Growing Valentine's Day roses harming Kenya's ecological site
source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/feb/14/valentines-day-roses-kenya
-
-
- JanforGore
- added this
University of Leicester ecology and conservation biologist, Dr David Harper, warned. Harper has spent over 30 years researching wetland conservation at Kenya's Lake Naivasha and said the growth of the flowers is draining the valuable water supply.
Seventy per cent of roses sold in European supermarkets come from Kenya, most from Naivasha. Harper called on UK supermarkets to show more concern about the health of the environment that the flowers come from.
He said: "A notable few of the farmers sending roses to Europe are showing concern and an eagerness to pioneer a sustainable way forward: the best flower farms have achieved Fairtrade status, which brings money back into the workforce for social welfare improvements. Two farms have even seconded senior managers to help Kenya's water management agency at Naivasha."
But he warns that the massive scale of UK supermarket promotions of flowers over Valentine's Day — and subsequently on Mother's Day – without concern for where or how environmentally sustainable roses can be grown, will just increase the export of water – the scarcest natural resource in Kenya.
He went on: "There are just a few good farms but many more that don't care how much damage they do to the lake. Seventy per cent of the roses sold in European supermarkets come from Kenya and the majority of those are from Naivasha, many thus coming without any ecological certification. This has to change for the future of the industry as well as the lake and the country."
The provenance of such roses is not always clear, he said. Cheap roses are often grown by companies which cut corners to avoid legislation, selling them by auction in Amsterdam so buyers think they come from Holland
-
- groups:
- Community, Green, Sustainable Agriculture, Earth Care, 1 more
-
- tags:
- Water, Ecology, Kenya, Water Conservation, 5 more
-
-
eyelashviper
-
The flower farms of this area have been polluting and affecting the habitat for quite awhile, yet little is done because of the $$$$ involved.
Most roses here in the US are grown in Colombia, which has been an alternative to farmers from growing coca leaves, a good thing for Colombia. - 1 year ago
-
eyelashviper
-
-
RojoGatto
-
im going to send this to my girl for the reason why i didn't get her roses
(i forgot) - 1 year ago
-
RojoGatto
-
-
cicly
-
again, should we not aim our frustrations on the core of the problems? are we to let the despicable business practices escape their resposibilities and blame a holiday instead?
- 1 year ago
-
cicly
-
-
coolplanet
-
cicly:
Earth Day every day.....
- 1 year ago
-
coolplanet
-
-
cicly
-
an innocuous day for showing affection is blamed for unscrupuluos business practices and barbaric acts of slavery??? come on.
- 1 year ago
-
cicly
-
-
coolplanet
-
cicly:
Even most of the cheap chocolate is harvested by slave labor!
How can we blithely pretend this isn't the reality?
Just like Christmas. How many millions of trees must we chop down for Jesus??? - 1 year ago
-
coolplanet
-
-
JanforGore
-
cicly:
Welcome to the real world.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
-
-
coolplanet
-
And what about all those blood diamonds given to sweethearts today?
- 1 year ago
-
coolplanet
-
-
Armageddon_Now
-
Hey, couples need their token gestures once a year.
- 1 year ago
-
Armageddon_Now
-
-
haberzet
-
Just another reason not to buy flowers for Valentines Day. There are alternatives to show your partner how you feel. Also I don't need one special day a year to show my wife how much I love her.
- 1 year ago
-
haberzet
-
-
JanforGore
-
http://current.com/news/92500705_blooming-controversy-what-is-killing-the-wildli...
Previous entry on what is killing Lake Naivasha and the war with flower farms.
- 1 year ago
-
JanforGore
