Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future, reviewed by Tia Fay



Deep Economy:  The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future
By: Bill McKibben.  2007


This book is about slowing growth, switching to a more localized scale, and changing our values from “more” to “better”  He talks about localizing everything: why we need to, why that’s important, how to do it, and what the benefits are.  This book has many different parts and uses an incredible variety of examples from around the world discussing the necessity and impact of localizing everything from radio, to energy, even currency.  However the start of this local movement is food. 

Growth
Before I get to the local food stuff, here are what he says are the three fundamental challenges to our fixation on growth:
1.    The first is political; growth, at least how we now create it, is producing more inequality than prosperity, and more insecurity than progress.
2.    The second argument draws on physics and chemistry as much as on economics; it is the basic objection that we do not have the energy needed to keep the magic going and we can’t deal with the pollution it creates.
3.    The third argument is both less obvious and even more basic:  growth is no longer making us happy.

Current American Food System
Consolidation
  Cargill controls 45% of the world’s grain trade
  Four multi-national companies control over 70% of milk sales in the US
  Four firms control 85% of global coffee roasting
  Philip Morris/Nabisco collects nearly 10cents of every American dollar spent on food. 
  five companies control 75% of the global veggie seed market
  Wal-mart is the largest seller of food in the world
  Since the end of WWII, America has lost a farm about every half hour

Illness
76 million Americans fall ill annual from food-borne illness

Resource depletion
We are running out of the two basic ingredients we need to grow crops on an industrial scale:  oil and water.
            Water:  70% of water used by humans is used to irrigate crops.  Water demand has tripled in the last 1/2 century. 
            Oil:  Between 1910 and 1983, U.S. corn yields grew 346%, energy consumption for agriculture increased 810%.
  The average bite of food an American eats has traveled fifteen hundred miles changing hands an average of six times along the way.
  A pound of grapes flown in from Chile gives off 6 pounds of carbon dioxide.
  To package a box of breakfast cereal, requires 7 times as much energy as the cereal contains
  75% of the apples for sale in NYC come from the west coast or overseas, even though NY state produces 10times as many apples as NYC residents consume.
  Compared to local and regional food systems, our national and international model releases 5 - 17 times more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

Why?
It makes a certain kind of intuitive sense, that industrialized farming is the most productive farming... however, this simply isn’t true.  Smaller farms produce more food.  According to a recent USDA Census of Agriculture, smaller farms produce far more food per acre- tons, calories, and dollars.  They use land, water, and oil much more efficiently; if they have animals, the manure is a gift, not a threat to public health.

Why does agri-business still exist then?
There are many reasons, including the way farm subsidies have been structured, the big guys’ easier access to bank loans, and the convenience for politically connected food processors of dealing with a few big operations.  But the basic reason is this:  we have substituted oil for people. 

Shift
What does a good system look like?
            Example 1:  Cuba. Cubans have created what may be the world’s largest working model for a semi-sustainable agriculture. 

            Example 2:  The Intervale- just outside of the center of Burlington VT.  Will Rapp helped to found a non-profit to lease about 200 acres surrounding an old dump and began renting it to people who wanted to start farming.  These two hundred acres supply 7-8% of all the fresh food consumed in Burlington. 

            Other ways:
  In 1970, the US had 340 farmers’ markets. In 2004:  3,700
  The first CSA was founded in MA in 1985, now there are more than 1,500. 
  Urban areas already produce about 1/3 of the food they consume.
  Colleges and universities are an obvious market, since they offer a captive population, and one likely to be receptive to the environmental and community impulses behind local food.  At least 200 universities have made serious commitments to local food. 

Greatest Challenge:
The deepest problem that the local-food efforts face however, is that we’ve gotten used to paying so little for food.  In the 1930’s a family might have spent 1/3 of its income on food, middle-class Americans now spend more like 1/10

 “It may be expensive in terms of how much oil it requires, and how much greenhouse gas it pours into the atmosphere, and how much tax subsidy it receives, and how much damage it does to local communities, and how many migrant workers it maims, and how much sewage piles up, and how many miles of highway it requires- but boy, when you pull your cart up to the register, it’s pretty cheap.”  ouch

Local Food
Eating local food requires you to live with a stronger sense of community in mind. Requires that you reorient your personal compass a little bit.  Requires that you shed a certain amount of your hyper-individualism and replace it with a certain amount of neighborliness. 

After a year of eating locally- In my role as eater, I was part of something larger than myself that made sense to me- a community.  I felt grounded, connected.

Consumers have ten times as many conversations at farmers’ markets as they do at the supermarket..  A simple change in economic life- where you shop- produces an enormous change in your social life.  You go from being a mere consumer to being a participant.

I’m not suggesting an abrupt break with the present, but a patient rebalancing of the scales.  It will not be fast, cheap, or easy- that’s what we have now.  It’s a quiet revolution begun by ordinary people with the stuff of our everyday lives.



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