,
Smallholders and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. The Second Law is
about order; the Universe is inexorably heading to increased randomness
and disorder.
For practical purposes, this does not have to be a problem because we
can increase order locally by hard work, by expending energy. But in the
process we create greater disorder (heat and waste) elsewhere.
If there is plenty of energy and plenty of “elsewhere”, then we don’t
have to worry.
Indeed, for our whole existence, we largely haven’t worried; in fact
the whole world order, built on trade and economics, hasn’t
worried.Biological systems know all about thermodynamics. All living
things are highly ordered assemblies of molecules continuously battling
against disorder.
Commodity chains must also obey the Second Law; in a sense, they are
living things, creating highly ordered products and emitting significant
waste and heat in the process.
For example, a recent study looking at Nicaraguan coffee production
and processing showed that the total energy embodied in coffee exported
to several countries - though not all - was not compensated by the
dollar price paid for that energy.
Essentially, the conclusion was that the country is exporting
subsidised energy.
It could well be that coffee is still the best way for farmers to
earn a living and that the available energy could not readily be put to
a better purpose.
But it should at least make a country’s decision-makers wonder about
the long term policy, the true value of exported products and how
sustainable a country’s commodity chains will be in an energetically
expensive future.
Look too at a modern high value vegetable chain. The orderliness
required to plant, grow, harvest, process, pack, store, monitor,
administer, transport, display and sell the produce in a supermarket is
simply staggering, and the expended energy intense.
The point of this article may now be apparent. We are intervening,
politically and normatively, in very complex systems that we only
partially understand.
This is not a tirade about supermarkets; no one is forcing farmers
into these chains. Indeed, the retail sector has only done its job:
ordering and quantifying according to its own criteria, to a state of
near optimal efficiency. It’s just that the rest of us have not been
able to match its brilliance.And it’s not about food miles.
The argument about the cost to the environment versus the gains to
poor rural farmers has its pros and cons. Instead, it’s about different
sorts of sustainability and the clash of very different interests.
The economic argument, revealed through agribusiness plans, may well
be very strong. But these are inevitably rather short-term positions,
and the funds invested may be hedged for exchange rate changes, freight
costs and other risks.
But it’s no longer a matter of a few agribusiness operations in a few
developing countries. With the EU’s Economic Partnership Agreements now
being signed, for instance, countries in the Africa, Caribbean and
Pacific (ACP) group are on course to completely open their borders to
food trade, and will be encouraged to export whatever products they can
to the EU.
Foreign investment will descend on certain countries and will look
for good deals on infrastructure. Politicians there may feel obliged to
provide subsidised water, road and other infrastructure to secure new
export initiatives, and they in turn will look for donor support to
carry them through.
Trade departments of development banks and other donors will examine
the short-to-medium-term economic argument, but may not adequately
determine whether this is sustainable into the long term.
Hence, before significant public funds are assigned to this end, we
must do our utmost to ensure they are well spent.
The author, Dr. Peter Baker is a commodities development specialist
at CABI, a not-for-profit agricultural research organisation.
The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental
topics running weekly on the BBC News website. |