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The development of a national food plan is a
welcome initiative in a world with exponential population growth and a
massive change in climate that threatens food security. The Government
issues paper gave an interesting summary of where Australia has been in
terms of food production but gave few insights into the way forward.
A food plan for our cities
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Most Australians live in our capital cities so that
is where Australia’s food security must be secured. Yet the cities are
steadily covering the nation’s best agricultural land with single storey
detached dwellings, roads and shopping centres.
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Much of the population, particularly older Australians
and the Y generation, are happy to live in apartments with very small footprints,
including low rise developments. Adopting planning provisions encouraging
such development and discouraging suburban sprawl would enable the densification
of cities and help to create a viable and convenient public transport service
and vastly improve community building, as well as reducing greenhouse gas
emissions per head.
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High quality communal greenspace can be provided
in place of under-utilised front and back yards, garages and roads. Part
of the greenspace would be dedicated to community gardens and urban orchards
where recycled wastewater, compost from urban waste and facilitation from
master gardeners enable interested residents to grow their own food and
build community.
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Storm water would be captured in rainwater tanks
or in wetland parks where water is purified and injected into aquifers
for later withdrawal and use for irrigation. This system captures high
quality water that would have ultimately run into the sea, so reducing
withdrawals from rivers and old aquifer water.With no help or encouragement
from the Federal Government and with opposition from suburban developers
this is already occurring in some local government areas. Salisbury Council,
SA has significant expertise in waste water purification and aquifer storage
and recharge (ASR) as well as facilitating composting.
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In Australia over a thousand community gardens exist
in which tens of thousands of Australians keep fit and provide themselves
with food as well as building community. Many gardeners produce far more
than they can consume themselves so community food swaps and weekend markets
are being created across the suburbs.
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National support for the community gardens movement
should be provided such that state and local government, community garden
coordinators and master gardeners can professionalise systems, increase
gardening training and develop a network supported by appropriate waste
and water recovery and public transport access
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However the City of Adelaide has some 500 hectares
of parklands immediately around the CBD, supplied with reticulated
recycled water. Neither the land nor the water are used for food production.
Many city residents are frustrated that they have no access to a patch
of unshaded soil in which to grow vegetables and herbs.
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A key aim of urban agriculture is to harness the
immense capacity and willingness of millions of Australians to grow their
own food.
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It should be the right of all urban Australians to
have reasonably convenient access to water and a piece of ground to grow
food (there may well be nominal costs involved as per most community gardens).
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Government at every level needs to have policy to
encourage rational change to town planning such that the town’s own ‘waste’
water and nutrients go back into producing the town’s food.
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It is true that more water will be shed from a city
than can be used for food growing inside that city and that is why protected
agricultural areas need to be established in peri-urban areas for the efficient
utilisation of waste nutrients and water from the city. (see my submission
to the SA Government http://www.sa.gov.au/upload/franchise/Housing,%20property%20and%20land/PLG/BMV/060_BMV_FoodForest.pdf
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The city of Edmonton (Canada) recovers phosphorus
and nitrogen as a concentrated fertiliser from its sewerage whilst Australian
sewerage operations encourage the gassing-off of P and N during treatment
so waste water can be discharged into the sea without causing catastrophic
perturbation to marine systems, (but also causing massive greenhouse gas
emissions and wasting the nutrients that could have gone back into food
production)
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Funding should be made available to improve the efficiency
and recovery rates of sewerage treatment facilities and to design facilities
that can be placed in strategic locations around cities to provide peri-urban
farms and urban food production with sustainable inputs
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A significant percentage of Adelaide’s green waste
is composted and reused in agriculture but most of it is transported inordinate
distances to composting facilities and then to farms remote from the city.
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All the city’s vegetable and fruit production input
needs can theoretically be met by recycling the city’s nutrients and waste.
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Funding should be made available to improve the efficiency
and the recovery rates of the waste composting cycle
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Food produced near the city can be efficiently delivered
to farmers markets which have the potential to return its full selling
price to the producer rather than the small percentage paid by the major
food retailers and their buying agents. This has the potential to return
financial viability to farmers. Just one of the hundreds of farmers markets
in Australia, The Adelaide Showground Farmers Market gives more than 120
food producers an opportunity to sell direct to the public and currently
turns over more than $8M. It also attracts food tourists from around the
world.
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The Victorian Government has realised that it can
reinject viability to regional areas by promoting the development of these
markets and has provided some $6M over a 4 year period to this purpose.
Other state governments have virtually ignored the movement and local governments
generally make no provision for markets in their planning.
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Important spin-offs of farmers markets include greenhouse
gas abatement, fresh food and community building
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The federal government should provide a framework
to assist the development of farmers markets nationally
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Australia’s university training of agriculture and
production horticulture students (as distinct from agricultural scientists)
has plummeted to well under 200 per year and the number of jobs for people
with agricultural skills which remain unfilled or are filled by people
with no appropriate training has risen to 100,000. The situation is critical
in rural areas and national productivity is being lost..
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Governments need to immediately create agricultural
research, teaching and extension positions to provide encouragement for
young people to consider agriculture as a career
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Given the price of Australian land and gross margins
achievable in our unprotected agricultural system it is impossible for
most young people to buy farm land. If Australia is to have a viable farming
culture it must support young entrants to the industry or face a future
of agricultural instability, foreign land ownership and lowered productivity.
Canada has used the ultra low interest system of Landbank as well as agricultural
subsidies and many other countries have systems to enable orderly renewal
of land ownership.
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It is time for the government to put its hands back
on the wheel and model new economic devices to facilitate farmer renewal
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For those who think young people are not interested
in food production it may be interesting to note that on any particular
day there are some 20000 youngsters WWOOFing in Australia. WWOOF stands
for Willing Workers on Organic Farms and it is a labour exchange system
used by most organic farmers and many conventional horticultural producers
to get willing employees. WWOOFers are generally thought of as overseas
visitors who are using the system to travel around Australia get daily
accommodation, food and a local cultural experience in exchange for half
a day’s work. But more and more young Australians are finding that it is
the only way to gain the skills of organic growing in Australia and to
be physically involved in sustainable food production.
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It represents a massive vote of no confidence in
the formal education system by the young people and in many cases an act
of desperation by farmers to find affordable, willing workers.
Conclusion
‘Business as usual’ will end in the next decades,
particularly when conventional oil supplies diminish and Australia can
either wait to be forced into austerity measures that create misery and
civil disobedience or get onto the front foot and create sustainable cities
that can go a long way to feeding themselves and providing a lot of public
open space and useful things for people to do at all levels of society.
Rural agriculture will need every bit of skill
and youthful energy that can be brought to bear on the challenges that
lie ahead.
A society that forgets agriculture has truly
lost its way.
Schematic Model of a sustainable
city
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Addressing some of the specific
issues raised in the Government background paper for a national food
plan
Food security
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It has long been accepted by farmers and agricultural
scientists that it is their role to feed as many people as need to be fed.
This is clearly a faulty view which has led to the over-farming of delicate
environments, contamination of vital food production resources and the
repeat, on a global scale, of the self destruction of past civilisations
in the middle east.
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The key to sustainable occupation of the planet
is the limitation of population growth and the ultimate acceptance of a
steady state economic model
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The fact that the Murray River recently failed to
flow into the sea for 2 years is a fair indication of how close Southern
Australia is to flipping into food insecurity
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Australia has long been a big food exporter but Victoria
is now a net food consumer and Australia is heading steadily toward a point
where the value of food imports will regularly exceed exports. With the
extraordinary levels of migration the government has allowed over the last
decade and the fecundity of the current population, the tipping point of
the country into food insecurity must be considered.
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The dogma that international free trade will solve
food insecurity has been proven to be faulty over centuries. Billions continue
to starve while others die of obesity in a world with relatively free movement
of food.
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Desperate nations have shown that they are prepared
to stop the export of food (despite market forces) to ensure that their
populations don’t starve.
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Rational policies are required to set environmentally
sustainable population targets in a world that is no longer rich with unexplored
frontiers; the planet is both finite and overpopulated given the technology
and capacity for rational organisation that humans currently have at their
disposal. The excellent scientific study 'Feeding the Ten Billion' by Lloyd
Evans, Chief of Plant Industry with CSIRO for seven years, demonstrates
empirically that the planet’s capacity to turn sunlight, water and nutrients
into food cannot sustainably continue to feed the World’s current population,
let alone the projected population at the end of this century. Since he
wrote the book climate change has moved faster than was predicted and it
is likely that Australia’s food production systems will be so perturbed
that our food production will drop significantly. The demolition of the
national grape harvest last season is a good example of how a subtle change
of climate can render an entire perennial cropping system unviable. The
change in winter chill will make and apple production in most current production
areas within a few decades.
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The fact of peak oil is also likely to make agricultural
production unviable in large areas of Australia, where crop yields per
litre of fuel and fertiliser are low
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A ‘business as usual’ approach extrapolating from
ABARE figures is not prudent.
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The whole food system needs rethinking and
massive effort needs to go into rebuilding the skills of our agricultural
producers such that the nation can remain domestically food-secure in a
world likely to be racked by extreme weather events, inevitable climate
change and geopolitical insecurity.
A nutritious and safe food supply
meeting consumer needs
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Consumers are in fact being ignored when they tell
the Government what food they want or need. They say that they need to
know what is in the food they buy. Is it too hard to put the truth on labels?
Is the Government too much influenced by the big players in the food industry
to make this happen or does it feel that consumers are all too stupid to
understand and make judgments about food production systems?
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The European Union has thought through these issues
and I recommend adopting their new labeling system.
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Clear food labeling with full disclosure of all ingredients
including any GE ingredients needs to be mandated by government
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Australia has been one of the dogmatic supporters
of genetic engineering and has poured an inordinate amount of effort and
funding into GE research for 20 years with no discernible payoff. Normal
plant breeding has almost ground to a halt as funds have been withdrawn
or diverted, leaving profit-driven companies to determine the future of
food. A return to breeding food without GE will avoid many long term health
problems that are showing up in populations that consume GE food which
contains high levels of substances (generated within GE plants) that act
against insects, fungi and bacteria. Some acute health effects of GE foods
will also be avoided. Plant breeders using GE foods with unnatural quantities
of various vitamins could get back to producing a wide range of productive,
well adapted natural foods from which people can construct full and healthy
diets.
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Publicly funded plant and animal breeders should
be collecting genetic resources from across the globe to produce new breeds
and varieties that will allow Australia to adapt its agriculture to a changing
climate. An example would be to produce new pistachio cultivars that can
flower normally despite our warming winter temperatures. As a pistachio
grower facing the unviability of cultivars available in (a rapidly warming)
Australia I will be happy to purchase some.
A competitive, productive and
efficient food industry
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The free market dogma has given Australia the duopoly
of Woolworths and Coles who have driven farmers from the land by reducing
profit margins for producers to miniscule levels and requiring them to
use every technical device available to maximise yields. The average commercial
broccoli crop grown during warm weather in the Adelaide Hills is sprayed
with biocides approximately 30 times to meet the cosmetic standards of
the supermarkets. Yet the few farmers who survive, producing food that
is of dubious health benefit and at high environmental cost, still draw
modest incomes. Imported food gives no relief from this pattern as the
same players dominate the field.
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The rise and rise of farmers markets globally (some
700 farmers markets exist in California) demonstrates the dissatisfaction
of the public with the food monopolies and their old, over-packaged, environmentally
expensive food and their contemptuous treatment of food producers.
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Regulation of the food industry by governments has
failed to deliver a healthy industry for consumers or food producers. The
average farmer is now approaching 60 years of age and carries a debt of
almost half a million dollars. Rural communities are losing hospitals,
schools, football clubs and confidence.
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Governments have also failed to maintain orderly
urban development to protect productive land and have allowed uncontrolled
speculative buying of land by overseas investors, driving up land prices
and destroying the fragile rural communities that have long provided employment,
food and export income.
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As transport, the building of roads and costs of
fertiliser become more expensive through the exhaustion of cheap oil supplies
it will become more important to produce food in and close to cities. This
will require policy changes in the zoning of land particularly at the local
and state government level.
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Research and innovation and extension in organic
farming practices (that are compatible with urban locations) should be
seriously funded
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Where there is ambiguity about the potential for
future urban development on rural land, speculators (often absentee owners)
will drive land prices too high for viable farming, and often leave the
land idle. There are many examples from the USA and Europe showing the
effectiveness of agricultural ‘preserves’. These issues should be
incorporated into planning as a matter of urgency at national state and
local government levels
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Protected agricultural areas should be declared to
keep our best agricultural land and most viable rural communities intact.
Quarantine
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Protection of the agricultural environment
is being progressively compromised, particularly by allowing more imported
raw foods into Australia. Each new pest or disease that arrives destroys
the livings of farmers by increasing production costs and reducing production.
Cheap imports also reduce farm viability and compromise the development
of sustainable seasonal cuisine.
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AQIS is severely under-resourced and has let a stream
of pests and diseases into Australia over the last 10 years. Just one recent
arrival, the Asian honeybee, has the potential to destroy 50% of the nation’s
food crops through displacement and weakening of European bee colonies.
The bee will destroy our honey industry and has already lost the nation
its capacity to export bees to the USA. As an island Australia has the
opportunity to enforce quarantine and enjoy the massive advantages of freedom
from destructive pests and diseases.
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Permission to import foods and other goods that compromise
our biosecurity should be withdrawn and AQIS systems should be significantly
boosted.
Sustainable food industry
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There is no point in the Government propping up regional
communities with occasional grant schemes or hardship benefits if the national
economic settings are destroying agricultural viability. Almost half of
the farm families in the country remain solvent only through extremely
long work hours, frugal living and the dedication of one of the partners
to earning the entire living for the family off-farm. Farmers and lobbyists
complained loudly enough about their terms of trade through the 90’s to
convince urban people that there were no careers in agriculture and very
few farmers were encouraging their children to return to the farm. They
were sent away to uni to study anything other than ‘ag’. High rates of
farm suicides and accidents have continued and there is virtually no farm
voice left in the public perception.
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Today, despite the ageing of their parents, the children
of farm families have continued to stay away from food production and a
life devoid of financial reward. There is no point in printing glossy brochures
about ‘careers in farming’ unless the economics are changed. Farmers in
Australia are still not competing on a level playing field internationally
and rather than take up the insulting Government exit packages offered
during the drought ‘just die on the job’.
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Just to give an idea of the direct subsidies other
western farmers receive, full time American farmers averaged $AUS75B (over
$150,000 per farm) and European farmers almost $AUS60B (over $AUS100,000
per farm); there are also a range of other embedded subsidies in the economic
framework of these jurisdictions.
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Farmers are unable to afford reasonable wages and
conditions for employees because of the lack of profitability in their
businesses. A new approach to engage Australians in growing their own food
is required rather than going down the pathway of creating subcultures
of ‘guest workers’ who fail to integrate into the Australian culture and
ultimately become a sub-class with a capacity to cause civil problems.
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Dryland salting, erosion, stubble burning, exhaustion
of water resources, over-fishing, clearing of bushland and extinction of
species are all encouraged by poor economic settings and lack of policies
for landscape maintenance
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Prices for virtually all farm inputs will rise under
the carbon tax and the viability of any ‘carbon farming’ scheme is unknown
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Australia’s simplistic attitude to the rural economy
is surely due for serious thought.
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Social and economic models around the world should
be considered in adopting wise domestic and international social and economic
models for a sustainable food future. Scandinavian systems are well developed.
Maximising the benefits of trade
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While Australia’s economy relies heavily on exporting
non-renewable minerals and coal (for people in other countries to burn
or refine), agriculture seems like a very minor player in our economy but
if the Government really wants to talk about environmental and long term
economic sustainability, agriculture becomes a totally vital and massively
important part of a sustainable economic future both domestically and in
international trade.
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If our governments allow agriculture to languish
under one-sided ‘free trade agreements’ and exploitation by retail giants,
closes research centres and allows the university sector to essentially
shut down the teaching of agriculture the economy will be in poor shape
when the mining sector strikes hard times again.
Aug 2011
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