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November 5, 2007
Current global modes of production, consumption and trade have caused massive environmental destruction including global warming that is putting at risk our planet's ecosystems and pushing human communities into disasters. Global warming shows the failure of a development model based on high fossil energy consumption, overproduction and trade liberalization.
Farmers - men and women - around the world are joining hands with other social movements, organizations, people and communities to ask for and to develop radical social, economic and political transformations to reverse the current trend.
Farmers - and especially small farmers - are among the first to suffer
from climate change. Changing weather patterns bring unusual droughts,
floods and storms, destroying farmlands, stock and farmers houses.
Moreover, plants and animal species are disappearing at an
unprecedented pace. Farmers have to adjust to these changes by adapting
their seeds and usual production systems to an unpredictable situation.
Moreover, droughts and floods are leading to harvest failures,
increasing the number of people going hungry in the world. Studies
predict a decline in global farm output of 3 to 16% by 2080. In
tropical regions, global warming is likely to lead to a serious decline
in agriculture (up to 50% in Senegal and 40% in India) and to the
acceleration of farmland turning into desert. On the other hand, huge
areas in Russia and Canada will turn into arable land for the first
time in human history, yet it is still unknown how these regions will
be able to grow crops.
Corporate food production and consumption are significantly
contributing to global warming and to the destruction of rural
communities. Intercontinental food transport, intensive monoculture
production, land and forest destruction and the use of chemical inputs
in agriculture are transforming agriculture into an energy consumer and
are contributing to climate change. Under neo-liberal policies imposed
by the World Trade Organisation, the regional and bilateral Free Trade
Agreements, as well as the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund, food is produced with oil-based pesticides and fertilizers and
transported all around the world for transformation and consumption.
Via Campesina, a movement bringing together millions of small farmers
and producers around the world, asserts that it is time to radically
change our way to produce, transform, trade and consume food and
agricultural products. We believe that sustainable small-scale farming
and local food consumption will reverse the actual devastation and
support millions of farming families. Agriculture can also contribute
to cool down the earth by using farm practises that store CO² and
reduce considerably the use of energy on farms.
Moreover, farms can also contribute to the production of renewable energy, especially through solar and biogas energy.
Globalized agriculture and corporate food production create global warming
1/ By transporting food all around the world
Fresh and packaged food is travelling around the world. In Europe and
the USA, for example, it is now common to find fruits, vegetables, meat
or wine from Africa, South America or Oceania; and we find Asian rice
in the Americas or in Africa. Fossil fuel used for food transport is
releasing tons of CO2 into the atmosphere. The Swiss peasants'
organisation UNITERRE calculated that one kilo of asparagus imported
from Mexico needs 5 liters of oil to travel by plane (11,800km) to
Switzerland. While a kilo of asparagus produced in Switzerland only
needs 0.3 liters of oil to reach the consumer.
2/ By imposing industrial forms of production (mechanization, intensification, use of agrochemicals, monoculture...)
The so called "modernized" agriculture, especially industrial
monoculture, is destroying natural processes in soil (which leads to
the storing of CO² in organic matter) and replaces them by chemical
processes based on fertilizers and pesticides. Due notably to the use
of chemical fertilizers, intensive agriculture and animal production
monocultures produce important quantities of nitrous oxide (NO2), the
third most significant greenhouse gas responsible for global warming.
In Europe 40% of the energy consumed on the farm is due to the
production of nitrogen fertilizers. Moreover, industrial agriculture
production consumes much more energy (and releases much more CO2) to
run its giant tractors to harrow and plow the land and to process the
food.
3/ By destroying biodiversity (and carbon sinks)
Carbon is naturally captured from the air by plants and it is stocked
in wood and organic matter in the soils. Some ecosystems such as native
forests, peat lands and meadows stock more carbon than others.
This carbon cycle has been part of the climate balance for hundreds of
thousands of years. Corporate agribusiness has now shattered this
balance by imposing widespread chemical agriculture (with massive use
of oil-based pesticides and fertilizers), by burning forests for
monoculture plantations and by destroying peat lands and biodiversity.
4/ By converting land and forests into non-agricultural areas
Forests, pastures and cultivated lands are rapidly converted into
industrial agricultural production areas or into shopping malls,
industrial complexes, big houses, large infrastructure projects or
tourist resorts. This in turn causes massive carbon releases and
reduces the capacity of the environment to absorb the carbon released
into the atmosphere.
5/ By transforming agriculture from an energy producer into an energy consumer
On the energy level, the first role of plants and agriculture is to
transform solar energy into energy in the form of sugars and cellulose
that can be directly absorbed in food or transformed by animals into
animal products. This is a natural process which brings energy into the
food chain. However, the industrialization process of agriculture over
the last two centuries has lead to an agriculture which consumes energy
(fertilizers, use of tractors, oil based agrochemicals...).
The false solutions
Agrofuels (fuels produced from plants, agriculture and forestry) are
often presented as one of the solutions to the current energy crisis.
Under the Kyoto protocol, 20% of the global energy consumption should
come from renewable sources by 2020; this includes agrofuels. However,
leaving aside the insanity of producing food to feed cars while so many
people are starving, industrial agrofuel production will actually
increase global warming instead of reducing it. In exchange for some
minor and unproven greenhouse gas savings compared to fossil oil
(except for sugercane), agrofuel production will increase intensive
monoculture plantations of oil palm, corn or sugarcane; and will
contribute to deforestation and biodiversity destruction. Intensive
agrofuel production is not a solution to global warming; neither will
it solve the global crisis in the agricultural sector.
Carbon trading
Under the Kyoto Protocol and other international schemes "carbon
trading" is presented as a solution for global warming. It is a
privatization of carbon after the privatization of land, air, seeds,
water and other resources. It allows governments to allocate permits to
big industrial polluters so they can trade "rights to pollute" amongst
themselves. Some other programs encourage industrialized countries to
finance cheap carbon dumps such as large-scale plantations in the South
as a way to avoid reducing their own emissions. Large plantations or
natural conservation areas are therefore being created in Asia, Africa
and Latin America kicking communities out of their land and reducing
their right to access their own forests, fields and rivers.
Genetically modified crops and trees
Genetically modified trees and crops are now being developed for
agrofuel production. Genetically modified organisms will not solve any
environmental crisis as they themselves pose a risk to the environment
as well as to health and safety. Moreover, they increase corporate
control over seeds, depriving farmers of their right to grow, develop,
select, diversify and exchange their own seeds.
These GM trees and crops are part of the "second generation" of
agrofuels based on cellulose while the first generation is based on the
different forms of sugar from crops. Even when it doesn't use
genetically modified varieties, this "second generation" raises similar
concerns.
Food sovereignty provides livelihoods to millions and protects life on earth
Via Campesina believes that solutions to the current crisis have to
emerge from organized social actors that are developing modes of
production, trade and consumption based on justice, solidarity and
healthy communities. No technological fix will solve the current global
environmental and social disaster.
Sustainable small-scale farming is labor-intensive and requires little energy use; it can contribute to cooling down the earth:
* by storing more CO² in soil organic matter through sustainable
production (extensive beef and sheep production on grassland has a
positive greenhouse gas balance)
*by replacing nitrogen fertilizers by organic agriculture or/and
cultivating nitrogen-fixing plants which capture nitrogen directly from
the air
*by producing biogas from plant and animal waste, while returning sufficient organic matter to the soil
*by producing solar energy on all agricultural roofs (with investment support for the small farms)...
All around the world, we practice and defend small-scale sustainable
family farming and we demand food sovereignty. Food sovereignty is the
right of peoples to healthy and culturally-appropriate food produced
through ecologically sound and sustainable methods, and their right to
define their own food and agriculture systems. It puts the aspirations
and needs of those who produce, distribute and consume food at the
heart of food systems and policies rather than the demands of markets
and corporations. Food sovereignty prioritizes local and national
economies and markets and empowers peasant and family farmer-driven
agriculture, artisan-style fishing, pastoralist-led grazing, and food
production, distribution and consumption based on environmental, social
and economic sustainability.
We urgently demand of local, national and international decision makers:
1/ The complete dismantling of agribusiness companies: they are
stealing the land of small producers, producing junk food and creating
environmental disasters.
2/ The replacement of industrialized agriculture and animal production
by small-scale sustainable agriculture supported by genuine agrarian
reform programs.
3/ The promotion of sane and sustainable energy policies. That includes
consuming less energy and producing solar and biogas energy on the
farms instead of heavily promoting agrofuel production as is currently
the case.
4/ The implementation of agricultural and trade policies at local,
national and international levels supporting sustainable agriculture
and local food consumption. This includes the ban on the kinds of
subsidies that lead to the dumping of cheap food on markets.
For the livelihoods of billions of small producers around the world,
For people's health and the planet's survival:
We demand food sovereignty and we are committed to struggle to achieve it collectively.
For more information contact: Isabelle Delforge <
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