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Old 16-07-2007, 04:08 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Food miles & Kenyan growers

Interesting article in our newspaper this morning about air miles and
environmental impact. I can see both sides of the argument however it does
show hom simplistic simply gauging things by food miles is. A far better
determinant is total energy consumption or environmental footprint from
ground to market. That provides an overall assessment. Will be difficult to
develop a comprehensive calculation I reckon. This is not to say that
efforts should not be made in calculating the environmental impact of food,
more that a robust system needs to be developed before dignificant actions
be taken.
rob

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/s...451695&ref=rss

In floppy hats and gumboots, Kenya's Kikuyu farmers are preparing for war
with Britain. There isn't an AK-47 in sight, though there are plenty of
organic cucumbers, carrots, french beans and cauliflowers.

It's a battle over who is to blame for climate change - poor African farmers
who export their produce by air, or Western consumers who care about the
environmental impact of "food miles".

"Who emits more greenhouse gases?" asks Charles Kimani among his avocado
trees. "A Kenyan or a Briton?" The average Briton emits 30 times more carbon
than a Kenyan, according to World Bank figures - or 9.4 tonnes of CO2
compared with 0.3 tonnes.

Behind the furore is the proposal by the UK's Soil Association, which
campaigns for organic food, organic farming and sustainable forestry to ban
imports of organic produce from poor countries such as Kenya because of
their food miles - the carbon emitted by air transport.

Starting with a debate in London tomorrow, the SA will hear views on the
issue until September, when it may decide to introduce a limited or total
ban. A ban would mean labelling air-freighted products so that they
effectively lost their organic status due to their food miles. Such a move
would destroy the livelihoods of tens of thousands of smallholders across
Africa in one of the continent's most enterprising export industries,
forcing them back into poverty and subsistence farming.


Advertisement

Advertisement"A ban on our export market will be death for us," says Mr
Kimani, who has put his children through school and college from the profits
made from fruit and vegetables on just three hectares of land.

Organic produce is the fastest-growth area of Africa's horticultural
industry, with cut flowers and other high-value products like dried herbs
and essential oils. In Kenya, where two-thirds of people live on less than
$1 a day, horticulture is the largest export earner after tourism.

The story is much the same in Ethiopia, Uganda and Tanzania.

A chain of other industries from packaging to transport firms also rely on
horticulture, so the knock-on effect would hurt millions of jobs across the
region.

The food miles debate deepens the scepticism that many Africans already have
towards Western rhetoric about ending poverty in the continent. Most farmers
in upcountry Kenyan areas such as Kiambu do not look to increased aid as the
way out of poverty. Devout Christians with a tradition of hard work and
self-help, Kikuyu farmers see wealth coming from access to lucrative Western
markets.


"The SA proposal is just another non-tariff barrier to trade among the many
that already exist," says Eustace Kiarii, chief of an organisation
representing Kenyan organic farmers. Farmers from Kenya and developing
countries are not asking for special trade access, but to be allowed to
trade competitively."



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Old 16-07-2007, 07:19 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Posts: 35
Default Food miles & Kenyan growers

At risk of starting a vitriolic debate on this hugely fashionable and "in"
subject - I personally have just a tiny little, teen weeny, very small,
back-of-the-mind suspicion that part of the Global Warming thing is to
maintain the status quo and the economic/agricultural power of the existing
major world economies ....do "we" (in the "West") really want Kenyan farmers
climbing out of poverty and potentially turning their economy around?

We're short of resources, and we want to keep things as they are - think
about it .....Global Warming is happening anyway - whether it's us or
cattle-f*rting - why not use it?

Barb
(an old cynic - definition: "one who believes that human conduct is
motivated wholly by self-interest ")



"George.com" wrote in message
...
Interesting article in our newspaper this morning about air miles and
environmental impact. I can see both sides of the argument however it does
show hom simplistic simply gauging things by food miles is. A far better
determinant is total energy consumption or environmental footprint from
ground to market. That provides an overall assessment. Will be difficult
to
develop a comprehensive calculation I reckon. This is not to say that
efforts should not be made in calculating the environmental impact of
food,
more that a robust system needs to be developed before dignificant actions
be taken.
rob

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/category/s...451695&ref=rss

In floppy hats and gumboots, Kenya's Kikuyu farmers are preparing for war
with Britain. There isn't an AK-47 in sight, though there are plenty of
organic cucumbers, carrots, french beans and cauliflowers.

It's a battle over who is to blame for climate change - poor African
farmers
who export their produce by air, or Western consumers who care about the
environmental impact of "food miles".

"Who emits more greenhouse gases?" asks Charles Kimani among his avocado
trees. "A Kenyan or a Briton?" The average Briton emits 30 times more
carbon
than a Kenyan, according to World Bank figures - or 9.4 tonnes of CO2
compared with 0.3 tonnes.

Behind the furore is the proposal by the UK's Soil Association, which
campaigns for organic food, organic farming and sustainable forestry to
ban
imports of organic produce from poor countries such as Kenya because of
their food miles - the carbon emitted by air transport.

Starting with a debate in London tomorrow, the SA will hear views on the
issue until September, when it may decide to introduce a limited or total
ban. A ban would mean labelling air-freighted products so that they
effectively lost their organic status due to their food miles. Such a move
would destroy the livelihoods of tens of thousands of smallholders across
Africa in one of the continent's most enterprising export industries,
forcing them back into poverty and subsistence farming.


Advertisement

Advertisement"A ban on our export market will be death for us," says Mr
Kimani, who has put his children through school and college from the
profits
made from fruit and vegetables on just three hectares of land.

Organic produce is the fastest-growth area of Africa's horticultural
industry, with cut flowers and other high-value products like dried herbs
and essential oils. In Kenya, where two-thirds of people live on less than
$1 a day, horticulture is the largest export earner after tourism.

The story is much the same in Ethiopia, Uganda and Tanzania.

A chain of other industries from packaging to transport firms also rely on
horticulture, so the knock-on effect would hurt millions of jobs across
the
region.

The food miles debate deepens the scepticism that many Africans already
have
towards Western rhetoric about ending poverty in the continent. Most
farmers
in upcountry Kenyan areas such as Kiambu do not look to increased aid as
the
way out of poverty. Devout Christians with a tradition of hard work and
self-help, Kikuyu farmers see wealth coming from access to lucrative
Western
markets.


"The SA proposal is just another non-tariff barrier to trade among the
many
that already exist," says Eustace Kiarii, chief of an organisation
representing Kenyan organic farmers. Farmers from Kenya and developing
countries are not asking for special trade access, but to be allowed to
trade competitively."





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Old 16-07-2007, 08:16 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Food miles & Kenyan growers


"Barb" wrote in message
...
At risk of starting a vitriolic debate on this hugely fashionable and "in"
subject - I personally have just a tiny little, teen weeny, very small,
back-of-the-mind suspicion that part of the Global Warming thing is to
maintain the status quo and the economic/agricultural power of the
existing major world economies ....do "we" (in the "West") really want
Kenyan farmers climbing out of poverty and potentially turning their
economy around?


I wonder why Kenyans can't grow food for their own use.

Perhaps I'm naive ...

Mary







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Old 16-07-2007, 10:45 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Posts: 61
Default Food miles & Kenyan growers

The message
from Martin contains these words:

On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:16:12 +0100, "Mary Fisher"
wrote:



"Barb" wrote in message
.. .
At risk of starting a vitriolic debate on this hugely fashionable
and "in"
subject - I personally have just a tiny little, teen weeny, very small,
back-of-the-mind suspicion that part of the Global Warming thing is to
maintain the status quo and the economic/agricultural power of the
existing major world economies ....do "we" (in the "West") really want
Kenyan farmers climbing out of poverty and potentially turning their
economy around?


I wonder why Kenyans can't grow food for their own use.

Perhaps I'm naive ...


.... you are.


Why not wonder why UK has to import cucumbers and lettuce etc. from
Holland &
Spain.
--


Exactly - why? Because we want to have them all year round instead of
eating the vegies in season like our parents did?

Better still - grow our own [not that I do with my tiny courtyard I have
to admit ] they certainly taste better.
Beryl
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Old 17-07-2007, 10:25 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Food miles & Kenyan growers


"Beryl Harwood" wrote in message
...

Why not wonder why UK has to import cucumbers and lettuce etc. from
Holland &
Spain.
--


Exactly - why?


We don't HAVE to, the pseudomarkets want to 'give customers choice'. In
other words they want to sell more. We can resist :-)

Because we want to have them all year round instead of
eating the vegies in season like our parents did?


And some of us still do. I won't buy anything from abroad which can be grown
in this country, if that means that I don't have strawberries at Christmas
so be it. I do buy exotics which can't be grown here.

Better still - grow our own [not that I do with my tiny courtyard I have
to admit ] they certainly taste better.


They do, even cucumbers which I never thought had much flavour. Once I had
grown my own there was no lookiing back. We gorge on things in their season
and look forward to them the rest of the year. At the moment it's
raspberries, too many for us to eat although we do, every day, so the rest
are going in the freezer ready for jamming. We've had three meals of runner
beans and there will be lots more to come. I think we had the last of the
cabbage last night. This morning I was in the greenhouse tending the
tomatoes, they're still green but I can wait :-)

I just wish I had a bigger garden to grown more.


Mary




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Old 17-07-2007, 12:46 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Food miles & Kenyan growers


"Martin" wrote

The point is that it is stupid to criticise other countries, when UK could
have
a perfectly viable horticulture industry supplying most of the UK
supermarkets
horticultural needs.
Martin


You don't see it as a sort of third world help, buying stuff from Africa
etc?
It might be better to grow stuff where the sun shines instead of in
greenhouses in northern Europe?
Jenny


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