Right to Food: “Agroecology outperforms large-scale industrial farming for global food security,” says UN expert
source: http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=10178&LargID=E?
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Along with 25 of the world’s most renowned experts on agroecology, the UN expert urged the international community to re-think current agricultural policies and build on the potential of agroecology.
“One year ago, Heads of States at the G20 gathering in Italy committed to mobilizing $22 billion over a period of three years to improve global food security. This was welcome news, but the most pressing issue regarding reinvestment in agriculture is not how much, but how,” Olivier De Schutter said .
“Today, most efforts are made towards large-scale investments in land – including many instances of land grabbing – and towards a ‘Green Revolution’ model to boost food production: improved seeds, chemical fertilisers and machines,” the Special Rapporteur remarked. “But scant attention has been paid to agroecological methods that have been shown to improve food production and farmers’ incomes, while at the same time protecting the soil, water, and climate.”
The widest study ever conducted on agroecological approaches (Jules Pretty, Essex University, UK) covered 286 projects in 57 developing countries, representing a total surface of 37 million hectares: the average crop yield gain was 79%. Concrete examples of ‘agroecological success stories’ abound in Africa.
In Tanzania, the Western provinces of Shinyanga and Tabora used to be known as the ‘Desert of Tanzania’. However, the use of agroforestry techniques and participatory processes allowed some 350,000 hectares of land to be rehabilitated in two decades. Profits per household rose by as much as USD 500 a year. Similar techniques are used in Malawi, where some 100,000 smallholders in 2005 benefited to some degree from the use of fertilizer trees.
“With more than a billion hungry people on the planet, and the climate disruptions ahead of us, we must rapidly scale up these sustainable techniques,” De Schutter said. “Even if it makes the task more complex, we have to find a way of addressing global hunger, climate change, and the depletion of natural resources, all at the same time. Anything short of this would be an exercise in futility.”
The experts gathering in Brussels identified the policies that could develop agroecological approaches to the scale needed to feed the world in 2050. They based their work on the experiences of countries that have pro-agroecology policies – such as Cuba or Brazil – as well as on the successful experiences from international research centres such as the World Agroforestry Center in Nairobi, and on the programmes of La Via Campesina, the transnational peasant movement, which runs agroecology training programmes.
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JanforGore
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The only reason I can see anyone disputing this is because they have stock in Monsanto or some other huge agro-industrial company. This is simply a no brainer to me. Bring agroecology first to the areas of the world that need it the most. Those areas where soil is depleted of nutrients; where deforestation threatens food sources, water sources, and exacerbates climate change;
where people have little access to anything but GMO US imports to push Monsanto's seeds down their throats.Give farmers in these countries the opportunity and tools necessary including seeds they can save and improve on through natural breeding to withstand drought and other environmental stresses, and respect their wisdom regarding how to plant them for the most profit for their communities both environmentally
and economically.To continue with the oil driven agricultural model we have currently employed is to doom future generations to a life of monoculture food sources, depleted soil, polluted and scarce water sources, and continued disease. It will be a world our children will not be able to live on sustainably with biodiversity. So I couldn't agree more with the suggestions here, especially after seeing the evidence of their success. .And with the Gulf ecocide we see unfolding, peak oil as well as peak water may well come even sooner. We must be prepared.
- 1 year ago
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JanforGore
