My previous blog "Going organic is a dead-end street"
received a lot of comments, mostly telling me that I didn’t know what I was
talking about. However, the FAO backs my conclusion.
In a statement it said: "FAO has no reason to believe that organic
agriculture can substitute for conventional farming systems in ensuring the
world’s food security." Or as its director-general Jaques Diouf puts it: "You
cannot feed 6 billion people today and 9 billion in 2050 without judicious use
of chemical fertilisers."
Should we continue on the same path as we did
the last decades? Answering that question I would say, no. In April a 2,500 page
report was presented in South Africa called International Assessment of Agricultural Science and
Technology for Development [IAASTD] which advocates a new way of
farming using modern technology without losing sight of improvements in small
scale farming.
The report - the first significant attempt to involve
governments, NGOs and industries from rich and poor countries - took 400
scientists four years to complete. The present system of food production and the
way food is traded around the world has led to a highly unequal distribution of
benefits and serious adverse ecological effects and was now contributing to
climate change.
GM not the solution
The authors said GM
technology was not a quick fix to feed the world’s poor and argued that growing
biofuel crops for car threatened to increase worldwide malnutrition. This was
also a reason for the US, UK, Australia and Canada not yet to endorse the
report.
The use of GM crops, where the technology is not contained, is
contentious, the UN says. The authors say science and technology should be
targeted towards raising yields but also protecting soils, water and
forests.
The scientists said they saw little role for GM, as it is
currently practised, in feeding the poor on a large scale. "Assessment of the
technology lags behind its development, information is anecdotal and
contradictory, and uncertainty about possible benefits and damage is
unavoidable," said the report. Data on some crops indicate highly variable yield
gains in some places and declines in others. The GM industry, despite being a
sponsor of the report, disagrees and abandoned talks last year on this
subject.
Biofuel not sustainable
The report says biofuels
compete for land and water with food crops and are inefficient. They can cause
deforestation and damage soils and water. The authors also warned that the
global rush to biofuels was not sustainable. "The diversion of crops to fuel can
raise food prices and reduce our ability to alleviate hunger. The negative
social effects risk being exacerbated in cases where small-scale farmers are
marginalised or displaced form their land," they said.
Of course
international environment and consumer groups, including Third World Network,
Practical Action, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth, found confirmation in the
report in being on the right track with their opinions stating: "This is a
sobering account of the failure of industrial farming. Small-scale farmers and
ecological methods provide the way forward to avert the current food crisis and
meet the needs of communities."
Short-sighted
This conclusion
is in my view far too short-sighted. Industrialised countries cannot go back to
small-scale farming, however, exploiting farming in developing countries needs
to be put to a halt. Subsidies distort the use of resources and benefit
industrialised nations at the expense of developing countries. I think both
industrial farming and small-scale farming can survive next to each other, but
then developing countries must exercise their right to stop the flood of cheap
subsidised products to protect their own farming sector.
On the other
hand industrialised countries need to stop sucking out resources in developing
countries and be creative in growing alternatives.
This will better develop agriculture that is less dependent
on fossil fuels, favours the use of locally available resources and explores the
use of natural processes such as crop rotation and use of (organic)
fertilisers.
Author: Dick Ziggers


