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THE HIMALAYAN DISASTER: TRANSNATIONAL DISASTER MANAGEMENT MECHANISM A MUST

We talked with Palash Biswas, an editor for Indian Express in Kolkata today also. He urged that there must a transnational disaster management mechanism to avert such scale disaster in the Himalayas. http://youtu.be/7IzWUpRECJM

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

THE HIMALAYAN TALK: PALASH BISWAS TALKS AGAINST CASTEIST HEGEMONY IN SOUTH ASIA

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Monday, July 7, 2008

Small farmers feed the world

Small farmers feed the world
Industrial agrofuels fuel hunger and poverty

Presented to the media on June24th, 2008 in Jakarta during the
International Conference on Peasant Rights. “Right to grow, right to feed,
right to eat”

The current massive wave of investment in energy production based on
cultivating and industrial processing of vegetal materials like corn, soy,
palm oil, sugar cane, canola, etc, will neither solve the climate crisis
nor the energy crisis. It will also bring disastrous social and
environmental consequences. It creates a new and very serious threat to
food production by small farmers and to the attainment of food sovereignty
for the world population.

Over the last twenty years the neoliberal policies adopted globally have
failed to answer people’s basic needs. The FAO promises at the 1996 World
Food Summit and the UN Millenium Development Goals to lift people out of
poverty have not been kept. Many more people are suffering form hunger.

It is claimed that agrofuels will help fight climate change. In reality,
the opposite is true. The new extensive monoculture plantations for the
production of agrofuels are increasing greenhouse gases through
deforestation, drainage of wetlands, and dismantling communal lands. If we
take into account the whole cycle of production, transformation,
distribution of agrofuels, they do not produce less greenhouse gases than
fossil fuels, except in some cases. Moreover, agrofuels will never be able
to replace fossil fuels. According to the latest estimates, they will only
cover the future rise in consumption from now until 2020. There is simply
not enough land in the world to generate all the fuel necessary for an
industrial society whose needs for transport of people and goods are
continually increasing. The promise of agrofuels creates the illusion that
we can continue to consume energy at an ever growing rate. The only answer
to the threat of climate change is to reduce energy use worldwide, and to
redirect international trade towards local markets.

Meanwhile, the social and ecological impacts of agrofuel development will
be devastating. Monoculture and industrial agriculture, whether for
agrofuel or any other production, are destroying land, forests, water and
biodiversity. They
drive family farmers, men and women, off their land. It is estimated that
five million farmers have been expelled from their land to create space
for monocultures in Indonesia; five million in Brazil, four million in
Colombia... Industrial agriculture generates much less employment than
sustainable family farming; this is an agriculture without farmers.

The current expansion of agrofuel production contributes to the massive
concentration of capital by landowners, large companies and TNCs,
provoking a real counter land reform throughout the world. Moreover it
contributes to increased speculation on food products and land prices.

Agrofuel production has already started to replace food production. Its
ongoing extension will drive even more small scale farmers and indigenous
peoples off their lands. Instead of dedicating land and water to food
production, these resources are being diverted to produce energy in the
form of diesel and ethanol. Today peasants and small farmers, indigenous
people, women and men, produce the huge majority of the food consumed
worldwide. If not prevented now, agrofuels will occupy our lands and food
will become even more scarce and expensive.

Who would eat agrofuels?

A new alliance of some governments with automotive and chemical companies,
oil and agro-industry is promoting agrofuels with the sole objective of
making money. The fear of climate change and energy crisis is used to
develop agrofuel production in a manner that maintains and strengthens an
agro-industrial model. Knowing that this model is, in itself, a major
cause of climate change and an intensive energy consumer, is no obstacle.

Technology and market control of the TNCs strengthen and increase their
hold over the agrarian sector. The family farmers whose food production
has been based on traditional seeds, are displaced, their coexistence with
biodiversity, their way of producing energy by human and animal force are
disrupted. Their way of life uses much less energy per

unit of food produced, and specially, fewer fossil fuels.

Agribusiness companies are aware that agrofuels produced on a large scale
are not economically viable. The race towards agrofuels is made possible
by the huge direct and indirect subsidies from supporting governments and
by speculation on the financial markets, which is also causing food prices
to rise.

The figures cited are alarming. Millions of hectares and billions of
dollars are mentioned: the government of India is contemplating planting
14 million hectares with "jatrofa", the Inter-American Bank of Development
says that Brazil has 120 million hectares ready for agrofuel production
and a business lobby suggests that there are 397 million hectares
available in 15 African countries. This means a level of expropriations
without precedent.

While TNCs and investment funds increase their profits, a large part of
the world population does not have enough money to buy food. Agrofuels are
estimated to be responsible for 30% of the current food price crisis.

When the TNCs are unable to find farmland for agrofuel production,
deforestation is forced on areas that are necessary for the preservation
of life on earth.

Thousands of farmers have no alternative but to accept to grow agrofuels
as they need an income to support themselves till the next season.
National and international agricultural policies imposed by international
financial institutions and TNCs have exacerbated the dependence of
developing countries, leading to food crisis, extreme poverty, and hunger
throughout the world. Therefore, those small farmers are not guilty of
making the wrong choice they are the victims of the current system imposed
on them.

Small farmers and agricultural workers, working in extremely harsh
conditions with damaging effects on their health, with very poor income
have no say in the way their production is used. Many are working under
contract farming with large agribusiness companies that process, refine
and sell the product. Therefore it is the companies who decide to channel
the produce to the fuel rather than to the food market. The high food
prices paid by the consumers are not reflected in the small farmers’
income.

In response to energy crisis: small scale production and local consumption

Small scale sustainable farming is essential to feed the world.
Sustainable family farming and food sovereignty consume up to 80 times
less energy than industrial agriculture.

Food sovereignty primarily involves the use of local resources for food
production, minimizing imports of raw materials as well as transport.
Likewise, the food produced is consumed locally so that the end product
does not travel far. It is not logical to eat, in Europe, aspargus coming
all the way from the Altiplano or fresh green beans coming from Kenya.

Throughout the history of farming, villagers have obtained energy from
their farmland to meet their daily needs. Peasant families are using
coconut or sunflower oil, biogas, firewood, wind and water to generate
electricity for local use. Such methods are sustainable and integrated
into the food production cycle on the farmland.

It is imperative to design and adopt responsible attitudes to food
consumption and to adjust our way of eating, in the knowledge that the
industrial model of production and consumption is destructive, while the
peasant-based model of production uses responsible energy practices.

Therefore, Via Campesina continues its struggle against the power of large
corporations and supporting political systems. The energy crisis should
not be seen as an isolated problem but as part of the whole crisis of the
current model of development where profit has priority over people.

Instead, we support a people centered, small-scale diversified agriculture
with local markets and healthy livelihoods using less energy and less
dependent on external sources. Sustainable family farmers fulfill the
fundamental mission of agriculture: to feed people.

Via Campesina denounces:

The neoliberal model, international financial institutions and
transnational capital, directly responsible for the food and the climate
crisis.

 The irresponsible presentation of agrofuels as an answer to the
climate and energy crisis

 The scandal of producing agrofuels in a world ravaged by hunger.

 The passive attitude of many institutions faced with the serious
risk posed by the advent of agrofuels which implies that rural and urban
populations can neither produce nor consume food.

 That these same institutions are in fact placing the economic
interests of TNCs above the food and nutritional needs of the very people
they are entrusted to represent and defend.

 The insult of continuing to promote agrofuels in spite of the
negative energy balance in their production, processing, and transport.

 The neoliberal model, international financial institutions and
transnational capital, directly responsible for the food and the climate
crisis.

Via Campesina demands:

The end of corporate driven, monoculture- based production of agrofuels.
As a first step, a five year international moratorium on the production,
trade and consumption of industrial agrofuels has to be immediately
declared.

An in-depth evaluation of social and environment cost of the agrofuel boom
and of profits made by TNCs in the processing and trade of the raw
materials.

The promotion and development of small scale production and local
consumption models and the rejection of consumerism

Explicit support from governments and institutions to the sustainable
peasant-based model of food production and distribution, with its minimal
use of energy, its capacity to create jobs, to respect cultural and
biological diversity and its positive effect on global warming (fertile
soils are the best way to capture CO2).

The reorientation of agricultural policies towards sustainable rural
communities and livelihoods based on food sovereignty and genuine agrarian
reform.

The promotion and development of responsible consumption models.

Let’s put out the fire of agrofuels and carry the flame of food sovereignty!


For more information: www.viacampesina.org

Cecep Risnandar (Bahasa Indonesia): +62 8129452478 (cecep@spi.or.id)
Isabelle Delforge (English, Spanish, French) +62 81513224565
(idelforge@viacampesina.org)

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