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June 11, 2009

E-Fuel Leads Organic Fuel Revolution

Filed under: biofuel news, tech — parnet @ 9:02 am

illustration only

by Staff Writers – biofueldaily.com
Sacramento CA (SPX) Jun 05, 2009
The E-Fuel Corporation, joined by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, will unveil the final production model of the E-Fuel MicroFueler, the world’s first home ethanol system, at the California State Capitol.

The MicroFueler, a household appliance-sized unit that creates ethanol fuel (E-Fuel100) from organic waste, is revolutionizing the green fuel industry.

Since the prototype’s unveiling in May 2008, the MicroFueler design and E-Fuel business model have undergone improvements that will enable consumers and businesses to more easily reduce their carbon footprint by producing energy where it is consumed, and breaking ties to the oil industry and local power grid. The final MicroFueler product will start shipping to California consumers in July.

Sierra Nevada Brewing Company in Chico, CA plans to install a MicroFueler this year and use its beer waste to power its vehicles. The State of California’s Department of General Services is also exploring a pilot program to test the MicroFueler with its flex-fuel vehicles.

“We are making our state a cleaner, greener and healthier place for everyone, but our goals require revolutionary technologies and low-carbon fuels,” said Governor Schwarzenegger. “That’s why I get so excited about the entrepreneurial spirit of creative and innovative companies who have been inspired by our groundbreaking environmental policies and are putting people to work right here in California. It’s great news for our economy, our environment and our energy future.”

New MicroFueler Design
The final MicroFueler product, which starts shipping in July, is more than 60% smaller and 80% lighter when compared to the original concept unit shown last year. The size and weight reduction is due to several design improvements to the core ethanol conversion column that is now capable of processing various organic waste material, as well as cellulosic and algae feedstocks.

Electricity from E-Fuel100 and 50% Water
The MicroFueler solution has been expanded to include the new GridBuster electric generator. The MicroFueler supports the optional GridBuster through a direct-connect fuel feed and intelligent control circuitry. The fuel is automatically combined with 50% water for optimal efficiency ad pumped to the GridBuster. Customers are free to drop off the grid and generate their own electricity, realizing substantial savings.

MicroFueler Supply Chain Model
Improvements to the E-Fuel business model and MicroFueler design mean that the sole task customers are required to perform is to simply fill their vehicles with E-Fuel100 ethanol. The E-Fuel Global Network (EGN) will monitor all aspects of the MicroFueler performance via online connectivity to an E-Fuel datacenter server. Local E-Fuel-registered dealers will have real time status updates and will be notified when organic fuel deliveries are required.

E-Fuel dealers are geographically focused, typically servicing multiple counties within a state, an entire state, or an entire country. Currently, E-Fuel dealers are setting up operations in 16 US states, as well as Ireland and Japan. E-Fuel plans to build a comprehensive international wide network of dealers, centered in major metro areas worldwide by the end of 2010. Dealers will sell and service MicroFuelers purchased at www.microfueler.com and will deliver organic fuel to customers for E-Fuel100 ethanol production.

Organic Fuel from Waste
E-Fuel has identified billions of gallons of organic waste worldwide which will act as the primary source of fuel for MicroFueler production of ethanol. One example is the “beer slurry” discarded from breweries. In Chico, CA. the Sierra Nevada Brewing Co discards 1.6 million gallons of beer slurry each year, and has agreed to test MicroFuelers at its plant, with a goal of creating its own E-Fuel100 ethanol for its fleet of vehicles and other purposes. Being abundant and inexpensive, organic waste will create E-Fuel100 ethanol that will always be available and price competitive against gasoline.

Tom Quinn, E-Fuel Corporation CEO, said “Our game changing system and technology eliminates the two main impediments to ethanol production – the reliance on corn as a feedstock and the difficulties of distributing ethanol. Now that consumers can produce organic fuel where they consume it, they can drastically reduce their reliance on fossil fuels by avoiding the gas station and powering their homes off the grid.”

June 10, 2009

UN Announces Launch Of World’s First Tuition-Free, Online University

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — parnet @ 9:55 am

UN ANNOUNCES LAUNCH OF WORLD’S FIRST TUITION-FREE, ONLINE UNIVERSITY
UN News Centre
May 19, 2009

Original Link

A leading arm of the United Nations working to spread the benefits of information technology today announced the launch of the first ever tuition-free online university.

As part of this year’s focus on education, the UN Global Alliance for Information and Communication Technology and Development (GAID) presented the newly formed University of the People, a non-profit institution offering higher education to the masses.

“This year the Global Alliance has focused its attention on education [and] how ICT can advance education goals around the world,” Serge Kapto from GAID told a press conference at UN Headquarters in New York.

For hundreds of millions of people around the world higher education is no more than a dream, Shai Reshef, the founder of the University of the People, told reporters. They are constrained by finances, the lack of institutions in their region, or they are not able to leave home to study at a university for personal reasons.

Mr. Reshef said that this University opened the gate to these people to continue their studies from home and at minimal cost by using open-source technology, open course materials, e-learning methods and peer-to-peer teaching.

Admission opened just over two weeks ago and without any promotion some 200 students from 52 countries have already registered, with a high school diploma and a sufficient level of English as entry requirements.

Students will be placed in classes of 20, after which they can log on to a weekly lecture, discuss its themes with their peers and take a test all online. There are voluntary professors, post-graduate students and students in other classes who can also offer advice and consultation.

The only charge to students is a $15 to $50 admission fee, depending on their country of origin, and a processing fee for every test ranging from $10 to $100. For the University to sustain its operation, it needs 15,000 students and $6 million, of which Mr. Reshef has donated $1 million of his own money.

June 9, 2009

Jatropha: Possible Jet Fuel but Difficult to Scale Up

Filed under: biofuel news, tech — Tags: — parnet @ 5:58 pm

From Theoildrum

“If you had not gathered this before, then you should know that I have been favorably impressed with the potential of algae as a future source of biofuels. However I recognize that there is a considerable amount of research and business development and growth that will have to occur before such fuel makes a significant impact in the market place.

Of the other alternative biofuel sources, I was also considerate of jatropha, which seemed to have some significant potential. The fuel comes from the nuts which the shrub produces, and since it can be grown on quite poor land, and in some countries is already in use a fencing plant I anticipated that its potential would be increasingly recognized. Well, it has not quite turned out the way that I thought it would, at least not yet.

And so some comments on what has, and has not, happened. Jatropha seems to have its own slogan “Soil to Oil” with a Center for Jatropha Promotion & Biodiesel located in Rajasthan in India. Jatropha curcus is a shrub or small tree that can grow on poor to marginal land in tropical parts of the world, growing to a height of perhaps 15 feet. It produces a nut in clusters of around 10, and the nuts contain seeds which are about 37% of an oil that will run a diesel engine without further refining.

The oil has been used in a 50:50 blend with jet fuel to power one engine of an Air New Zealand 747 on a 2-hour flight last December 30th. The oil has a lower freezing temperature than jet fuel, and has been estimated to cost around $43 per barrel. This flight was followed, on January 7th by a Continental Airlines flight which used a 737-800, and a mix of oil from jatropha and algae. The flight saw a 3% savings in fuel by the engine using the biofuel. The algae oil came from Sapphire Energy; the jatropha came from Terasol Energy. The biofuel was mixed 50:50 with jet fuel, and there were no modifications made to the engine.

The success of the test has encouraged Sapphire, who is now predicting that they will be able to produce 1 million gal/year (65 barrels/day) of diesel and jet fuel, rising to 10 million gallons (650 bd) by 2018 and 1 billion gallons (65 kbd) by 2025. Sapphire is based in San Diego.

Terasol supplies both oil and feedstocks, concentrating, at the moment, on jatropha and castor bean oil.

Japanese Airlines carried out their own test on January 30th. The Japanese flight, an hour-and-a-half long, used a mixture of 84% camelina, under 16% jatropha oil, and under 1% algal oil.

Camelina, (or wild flax) incidentally looks as though it deserves more investigation, since it grows on poor ground and has twice the yield of soy. Further it also has a low gell temperature. The spent biomass is recognized as a good animal feed, and it grows in places like Kansas and Montana, perhaps alternating with wheat, in which combination it apparently increases the wheat yield by 15%, and gives 100 gallons/acre of oil.
According to the article:

Dr. Bill Schillinger at Washington State University recently described camelina’s business model to Capital Press as: “At 1,400 pounds per acre at 16 cents a pound, camelina would bring in $224 per acre; 28-bushel white wheat at $8.23 per bushel would garner $230.”

Returning to jatropha, the President of Terasol recently answered some questions for Scientific American. He noted that the main problem the fuel now faces is one of scale.

. . . the main obstacle is the lack of research and practice in large-scale commercial cultivation, as well as mechanized harvesting. Currently most jatropha and castor are grown on smaller, independent farms. The second obstacle is yield and unit of input. Research in plant breeding needs to continue in order to improve the quantity and quality of oils being produced.

They see commercial quantities of the jatropha being available in 3-5 years.

The optimistic view of jatropha’s future is becoming less common, even as it is projected as a fuel of the future. There in fact some doubts about its feasibility:

Not only was the cultivation of jatropha supposed to absorb more CO2 from the atmosphere than it released, but the miracle tree could also stabilize and restore degraded soils. That’s surely why Scientific American in 2007 called jatropha “green gold in a shrub,” a plant that “seems to offer all the benefits of biofuels without the pitfalls.”

Fast forward a couple of years. By 2009, governments from China to Brazil, along with several major biofuel companies, had planted — or vowed to plant — millions of acres of jatropha. In India alone, the government has announced plans to subsidize an intensive program to plant jatropha for biofuels on 27 million acres of “wastelands” — an area roughly the size of Switzerland.

The problem, again, is one of scale. With the average farm being around 12 acres (at 2-300 gal/acre/year) the current gains come mainly from local use, rather than collection to meet larger national goals.

For example, in Mali the nation has some 10,000 km of jatropha hedges that yield about 1 kg/meter/year. If all the nuts were collected and processed this would yield around 5 million liters per yr of oil (85.8 bd). Typical village hedge lies between 2 & 15 km, making oil generation very much a local enterprise. It is growing because there has been a move to provide local women with engine powered grain mills, to start small businesses. But the fuel cost was prohibitive. Collecting and processing the nuts can not only provide the needed fuel, but also inject about $3,800 on average, per village per year. As a result local hedges are growing in length, though somewhat slowly (from 5 – 15 km in 8 years.) The projects have also benefitted from development of a shelling machine for the nuts.

But while the growth is commendable, it is nowhere near working at the scale needed to have a significant market impact. The latest news is that to get high yields, huge water inputs are needed–20,000 liters of water to produce one liter of biofuel. This news will further make scaling up oil production from jatropha difficult.” Source

June 7, 2009

Debt slavery on the rise in Brazilian sugarcane plantations: report

Filed under: political economy, reports — parnet @ 2:08 pm

In Brazil, a report issued by the Pastoral Land Commission of Brazil, created by the Catholic Bishops of Brazil, revealed that debt slavery cases in 2008 rose to 280, up six percent from 2007. The UN International Labor Organization estimated in 2003 that between 25,000 and 40,000 Brazilians live in debt slavery, common in the sugar plantation areas where illiterate workers become indebted to plantation owners who overcharge for food and shelter while paying low wages for sugar plantation work.

Workers are required to swing a machete an average of 3,000 times per day in Brazilian plantations, according a recent report in Ethical Traveler.

Father Tiago, a Scottish Catholic monk who has for many years been helping the abused workers, told Der Spiegel, “The promise of biofuel is a lie. Anyone who buys ethanol is pumping blood into his tank. Ethanol is produced by slaves.”

New land grab website

Filed under: food security, political economy — parnet @ 2:05 pm

GRAIN is launching today a new website that offers the most comprehensive information tool on the global land grab for outsourced food production: http://farmlandgrab.org.

waste gasification process – Converting Garbage into Fuel

Filed under: tech — parnet @ 1:52 pm

Technology Review has an article on a new waste gasification process – Converting Garbage into Fuel.

Waste gasification, a process for converting garbage into fuel and electricity without incinerating it, may be a step closer to large-scale commercialization. Last week, Houston’s Waste Management, a major garbage-collection and -disposal company, announced a joint venture with InEnTec, a startup based in Richland, WA, to commercialize InEnTec’s plasma-gasification technology.

Waste Management will fund the new venture, which will be called S4 Energy Solutions, as well as provide infrastructure and expertise from its waste-collecting and -processing businesses to make the technology economical. The company, which will operate and market plasma-gasification technologies, will be announcing specific projects to build facilities later this year. The involvement of Waste Management could signal that the technology, which has been more expensive than other waste-disposal options, is finally reaching a stage at which it can be practical. “Up until late last year, it was under the radar,” says James Childress, the executive director of the Gasification Technologies Council. “Now the big players are finally getting involved in this.”

InEnTec’s technology, originally developed at MIT and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, in Richland, WA, uses a multiple high-temperature processes–including subjecting garbage to plasma arcs–to break down organic materials into syngas, a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Syngas can either be directly burned in gas turbines to produce electricity, or it can be converted into other fuels, including gasoline and ethanol. Metals and other inorganic materials in garbage can be isolated and recycled. The combination of high temperatures and an oxygen-poor environment that prevents the garbage from catching fire eliminates the production of dioxins and furans, two toxic chemicals produced during incineration.

That core technology has been proved, says Joseph Vaillancourt, managing director at Waste Management and the senior vice president of the new joint venture. What’s kept it from being commercialized, he says, is the need to develop the processes for economically collecting and feeding waste into the system, and on the “back end” pairing the syngas produced with gas turbines for generating electricity, or other chemical processes for converting it into fuels. Vaillancourt says that Waste Management has already developed infrastructure for collecting and processing waste and for using heat from incinerators for generating electricity, and it will employ its “knowledge and wherewithal” to develop an “integrated system” using InEnTec’s technology.

June 3, 2009

Biopiracy, GM Seeds and Rural India – or: why “Over 100,000 farmers have committed suicide…”

Filed under: political economy, research — Tags: , , , , — parnet @ 9:52 am

 

 

Introduction

The reality for the average Indian remains the same: agricultural cultivation and the ability to farm is the bedrock of rural living. With its historical practices, values, and communal sentiments of respect, cultivation and the practice of farming has embedded roots. Farming for Indians is not only a source of income – it is a source of culture and identity. Since the late 1990s however, Indian governmental officials have wilfully compromised this sentiment for the ‘bright lights’ associated with the West.

After over a decade of trade liberalization and free market reforms, mainstream economic development has left rural India to fend for itself. Amidst great levels of industrialization and growth, the vast majority of Indians have been left behind. Agriculture is the primary source of livelihood for some 70% of Indians[1].Considering the fact that only 1% of Americans and 2-3% of Europeans derive their livelihood from agriculture, this is a huge level of dependence[2].

India’s desire to become a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the adoption of the Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPs) specifically has compromised the livelihood of farmers. With the adoption of such neo-liberal policies, the sovereignty of rural India has been threatened. TRIPs in particular has created a gateway for agro-business conglomerates to engage in biopiracy and GM seed monopolization, effectively marginalizing rural communities. Through the manipulation of intellectual property rights (IPRs), conglomerates such as Monsanto have put rural farmers on the defensive. This paper highlights the manipulative nature and destabilizing affects of patents, IPRs and agro-business conglomerates in the context of rural India. Special focus is placed upon the infamous Basmati rice case, and Bt cotton, the first GM seed made available to Indian farmers.

Through these case studies, this paper will illustrate both the intent and impact of agro-business conglomerates and the associated costs incurred by farmers. Centuries of indigenous knowledge, tradition cultivation practises and sharing techniques are being compromised. Many farmers have lost their right to cultivate and control the agricultural production cycle. As a result, farmers increasingly find themselves indebt, disempowered and most alarming, suicidal. With approximately one in every four farmers globally being Indian, the rural lifestyle – the cultural origins of India are being threatened[3]. Agro-business conglomerates are promoting a cycle of dependence, which, if not stopped will carry with it disastrous affects for the entire country. (more…)

May 27, 2009

Monsanto’s Terminator Making a Comeback?

Filed under: food security, political economy — parnet @ 8:54 am

By Barbara H. Peterson – http://farmwars.info/?p=845
Monsanto and its cohorts in crime promised us that they would not be using Terminator technology called GURT, or genetic use restricted technology. In fact, the United Nations actually issued a moratorium on the project. So we’re safe, right? Wrong.

As usual, the boys in the little white lab coats have not been idle. In spite of the moratorium, not only are they working heatedly on Terminator technology, but are getting ready to introduce Zombie technology. Terminator, and Traitor or Zombie technologies are just variations of GURT. Whereas Terminator technology produces plants with sterile seeds, Zombie technology carries this a step further by creating plants that could require a chemical application to trigger seed fertility every year. Pay for the chemical or get sterile seed. This is called reversible transgenic sterility. They have been working steadily on perfecting this technology, and are now poised to introduce it to the world as a solution to the current GMO contamination problem. Move over Terminator, here comes the Zombie.

If a field gets contaminated with seeds containing the Terminator gene, the resulting plants will have sterile seeds, so the reproductive cycle ends. If the contamination is from the Zombie gene, the resulting plants will most likely require a certain pesticide or will be sterile.

Plants are engineered with sterility as the default condition, but sterility can be reversed with the application of an external stimulus that restores the plant’s viability. In order to bring the “zombie” seed back from the dead, the farmer or breeder must use an external stimulus (such as a proprietary chemical) to restore the seed’s fertility. (Terminator the Sequel, 2007 PDF doc) 

Either way, if you are a small farmer with a contaminated field, your seed-saving venture for the following year will be less than successful. Planting sterile seeds takes the same amount of work as well as monetary outlay that planting good seeds does, but without the return on investment. And, you cannot tell the difference between the good, the bad, and the ugly seeds until it’s too late. That is, if the patent enforcement brigade doesn’t raid your property first and force you to destroy your crops and all of your seeds due to patent infringement. Then you get nothing, and have to pay for the privilege. 

Oh, and did I forget to mention that Monsanto announced in 2006, its takeover of Delta Pine & Land?

http://www.banterminator.org/News-Updates/News-Updates/Monsanto-Announces-Takeover-of-Delta-Pine-Land

This would not be of much consequence, but for the fact that Delta Pine & Land is a joint owner along with the USDA of US patent # 5,723,765 – GURT technology.

In March 1998 the US Patent Office granted Patent No. 5,723,765 to Delta Pine & Land for a patent titled, Control of Plant Gene _Expression. The patent is owned jointly, according to Delta Pine’s Security & Exchange Commission 10K filing, ‘by DP&L and the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of Agriculture.’  (http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=3082) 

This makes, as of 2006, Monsanto and the United States of America (Corp USA), as represented by the Secretary of Agriculture (USDA), which is currently Tom Vilsack, joint owners of the GURT patent. Kind of gives you that warm, fuzzy feeling all over, doesn’t it?

Barbara H. Peterson

Read the following article from ETC Group and download the full 28 page report here:

etcomm95_tsequel_11june071

Here is another report on GURT technology from Germany:

german_scientists_on_sst

Terminator: The Sequel 

http://www.etcgroup.org/en/materials/publications.html?pub_id=635

Despite the fact that governments re-affirmed and strengthened the United Nations’ moratorium on Terminator technology (a.k.a. genetic use restriction technology [GURTs]) in March 2006, public and private sector researchers are developing a new generation of suicide seeds – using chemically induced “switches” to turn a genetically modified (GM) plant’s fertility on or off.

Issue: Under the guise of biosafety, the European Union’s 3-year Transcontainer Project is investing millions of euros in strategies that cannot promise fail-safe containment of transgenes from GM crops, but could nonetheless function as Terminator, posing unacceptable threats to farmers, biodiversity and food sovereignty. Terminator technology – genetic seed sterilization – was initially developed by the multinational seed/agrochemical industry and the US government to maximize seed industry profits by preventing farmers from re-planting harvested seed. Researchers are also developing new techniques to excise transgenes from GM plants at a specific time in the plant’s development, and methods to kill a plant with “conditionally lethal” genes. This new generation of GURTs will shift the burden of trait control to the farmer. Under some scenarios, farmers will be obliged to pay for the privilege of restoring seed fertility every year – a new form of perpetual monopoly for the seed industry.

Impact: Whether intended or not, new research on molecular containment of transgenes will ultimately allow the multinational seed industry to tighten its grasp on proprietary germplasm and restrict the rights of farmers. Industry and governments are already working to overturn the existing moratorium on Terminator technology at the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). In the months leading up to the CBD’s 9th Conference of the Parties (Bonn, Germany 19-30 May 2008), industry will argue that global warming requires urgent introduction of transgenic crops and trees for biofuels – and that Terminator-type technologies offer a precautionary, environmental necessity to prevent transgene flow. Ironically, society is being asked to foot the bill for a new techno-fix to mitigate the genetic contamination caused by the biotech industry’s defective GM seeds.

Players: Taxpayer-financed research on biological containment of GM crops subsidizes the corporate agenda. A handful of multinational seed corporations control biotech seeds and the proprietary seed market as a whole has seen unprecedented corporate concentration. In 2006, the world’s top 4 seed companies – Monsanto, DuPont, Syngenta and Groupe Limagrain – accounted for half (49%) of the proprietary seed market.

Policy: Governments keep trying to find ways to make GM seeds safe and acceptable and they keep failing. They should stop trying. There is no such thing as a safe and acceptable form of Terminator. The EU should discontinue funding for research on “reversible transgenic sterility,” and re-assess funding for other research projects undertaken by Transcontainer. Rather than support research on coexistence to bail out the agbiotech industry, the EU should instead fund sustainable agricultural research that benefits farmers and the public. National governments should propose legislation to prohibit field-testing and commercial sale of Terminator technologies. Governments meeting at the 9th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Bonn, Germany must strengthen the moratorium on GURTs by recommending a ban on the technology.

To read the 28-page report, 
Download PDF (1 MB) here: etcomm95_tsequel_11june071

May 25, 2009

Africa almost giving land away, says UN

Filed under: food security, political economy, research — parnet @ 6:38 am

ByJavier Blas in London - FT  May 24 2009 22:05

African countries are giving away vast tracts of farmland to other countries and investors almost for free, with the only benefits consisting of vague promises of jobs and infrastructure, according to a report published on Monday.

“Most of the land deals documented by this study involved no or minimal land fees,” it says. Although the deals promise jobs and infrastructure development, it warns that “these commitments tend to lack teeth” on the contracts.

The report – “Land Grab or development opportunity?” – is written jointly by two UN bodies – the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the International Fund for Agricultural Development – and the International Institute for Environment and Development, a London-based think-tank.

It is the first major study of the so-called “farmland grab” trend, in which rich countries such as Saudi Arabia or South Korea invest in overseas land to boost their food security. The investors plan to export all, or a large share of, the crops back to feed their own populations.

The trend gained notoriety after an attempt by South Korea’s Daewoo Logistics to secure a large chunk of land in Madagascar, which contributed to the collapse of the African country’s government.

Some critics, including Jacques Diouf, head of the FAO, warn against “neo-colonialism” but others say the investments can boost economic growth in Africa.

The report, seen by the Financial Times, concludes that “virtually all the [farmland] contracts” were “strikingly short and simple compared to the economic reality of the transaction”. Key concerns such as “strengthening the mechanisms to monitor or enforce compliance with investor commitments” on jobs or infrastructure, “maximising government revenues”, or “balancing food security concerns . . . are dealt with by vague provisions if at all”, it says.

The report, which studied cases in Ethiopia, Ghana, Mali, Madagascar and Sudan, uncovered farmland investment in the past five years totalling about 2.5m hectares – equal to about half the arable land of the UK.

Other estimates, including one from Peter Brabeck, chairman of Nestlé, put total farmland investments in Africa, Latin America and Asia above 15m hectares, about half the size of Italy.

Also raised in the report was the risk that poor people will lose access to farmland and water.

“Land allocations on the scale documented in this study do have the potential to result in loss of land for large numbers of people,” the report states. “Long-term land leases – for 50 or even 99 years – are unsustainable,” it adds.

Lorenzo Cotula, one of the report’s authors, says new research indicates that farmland deals could be “structured much better”. In particular, it proposes giving host countries more resources to negotiate the deals.

“As pressure grows, the deals will start to be done in a different way,” he adds.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

May 19, 2009

More renewable than conventional energy added in EU and USA

Filed under: biofuel news, reports — parnet @ 1:52 pm

More renewable energy than conventional power capacity was added in 2008 in both the European Union and United States for the first time ever, according to the latest Renewables Global Status Report from the Renewable Energy Policy Network (REN21).

Global power capacity from new renewable energy sources (excluding large hydro) reached 280,000 megawatts (MW) in 2008 – a 16 per cent rise from the 240,000 MW in 2007 and nearly three times the capacity of the United States nuclear sector.

Solar heating capacity increased by 15 per cent to 145 gigawatts-thermal (GWth), while biodiesel and ethanol production both increased by 34 per cent. … More

Renewables Surge Despite Economic Crisis

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — parnet @ 1:33 pm

The 2008 figures are in from the new REN 21 Renewables Global Status Report: Renewable power capacity (excluding large hydropower) increased a hefty 16 percent last year, which is remarkable given that world oil use actually declined. Growth in some renewable sectors was even more impressive. Biodiesel production increased 34 percent, and solar power took the prize with a 73 percent jump.
Renewable energy has not entirely escaped the impact of the global recession – growth this year will almost certainly be slower – but it is clear that global energy markets have turned a corner. Political support and business investment in new energy sources have reached the point where the new industries appear hard to stop. REN 21 reports that 64 nations now have policies to promote renewable power generation. Scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs across the globe are responding with unprecedented innovation. Overnight, the energy business has begun to resemble the I.T. industry more than it does the energy industry of the past.

Once dominated by wealthy European nations, the renewable energy surge has now taken hold in the world’s most dynamic energy markets, including Brazil, China, and India. And the United States is enjoying an Obama boom. Clean energy growth is accelerating in response to new government subsidies and unprecedented support from the White House and from governors across the nation.

With the world now sitting at the edge of a climate catastrophe, it’s still not clear that the energy system will be transformed quickly enough to prevent disaster. But progress in energy policy and markets is now exceeding expectations and entering a new period of dynamic growth and innovation. If a strong climate agreement can be reached in Copenhagen this fall, the world still has a fighting chance to make it out of the fossil fuel age with the global ecosystem intact.

Christopher Flavin is president of the Worldwatch Institute.

This article is a product of Eye on Earth, Worldwatch Institute’s online news service. For permission to reprint Eye on Earth content, please contact Juli Diamond at jdiamond@worldwatch.org.

April 26, 2009

Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?

Filed under: food security, political economy — parnet @ 12:34 pm

From the May 2009 Scientific American Magazine
Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?
The biggest threat to global stability is the potential for food crises in poor countries to cause government collapse
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=civilization-food-shortages
By Lester R. Brown

Key Concepts

* Food scarcity and the resulting higher food prices are pushing poor countries into chaos.
* Such “failed states” can export disease, terrorism, illicit drugs, weapons and refugees.
* Water shortages, soil losses and rising temperatures from global warming are placing severe limits on food production.
* Without massive and rapid intervention to address these three environmental factors, the author argues, a series of government collapses could threaten the world order.

One of the toughest things for people to do is to anticipate sudden change.
Typically we project the future by extrapolating from trends in the past.
Much of the time this approach works well. But sometimes it fails spectacularly, and people are simply blindsided by events such as today’s economic crisis.

For most of us, the idea that civilization itself could disintegrate probably seems preposterous. Who would not find it hard to think seriously about such a complete departure from what we expect of ordinary life? What evidence could make us heed a warning so dire-and how would we go about responding to it? We are so inured to a long list of highly unlikely catastrophes that we are virtually programmed to dismiss them all with a wave of the hand: Sure, our civilization might devolve into chaos-and Earth might collide with an asteroid, too!

For many years I have studied global agricultural, population, environmental and economic trends and their interactions. The combined effects of those trends and the political tensions they generate point to
the breakdown of governments and societies. Yet I, too, have resisted the idea that food shortages could bring down not only individual governments but also our global civilization.

I can no longer ignore that risk. Our continuing failure to deal with the environmental declines that are undermining the world food economy-most important, falling water tables, eroding soils and rising
temperatures-forces me to conclude that such a collapse is possible.

The Problem of Failed States
Even a cursory look at the vital signs of our current world order lends unwelcome support to my conclusion. And those of us in the environmental field are well into our third de–cade of charting trends of environmental decline without seeing any significant effort to reverse a single one.

In six of the past nine years world grain production has fallen short of consumption, forcing a steady drawdown in stocks. When the 2008 harvest began, world carryover stocks of grain (the amount in the bin when the new harvest begins) were at 62 days of consumption, a near record low. In response, world grain prices in the spring and summer of last year climbed to the highest level ever.

As demand for food rises faster than supplies are growing, the resulting food-price inflation puts severe stress on the governments of countries already teetering on the edge of chaos. Unable to buy grain or grow their own, hungry people take to the streets. Indeed, even before the steep climb in grain prices in 2008, the number of failing states was expanding [Purchase the digital edition to see related sidebar]. Many of their
problems stem from a failure to slow the growth of their populations. But if the food situation continues to deteriorate, entire nations will break down at an ever increasing rate. We have entered a new era in geopolitics.
In the 20th century the main threat to international security was superpower conflict; today it is failing states. It is not the concentration of power but its absence that puts us at risk.

States fail when national governments can no longer provide personal security, food security and basic social services such as education and health care. They often lose control of part or all of their territory.
When governments lose their monopoly on power, law and order begin to disintegrate. After a point, countries can become so dangerous that food relief workers are no longer safe and their programs are halted; in Somalia and Afghanistan, deteriorating conditions have already put such programs in
jeopardy.

Failing states are of international concern because they are a source of terrorists, drugs, weapons and refugees, threatening political stability everywhere. Somalia, number one on the 2008 list of failing states, has become a base for piracy. Iraq, number five, is a hotbed for terrorist training. Afghanistan, number seven, is the world’s leading supplier of heroin. Following the massive genocide of 1994 in Rwanda, refugees from that troubled state, thousands of armed soldiers among them, helped to destabilize neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo (number six).

Our global civilization depends on a functioning network of politically healthy nation-states to control the spread of infectious disease, to manage the international monetary system, to control international
terrorism and to reach scores of other common goals. If the system for controlling infectious diseases-such as polio, SARS or avian flu-breaks down, humanity will be in trouble. Once states fail, no one assumes
responsibility for their debt to outside lenders. If enough states disintegrate, their fall will threaten the stability of global civilization itself.

A New Kind of Food Shortage
The surge in world grain prices in 2007 and 2008-and the threat they pose to food security-has a different, more troubling quality than the increases of the past. During the second half of the 20th century, grain
prices rose dramatically several times. In 1972, for instance, the Soviets, recognizing their poor harvest early, quietly cornered the world wheat market. As a result, wheat prices elsewhere more than doubled, pulling rice and corn prices up with them. But this and other price shocks were event-driven-drought in the Soviet Union, a monsoon failure in India, crop-shrinking heat in the U.S. Corn Belt. And the rises were short-lived: prices typically returned to normal with the next harvest.

In contrast, the recent surge in world grain prices is trend-driven, making it unlikely to reverse without a reversal in the trends themselves. On the demand side, those trends include the ongoing addition of more than 70 million people a year; a growing number of people wanting to move up the food chain to consume highly grain-intensive livestock products [see "The Greenhouse Hamburger," by Nathan Fiala; Scientific American, February 2009]; and the massive diversion of U.S. grain to ethanol-fuel
distilleries.

The extra demand for grain associated with rising affluence varies widely among countries. People in low-income countries where grain supplies 60 percent of calories, such as India, directly consume a bit more than a pound of grain a day. In affluent countries such as the U.S. and Canada, grain consumption per person is nearly four times that much, though perhaps 90 percent of it is consumed indirectly as meat, milk and eggs from grain-fed animals.

The potential for further grain consumption as incomes rise among low-income consumers is huge. But that potential pales beside the insatiable demand for crop-based automotive fuels. A fourth of this year’s U.S. grain harvest-enough to feed 125 million Americans or half a billion Indians at current consumption levels-will go to fuel cars. Yet even if the entire U.S. grain harvest were diverted into making ethanol, it would meet at most 18 percent of U.S. automotive fuel needs. The grain required to fill a 25-gallon SUV tank with ethanol could feed one person for a year.

The recent merging of the food and energy economies implies that if the food value of grain is less than its fuel value, the market will move the grain into the energy economy. That double demand is leading to an epic
competition between cars and people for the grain supply and to a political and moral issue of unprecedented dimensions. The U.S., in a misguided effort to reduce its dependence on foreign oil by substituting grain-based fuels, is generating global food insecurity on a scale not seen before.

Water Shortages Mean Food Shortages
What about supply? The three environmental trends I mentioned earlier-the shortage of freshwater, the loss of topsoil and the rising temperatures (and other effects) of global warming-are making it increasingly hard to
expand the world’s grain supply fast enough to keep up with demand. Of all those trends, however, the spread of water shortages poses the most immediate threat. The biggest challenge here is irrigation, which consumes 70 percent of the world’s freshwater. Millions of irrigation wells in many countries are now pumping water out of underground sources faster than rainfall can recharge them. The result is falling water tables in countries populated by half the world’s people, including the three big grain producers-China, India and the U.S.

Usually aquifers are replenishable, but some of the most important ones are not: the “fossil” aquifers, so called because they store ancient water and are not recharged by precipitation. For these-including the vast
Ogallala Aquifer that underlies the U.S. Great Plains, the Saudi aquifer and the deep aquifer under the North China Plain-depletion would spell the end of pumping. In arid regions such a loss could also bring an end to
agriculture altogether.

In China the water table under the North China Plain, an area that produces more than half of the country’s wheat and a third of its corn, is falling fast. Overpumping has used up most of the water in a shallow aquifer there, forcing well drillers to turn to the region’s deep aquifer, which is not replenishable. A report by the World Bank foresees “catastrophic consequences for future generations” unless water use and supply can
quickly be brought back into balance.

As water tables have fallen and irrigation wells have gone dry, China’s wheat crop, the world’s largest, has declined by 8 percent since it peaked at 123 million tons in 1997. In that same period China’s rice production dropped 4 percent. The world’s most populous nation may soon be importing massive quantities of grain.

But water shortages are even more worrying in India. There the margin between food consumption and survival is more precarious. Millions of irrigation wells have dropped water tables in almost every state. As Fred Pearce reported in New Scientist:

Half of India’s traditional hand-dug wells and millions of shallower tube wells have already dried up, bringing a spate of suicides among those who rely on them. Electricity blackouts are reaching epidemic proportions in
states where half of the electricity is used to pump water from depths of up to a kilometer [3,300 feet].

A World Bank study reports that 15 percent of India’s food supply is produced by mining groundwater. Stated otherwise, 175 million Indians consume grain produced with water from irrigation wells that will
soon be exhausted. The continued shrinking of water supplies could lead to unmanageable food shortages and social conflict.

Less Soil, More Hunger
The scope of the second worrisome trend-the loss of topsoil-is also startling. Topsoil is eroding faster than new soil forms on perhaps a third of the world’s cropland. This thin layer of essential plant nutrients,
the very foundation of civilization, took long stretches of geologic time to build up, yet it is typically only about six inches deep. Its loss from wind and water erosion doomed earlier civilizations.

In 2002 a U.N. team assessed the food situation in Lesotho, the small, landlocked home of two million people embedded within South Africa. The team’s finding was straightforward: “Agriculture in Lesotho faces a
catastrophic future; crop production is declining and could cease altogether over large tracts of the country if steps are not taken to reverse soil erosion, degradation and the decline in soil fertility.”

In the Western Hemisphere, Haiti-one of the first states to be recognized as failing-was largely self-sufficient in grain 40 years ago. In the years since, though, it has lost nearly all its forests and much of its topsoil, forcing the country to import more than half of its grain.

The third and perhaps most pervasive environmental threat to food security-rising surface temperature-can affect crop yields everywhere.
In many countries crops are grown at or near their thermal optimum, so even a minor temperature rise during the growing season can shrink the harvest. A study published by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences has confirmed a rule of thumb among crop ecologists: for every rise of one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above the norm, wheat, rice and corn yields fall by 10 percent.

In the past, most famously when the innovations in the use of fertilizer, irrigation and high-yield varieties of wheat and rice created the “green revolution” of the 1960s and 1970s, the response to the growing demand
for food was the successful application of scientific agriculture: the technological fix. This time, regrettably, many of the most productive advances in agricultural technology have already been put into practice, and so the long-term rise in land productivity is slowing down. Between 1950 and 1990 the world’s farmers increased the grain yield per acre by more than 2 percent a year, exceeding the growth of population. But since then, the annual growth in yield has slowed to slightly more than 1 percent. In some countries the yields appear to be near their practical limits, including rice yields in Japan and China.

Some commentators point to genetically modified crop strains as a way out of our predicament. Unfortunately, however, no genetically modified crops have led to dramatically higher yields, comparable to the doubling or tripling of wheat and rice yields that took place during the green revolution. Nor do they seem likely to do so, simply because conventional plant-breeding techniques have already tapped most of the potential for raising crop yields.

Jockeying for Food
As the world’s food security unravels, a dangerous politics of food scarcity is coming into play: individual countries acting in their narrowly defined self-interest are actually worsening the plight of the many. The trend began in 2007, when leading wheat-exporting countries such as Russia and Argentina limited or banned their exports, in hopes of increasing locally available food supplies and thereby bringing down food prices
domestically. Vietnam, the world’s second-biggest rice exporter after
Thailand, banned its exports for several months for the same reason. Such moves may reassure those living in the exporting countries, but they are creating panic in importing countries that must rely on what is then left of the world’s exportable grain.

In response to those restrictions, grain importers are trying to nail down long-term bilateral trade agreements that would lock up future grain supplies. The Philippines, no longer able to count on getting rice from the world market, recently negotiated a three-year deal with Vietnam for a guaranteed 1.5 million tons of rice each year. Food-import anxiety is even spawning entirely new efforts by food-importing countries to buy or lease farmland in other countries [Purchase the digital edition to see related sidebar].

In spite of such stopgap measures, soaring food prices and spreading hunger in many other countries are beginning to break down the social order. In several provinces of Thailand the predations of “rice rustlers” have forced villagers to guard their rice fields at night with loaded shotguns.
In Pakistan an armed soldier escorts each grain truck. During the first half of 2008, 83 trucks carrying grain in Sudan were hijacked before reaching the Darfur relief camps.

No country is immune to the effects of tightening food supplies, not even the U.S., the world’s breadbasket. If China turns to the world market for massive quantities of grain, as it has recently done for soybeans, it will
have to buy from the U.S. For U.S. consumers, that would mean competing for the U.S. grain harvest with 1.3 billion Chinese consumers with fast-rising incomes-a nightmare scenario. In such circumstances, it would be tempting for the U.S. to restrict exports, as it did, for instance, with grain and soybeans in the 1970s when domestic prices soared. But that is not an option with China. Chinese investors now hold well over a trillion U.S. dollars, and they have often been the leading international buyers of U.S.
Treasury securities issued to finance the fiscal deficit. Like it or not, U.S. consumers will share their grain with Chinese consumers, no matter how high food prices rise.

Plan B: Our Only Option
Since the current world food shortage is trend-driven, the environmental trends that cause it must be reversed. To do so requires extraordinarily demanding measures, a monumental shift away from business as usual-what we at the Earth Policy Institute call Plan A-to a civilization-saving Plan B. [see "Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization," at
www.earthpoli cy.org/Books/PB3/]

Similar in scale and urgency to the U.S. mobilization for World War II, Plan B has four components: a massive effort to cut carbon emissions by 80 percent from their 2006 levels by 2020; the stabilization of the world’s
population at eight billion by 2040; the eradication of poverty; and the restoration of forests, soils and aquifers.

Net carbon dioxide emissions can be cut by systematically raising energy efficiency and investing massively in the development of renewable sources of energy. We must also ban deforestation worldwide, as several countries already have done, and plant billions of trees to sequester carbon. The transition from fossil fuels to renewable forms of energy can be driven by imposing a tax on carbon, while offsetting it with a reduction in income taxes.

Stabilizing population and eradicating poverty go hand in hand. In fact, the key to accelerating the shift to smaller families is eradicating poverty-and vice versa. One way is to ensure at least a primary school education for all children, girls as well as boys. Another is to provide rudimentary, village-level health care, so that people can be confident that their children will survive to adulthood. Women everywhere need access
to reproductive health care and family-planning services.

The fourth component, restoring the earth’s natural systems and resources, incorporates a worldwide initiative to arrest the fall in water tables by raising water productivity: the useful activity that can be wrung
from each drop. That implies shifting to more efficient irrigation systems and to more water-efficient crops. In some countries, it implies growing (and eating) more wheat and less rice, a water-intensive crop. And for
industries and cities, it implies doing what some are doing already, namely, continuously recycling water.

At the same time, we must launch a worldwide effort to conserve soil, similar to the U.S. response to the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Terracing the ground, planting trees as shelterbelts against windblown soil erosion, and practicing minimum tillage-in which the soil is not plowed and crop residues are left on the field-are among the most important soil-conservation measures.

There is nothing new about our four interrelated objectives. They have been discussed individually for years. Indeed, we have created entire institutions intended to tackle some of them, such as the World Bank to
alleviate poverty. And we have made substantial progress in some parts of the world on at least one of them-the distribution of family-planning services and the associated shift to smaller families that brings
population stability.

For many in the development community, the four objectives of Plan B were seen as positive, promoting development as long as they did not cost too much. Others saw them as humanitarian goals-politically correct and morally appropriate. Now a third and far more momentous rationale presents itself: meeting these goals may be necessary to prevent the collapse of our civilization. Yet the cost we project for saving civilization would amount to less than $200 billion a year, a sixth of current global military spending. In effect, Plan B is the new security budget.

Time: Our Scarcest Resource
Our challenge is not only to implement Plan B but also to do it quickly. The world is in a race between political tipping points and natural ones. Can we close coal-fired power plants fast enough to prevent the Greenland ice sheet from slipping into the sea and inundating our coastlines? Can we cut carbon emissions fast enough to save the mountain glaciers of Asia? During the dry season their meltwaters sustain the major rivers of India and China-and by extension, hundreds of millions of people. Can we stabilize population before countries such as India, Pakistan and Yemen are overwhelmed by shortages of the water they need to irrigate their crops?

It is hard to overstate the urgency of our predicament. [For the most thorough and authoritative scientific assessment of global climate change, see "Climate Change 2007. Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change," available at www.ipcc.ch] Every day counts.
Unfortunately, we do not know how long we can light our cities with coal, for instance, before Greenland’s ice sheet can no longer be saved. Nature sets the deadlines; nature is the timekeeper. But we human beings cannot see the clock.

We desperately need a new way of thinking, a new mind-set. The thinking that got us into this bind will not get us out. When Elizabeth Kolbert, a writer for the New Yorker, asked energy guru Amory Lovins about thinking outside the box, Lovins responded: “There is no box.”

There is no box. That is the mind-set we need if civilization is to survive. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Lester R. Brown, in the words of the Washington Post, is “one of the world’s most influential thinkers.” The Telegraph of Calcutta has called him “the guru of the environmental movement.” Brown is founder of both the
Worldwatch Institute (1974) and the Earth Policy Institute (2001), which he heads today. He has authored or co- authored 50 books; his most recent is Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization. Brown is the recipient of many prizes and awards, including 24 honorary degrees and a MacArthur
Fellowship.

April 22, 2009

The Tragedy of Farmers Suicides in India

Filed under: food security, political economy — parnet @ 8:48 am

From The Huffingtonpost:

“Last week, a blog I wrote entitled 1500 Farmers Commit Suicide: A Wake Up Call for Humanity was virally shared online, and was the featured story on the home page of Huffington Post. Referencing a story from The Independent that was vague on details and called them “mass” suicides, undoubtedly, I participated in the sensationalization of this story. But, for this I do not apologize.

According to the National Crime Records Bureau of India, 182,936 Indian farmers have committed suicide between 1997 -2007. It estimates 46 Indian farmers kill themselves every day – that is, roughly one suicide every 30 minutes. An estimated 16,625 farmers across India killed themselves in 2007, the last year that was reported. The numbers are horrifying, and they indicate the sense of despair that the poorest people in the world are facing today.

The current fate of farmers in India is a tangled hierarchy that involves politics, agro-business, multinationals, trade liberalization, global subsidies, the environment, water, ethics, and human rights. Activists point out the role of agrochemicals, particularly genetically engineered seeds, that have been aggressively marketed to Indian farmers by companies like Monsanto–an American multinational agricultural biotechnology corporation that also wields a powerful influence on the farming practices in America.

Companies like Monsanto promise farmers that these genetically modified (GM) seeds, which cost significantly more than traditional seeds, require less pesticide and will potentially produce higher yields than traditional, renewable seeds. However, farmers are usually not told that GM seeds also require more water, making crops more susceptible to drought, irrigation and lower water levels. These genetically modified seeds also do not produce viable seeds of their own to be saved for the next season’s harvest, which means that farmers are forced to buy the patented seeds and fertilizer again and again every year.

Lured in by these promises, farmers are forced to take out high interest loans to purchase these “magical seeds” – often from aggressive lenders who charge exorbitant rates – just to survive. Combine that with Western subsidies on cotton – which deflate global prices – and Indian farmers are faced with revenues that cannot cover their debt. Out of despair, hopelessness, even shame, farmers turn to suicide – often by drinking pesticide – they kill themselves, leaving behind children and families who must bear the burden of a system that is too overwhelming to even think about.

Dr. Vandana Shiva, a world-renowned ecologist and champion for Planet Earth and her people, has been a powerful and provocative voice for the hardships faced by farmers in India. Dr. Shiva encourages traditional practices and organic farming, recognizing the seed as a currency for empowerment and freedom. While the Indian government has provided debt relief and seed replenishment programs, the plight of farmers has continued at alarming rates.

This week, many of us will be celebrating Earth Day. Media will be abundant with messages about how we can take care of our planet and its ecology by making changes in our personal lives and in our communities. Let us not forget, however, those individuals who work the land for our food and basic goods. We must mandate corporations and world leaders to cherish the soil and her people for our global wellbeing. We must also be vigilant more than ever, and speak out against corporations that exploit the farmers and the earth for their own monetary self-interest.

The reality is that if we do not collectively create solutions for this problem, we will likely have much larger ones on our hands. The tangled hierarchy extends to all of us, no matter where we live and how comfortable our current economic situation is in comparison with the rest of the world. More death creates more disharmony, more civil violence in areas of weak global security, disruption to the food supply, higher food prices, and most of all–the collective burden of a weakened, ailing planet that will create unspeakable suffering for our grandchildren and our grandchildren’s grandchildren.

This ongoing tragedy in India is hardly some faraway global event, but a terrifying manifestation of a simple truth that many of us would rather ignore or forget: all of us are directly responsible for the present state of this ailing planet, and all of us directly responsible for finding a radical new solution that will save us from destroying the only home we have.

Mallika Chopra is the founder of Intent.com, a site focused on personal, social and global wellness

April 14, 2009

India’s ‘Green Revolution’ Heading For Collapse

Filed under: food security, political economy, research — parnet @ 10:04 am

by Eric deCarbonnel - MONDAY, APRIL 13, 2009

“NPR reports that ‘Green Revolution’ Trapping India’s Farmers In Debt.

(emphasis mine) [my comment]

‘Green Revolution’ Trapping India’s Farmers In Debt
by Daniel Zwerdling

Morning Edition, April 14, 2009 · As the world’s population surges, the international community faces a pressing problem: How will it feed everybody?

Until recently, people thought India had an answer.

Farmers in the state of Punjab abandoned traditional farming methods in the 1960s and 1970s as part of the national program called the “Green Revolution,” backed by advisers from the U.S. and other countries.

Indian farmers started growing crops the American way — with chemicals, high-yield seeds and irrigation.

Since then, India has gone from importing grain like a beggar, to often exporting it.

But studies show the Green Revolution is heading for collapse.

A Thirst For Water

On a recent morning, a drilling rig is pounding away in the middle of a wheat field near the village of Chotia Khurd. The sound, part jackhammer and part pile driver, is becoming increasingly common in the farm fields of northern India’s Punjab region.

The farmer, Sandeep Singh, is supervising and looking unhappy as the rig hammers away, driving deeper and deeper under his field in search of water.

When India’s government launched the Green Revolution more than 40 years ago, it pressured farmers to grow only high-yield wheat, rice and cotton instead of their traditional mix of crops. 

The new miracle seeds could produce far bigger yields than farmers had ever seen, but they came with a catch: The thirsty crops needed much more water than natural rainfall could provide, so farmers had to dig wells and irrigate with groundwater.

The system worked well for years, but government studies show thatfarmers have pumped so much groundwater to irrigate their crops that the water table is dropping dramatically, as much as 3 feet every year.

So farmers like Sandeep keep hiring the drilling company to come back to their fields, to bore the wells ever deeper — on this day, to more than 200 feet.

Farmers In Debt

The groundwater problem has touched off an economic chain reaction. As the farmers dig deeper to find groundwater, they have to install ever more powerful and more expensive pumps to send it gushing up to their fields.

Sandeep says his new pump costs more than $4,000. He and most other farmers have to borrow that kind of cash, but they are already so deep in debt that conventional banks often turn them away. 

So Sandeep and his neighbors have turned to “unofficial” lenders — local businessmen who charge at least double the banks’ interest rate. The district agriculture director, Palwinder Singh, says farmers can end up paying a whopping 24 percent.

Another side effect of the groundwater crisis is evident at the edge of the fields — thin straggly rows of wheat and a whitish powder scattered across the soil.

The white substance is salt residue. Drilling deep wells to find fresh water often taps brackish underground pools, and the salty water poisons the crops.

“The salt causes root injuries,” Palwinder says. “The root cannot take the nutrients from the soil.”

Destroying The Soil

In the village of Chotia Khurd, farmers agree that the Green Revolution used to work miracles for many of them. But now, it’s like financial quicksand.

Studies show that their intensive farming methods, which government policies subsidize, are destroying the soil. The high-yield crops gobble up nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorous, iron and manganese, making the soil anemic.

The farmers say they must use three times as much fertilizer as they used to, to produce the same amount of crops — yet another drain on their finances.

A farmer named Suba Singh has seen the good and bad effects of the Green Revolution.

Clad in a bright blue turban and his face furrowed like a field, he opens a squeaky wooden gate to his compound. He points to a small building made of mud and straw, with faded green doors.

“That’s where my family used to live,” he says.

During the profitable years of the Green Revolution, he saw that everyone else in the village was building brick houses.

“So I took out a loan,” he says, “and built a brick house for my family, too.”

He turned the old mud house into his cattle shed. But now he is in debt.

A study by the Punjab State Council for Science and Technology calls it a “vicious cycle of debt.”

Suba and the other farmers say they’ve had to borrow money to buy just about everything that makes them look prosperous — their brick homes, tractors, cattle, even their plastic chairs.

The farmers have also built their Green Revolution farms and lifestyle on another unstable source of money: Family members have moved overseas to find jobs, because they couldn’t make a living farming, and now they send part of their income back to Chotia Khurd to support their relatives.

“It’s like a disease that is catching on in the world,” says Suba, “building a life that is like a house of cards.”

A System About To Collapse?

Some leading officials in the farming industry wonder when this house of cards might collapse.

“The state and farmers are now faced with a crisis,” warns a report by the Punjab State Farmers Commission.

India’s population is growing faster than any country on Earth, and domestic food production is vital.

But the commission’s director, G.S. Kalkat, says Punjab’s farmers are committing ecological and economic “suicide.”

If he is correct, suicide is coming through national policies that reward farmers for the very practices that destroy the environment and trap them in debt. 

Kalkat says only one thing can save Punjab: India has to launch a brand new Green Revolution. But he says this one has to be sustainable.

The problem is, nobody has yet perfected a farming system that produces high yields, makes a good living for farm families, protects and enhances the environment — and still produces good, affordable food.

My reaction: India’s “Green Revolution” is heading for collapse.

1) When the Green Revolution was launched 40 years ago, India’s farmers were pressured to grow only high-yield wheat, rice and cotton instead of their traditional mix of crops.

2) These new high-yield crops needed much more water than natural rainfall could provide, so farmers had to dig wells and irrigate with groundwater.

3) So much groundwater has been pumped to irrigate crops that water tables have been dropping dramatically over the last three decades, as much as 3 feet every year.

4) Farmers have had to deepen their wells every few years — from 10 feet to 20 feet to 40 feet, and now to more than 200 feet — because the precious water table keeps dropping below their reach.

5) Intensive farming methods subsidized by government policies are destroying the soil.

6) Since the high-yield crops gobble up nutrients, farmers must use three times as much fertilizer to produce the same amount of crops as they used to.

7) India’s population is growing faster than any country on Earth.

8) India’s farmers are being pushed towards ecological and economic “suicide” by national policies which reward farmers for destroying the environment and trapping themselves in debt.

Conclusion: India’s farmers are reaching the point where they must now pump water from 200 feet below ground, which is scary because it obviously is not sustainable. While peak oil may or may not have arrived, peak water has already come and gone.

I wonder which will cause more social unrest: the collapsing US financial system/dollar or skyrocketing global food prices?” Source

April 13, 2009

Study shows bioenergy benefits for rural poor

Filed under: food security, reports, research — parnet @ 4:50 pm

 

Bioenergy, when produced on a small-scale in local communities, can play a significant role in rural development in poor countries, according to a new report jointly published by FAO and the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID).  The study, “Small Scale Bioenergy Initiatives: Brief Description and Preliminary Lessons on Livelihood Impacts from Case Studies in Latin America, Asia and Africa,” covers 15 different “start-up” bioenergy projects from 12 countries in Latin America, Africa and Asia involving a diverse array of technologies. “The furious debate around bioenergy has largely concerned liquid fuels used for transport,” said Oliver Dubois, a bioenergy expert in FAO’s Natural Resources Department. “Yet more than 80 percent of bioenergy usage in the world involves other sources, mainly wood, which are used for basic household cooking and heating in poor areas of the world.” 

Concern over the impact these transportation biofuels will have on the environment, water resources and food security has obscured many of the positive benefits for poor rural people.

The study shows quite clearly that there are a number of huge possible benefits of using new technologies for biomass-based rural energy, some very basic, others more sophisticated.

Biofuel benefits for poor

Some of the possible benefits of bioenergy highlighted in the study include: 

-an increase in natural resource efficiency as energy can be created from waste that would otherwise be burnt or left to rot is put to use

-the creation of useful by-products such as affordable fertilizer from biogas production 

-the possibility of simultaneously producing food and fuel through intercropping

-the creation of new financial capital with growth cycles by making use of marginal land 

“In all the cases covered, even those that sold on bioenergy products to a wider market, the local community benefited from improved energy access both for domestic and business use,” said Dubois.

Saving local resources

“Virtuous cycles are shown to develop within communities where people have access to the energy services needed for development without money flowing out of communities for fossil fuels or local natural resources used up”.

The study also shows how the use of bioenergy has often played a role in partially insulating poor rural people from the vagaries of the fossil fuel market used in times of an energy crisis, but then typically abandoned when the oil price drops. 

In none of the cases studied did bioenergy production appear to jeopardise food security, either because the bioenergy is produced from crops not used for food or grown on very small plots or stretches of unused land.

Involving local people

“These initiatives have adequately involved local people in decisions on the bioenergy schemes, so if food security did suffer as a result they would have done something about it,” said Dubois.

Although bioenergy initiatives face implementation challenges, these challenges are similar to those of other production activities in rural areas such as technological constraints and lack of investment capital, the study found. 

The research for the study was carried out between September and November 2008 as a joint initiative between FAO and the PISCES Programme funded by DFID.

More: 

  • ROME – Apr 8/09 – SNS — Small scale bioenergy projecs in local communities can play a significant role in rural development in poor countries, according to a new report jointly published by FAO and the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID).

    Ag Report - Apr 08 7:08 AM

  •  

    April 9, 2009

    Maker Faire Africa (MFA), a celebration of African ingenuity, innovation and invention

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 3:47 pm

    February 20, 2009

    Catastrophic Fall in 2009 Global Food Production

    Filed under: political economy, research — parnet @ 1:13 pm

    by Eric deCarbonnel – Marketskeptics

    After reading about the droughts in two major agricultural countries, China and Argentina, I decided to research the extent other food producing nations were also experiencing droughts. This project ended up taking a lot longer than I thought. 2009 looks to be a humanitarian disaster around much of the world

    To understand the depth of the food Catastrophe that faces the world this year, consider the graphic below depicting countries by USD value of their agricultural output, as of 2006.

    2006

    Now, consider the same graphic with the countries experiencing droughts highlighted.

    2006-1

    The countries that make up two thirds of the world’s agricultural output are experiencing drought conditions. Whether you watch a video of the drought in China, Australia, Africa, South America, or the US, the scene will be the same: misery, ruined crop, and dying cattle. (more…)

    December 14, 2008

    AGRICULTURE-ETHIOPIA: Can Foreign-Owned Farms Solve Food Crisis?

    Filed under: food security, political economy, research — Tags: , — parnet @ 7:06 pm

    ADDIS ABABA, Dec 13 (IPS) -  …The long term Agricultural Development Led Industrialization (ADLI) strategy adopted in 1992 largely aims at transforming the economy by investing in strengthening nine million small-scale farmers.

    But the government’s ambitious target of harvesting 28 million tonnes of cereals in the first three quarters of the 2007/2008 budget year has failed. The nation produced only 16.4 million metric tones, according to a performance report presented to the Ethiopian Parliament on Jun. 3 by the agriculture ministry.

    A new plan

    Authorities seem determined to change this situation by leasing huge chunks of land to other sovereign states for mechanised farming.

    The Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has promised Saudi Arabia that his country will provide hundreds of thousands of hectares of unutilised agricultural land for growing cereals in the east African country. This is a follow up to an earlier pledge by Ethiopia to grant 5,000 hectares of land to the Djibouti government for large-scale commercial farming.

    The Ethiopian agriculture ministry is identifying available land for such foreign investors; so far close to two million hectares of land have been identified in the regions of Oromia and Amhara, where almost all cereals in the country are produced.

    Pundits however are wary of the risk; not just the food but the profits from this farming would be siphoned off to consumers and investors in other countries.

    While the government argues that the food produced would be available to domestic markets as well as for export, analysts fear that almost all of it would leave the country because Ethiopians cannot possibly compete with the prices foreign consumers would pay for it. …  Full article here

    December 12, 2008

    Waste coffee grounds turned into biodiesel

    Filed under: biofuel news, tech — parnet @ 12:57 pm

    From biodieselnow.com A study in the online journal of the American Chemical Society’s (ACS) Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, reports that waste coffee grounds can provide a cheap, abundant, and environmentally friendly source of biodiesel fuel for powering cars and trucks. The study by Mano Misra, Susanta Mohapatra, and Narasimharao Kondamudi note that the major barrier to wider use of biodiesel fuel is lack of a low-cost, high quality source, or feedstock, for producing that new energy source. Spent coffee grounds contain between 11 and 20 percent oil by weight which is almost as much as traditional biodiesel feedstocks such as rapeseed, palm, and soybean oil. (more…)

    December 9, 2008

    Thought for Food

    Filed under: food security — Tags: — parnet @ 12:11 pm

    The Challenges of Coping with Soaring Food Prices

    This paper analyzes the causes of rising food commodities prices. It discusses the role played by structural idiosyncratic and macroeconomic factors such as the depreciation of the dollar and the reduction of US interest rates after mid-June 2007. The author also examines how governments have been coping with inflationary pressures and under which circumstances putting a wedge between international and domestic prices may or may not be appropriate. Finally, the author assesses the potential impact of higher food commodities prices on poverty and whether governments in developing countries are sufficiently equipped to cope.

    From: http://www.isn.ethz.ch/isn/Digital-Library/Publications/Detail/?lng=en&id=94226  © 2008 Center for Global Development (CGD)

    Poisoning Africa

    Filed under: political economy — Tags: , — parnet @ 11:50 am

    Developed countries produce more toxic waste than they are willing to handle and the price of unsustainable development is being paid by the poorest populations on the globe, Edoardo Totolo writes for ISN Security Watch.

    By Edoardo Totolo for ISN Security Watch – Full article here

    December 2, 2008

    Bioenergy is not to blame for hunger in the world

    Filed under: political economy — Tags: , — parnet @ 1:46 pm

    …”For years, the campaign against bioenergy has been orchestrated by the old oil industry and many environmental associations and church relief organisations have been taken in by it. According to a study by “Union of Concerned Scientists” Exxon Mobil for example, has donated more than 16 million US-Dollars to 43 “climate sceptical organisations” between 1998 and 2005. The British Royal Society criticises that in 2005 alone, ESSO had paid almost 3 million US-Dollars to organisations which dispute climate change.

    The facts: On roughly 2 % of all arable land, biofuel is being grown worldwide, but more than 30 % of agricultural land lies fallow. All these numbers give proof that first and foremost the poverty of the farmers in the Third World, who have no money to buy seeds, is the main cause of famine and not the low proportion of land used for bioenergy. …”

    Full: http://www.sonnenseite.com/

    December 1, 2008

    The Great Land Giveaway: Neo-Colonialism by Invitation

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 4:01 pm
    Colonial style empire-building is making a huge comeback
    by James Petras – Global Research, December 1, 2008

    “The deal South Korea’s Daewoo Logistics is negotiating with the Madagascar Government looks rapacious…The Madagascan case looks neo-colonial…The Madagascan people stand to lose half of their arable land.” Financial Times Editorial, November 20, 2008

    “Cambodia is in talks with several Asian and Middle Eastern governments to receive as much as $3 billions US dollars in agricultural investments in return for millions of hectares of land concessions…” Financial Times, November 21, 2008

    “We are starving in the midst of bountiful harvests and booming exports!: Unemployed Rural Landless Workers, Para State, Brazil (2003)

    Full: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11231

    November 27, 2008

    An £800 gadget that makes water straight out of thin air ‘could help millions’

    Filed under: tech — parnet @ 8:20 am

    A gadget which makes water out of thin air could become the greatest household invention since the microwave.  Using the same technology as a de-humidifier,the Water Mill is able to create a ready supply of drinking water by capturing it from an unlimited source -the air. 

    The company behind the machine says not only does it offer an alternative to bottled water in developed countries, but it is a solution for the millions who face a daily water shortage.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/

    November 26, 2008

    Kissinger’s 1974 Plan for Food Control Genocide

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 7:30 pm

    This article appeared as part of a feature in the December 8, 1995 issue of Executive Intelligence Review, and was circuclated extensively by the Schiller Insitute Food for Peace Movement. It is reprinted here as part of the package: “Who Is Responsible for the World Food Shortage?” (more…)

    November 21, 2008

    Descrambling the ‘Food Crisis’, By George Caffentzis

    Filed under: political economy — Tags: — parnet @ 9:13 am
    Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 26 August, 2008 – 11:10

    When the world’s hedge funds turned from real estate to grain speculation the poor picked up the tab. But the food bubble was no accident, argues George Caffentzis, it was class war

    After more than three decades of relative stability, food prices have dramatically increased over the last three years. Between May 2007 and May 2008, corn prices increased by 46 percent, wheat by 80 percent, soybeans by 72 percent; rice by 75 percent. As a result, according to the UN World Food Program, another 130 million people have been added to the hundreds of millions already starving or suffering from malnutrition.

    Not surprisingly, then, in dozens of cities across the world, from Port-au-Prince to Cairo to Manila, people have rioted in protest against the economic death sentence imposed on them, clearly aware that fluctuations in commodity prices are not ‘facts of nature’. Indeed, the hieroglyphics of food prices both hide and reveal a world of plans, policies and struggles that we need to decipher if we are to explain the roots of this ‘food crisis’.

    full: http://www.metamute.org/en/content/decoding_the_food_crisis

    November 19, 2008

    Transforming the Global Economy: Solutions for a Sustainable World

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 2:08 pm

    Susan George – 15 November 2008
    The crisis that we are seeing today is not only the financial crisis – this is only one aspect of a much bigger systemic crisis that encompasses the social crisis, or crisis of inequality, the financial and the ecological crises, says Susan George in this video lecture, and suggests radical reforms that would create more just wealth distribution while saving the economy and the environment: an environmental Keynesianism.

    http://www.tni.org

    November 11, 2008

    Clean energy investment falls sharply

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 7:20 pm

    Investment in low-carbon technologies is suffering its first reversal after several years of record growth, as the financial crisis dims the sector’s prospects.

    Source (Financial Times)

    We told you so…

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 5:29 pm

    In our project proposal we advised against the risks of large-scale investments in biofuel production -risks related to the (re)making of a plantation economy based on monocolture. This article is about the realization of our easy “prophecy”:  http://www.physorg.com/news145096760.html

    extract: “in Wolaytta, where nearly half of the two-million population do not have enough to eat, several thousand farmers like Ashenafi are complaining that they have been duped into growing biofuel crops on fertile land at the expense of maize, cassava and sweet potato, the region’s staples. 
    Farmers say Global Energy Ethiopia, an American-Israeli subsidiary which initially acquired 2,700 hectares to grow castor beans — a toxic plant whose seed provides castor oil, lured them with false claims of continuous harvests and financial incentives.

    “Experts who told us we could have up to three harvests a year and they would pay 500 birr (50 dollars) in labour costs,” 45-year-old Borja Abusha, a father of eight, said.

    “But it has now been six months without a harvest and they haven’t respected their promise to cover costs. We are left with nothing.” “… more: http://www.physorg.com/news145096760.html

    WorldChanging: Elephant Pump

    Filed under: tech — parnet @ 4:21 pm

    pumpaid.jpgReal globalism: a 2,000 year old Chinese design is now helping to bring clean water to poor rural Zimbabweans through the efforts of an Englishman.

    Rope pumps have been around for centuries, emerging first in China. A loop of rope, if driven at sufficient speed, can pull water up from a well more efficiently than standard pump designs. The rope can be made from any material, and the volume brought up by the rope’s motion can be increased with pistons spaced along the cable. The Elephant Pump is an improved version of the rope pump, designed by a group called Pump Aid, founded by Ian Thorpe. Their goal was to make a clean water system that would be as efficient, as inexpensive, as locally-appropriate and as sustainable as possible.

    The community contributes some materials for construction of the pump, including sand and stones for building, hand made bricks for the pump housing and labour to assist in tasks during the building process. Ongoing maintenance costs are minimal since major components of the pump such as the axle have a lifespan of 50 years. The cost of maintenance and capital cost of the pump are far exceeded by the potential for income generation through small scale irrigation. [...]

    The Elephant Pump uses the renewable energy source of hand or pedal power, not fossil fuels (which are unsustainable and polluting). The pump can also be adapted to use wind or solar energy where appropriate. The entire mechanism is enclosed in a brick housing with a cement apron and spillway to prevent waste water, people or animals from contaminating the water source. Renfiltration rates and water table history are investigated to ensure that pumps are only built where sustainable harvesting of groundwater is possible.

    Elephant Pumps are significantly less costly than standard pumps, and able to produce a higher yield of water from wells of similar depth. Pump Aid has just won the 2005 St. Andrews Prize for the Environment, recognizing their efforts to bring sustainable water to the poorest communities. Over 1,200 pumps have been installed so far, bringing water to over 300,000 Zimbabweans. Pump Aid is now set to bring the design to Mozambique and Malawi.

    http://www.worldchanging.com/

    November 10, 2008

    Sustainable Agriculture – Meeting Food Security Needs, Addressing Climate Change Challenges

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 1:19 pm

    by Lim Li Ching

    Lim Li Ching, is a Senior Fellow at the Oakland Institute and works with the biosafety programme at Third World Network (TWN), an international NGO based in Malaysia. 

    Introduction

    The challenges facing agriculture today are immense. Of immediate concern is the global increase in food prices, starkly brought home by reports of food riots and food shortages in many countries around the world. During the first three months of 2008, international nominal prices of all major food commodities reached their highest levels in nearly 50 years while prices in real terms were the highest in nearly 30 years (FAO, 2008).

    While the FAO food price index[1] rose, on average, 8 percent in 2006 compared with the previous year, it increased by 24 percent in 2007 compared to 2006. The increase in the average of the index for the first three months of 2008 compared to the same three months in 2007 was 53 percent. The continuing surge in prices is led by vegetable oils, which on average increased by more than 97 percent during the same period, followed by grains with 87 percent, dairy products with 58 percent and rice with 46 percent. The FAO estimates that the number of hungry people increased by about 50 million in 2007 as a result of soaring food prices.

    In addition, the challenges of climate change are increasingly urgent. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change makes it clear that warming of the climate system is “unequivocal”, as observations of increases in air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and sea level rise have made evident (IPCC, 2007). Agriculture will therefore have to cope with increased climate variability and more extreme weather events.

    Climate change, coincident with increasing demand for food, feed, fibre and fuel, has the potential to irreversibly damage the natural resource base on which agriculture depends, with significant consequences for food insecurity (IAASTD, 2008). The relationship between climate change and agriculture is two-way; agriculture contributes to climate change in several major ways and climate change in general adversely affects agriculture.

    Agriculture is thus at a crossroads. It has to find ways to feed the world while being environmentally, socially and economically sustainable. Yet, it is increasingly clear that the path that agriculture has been on is not sustainable nor can it feed the world without destroying the planet (IAASTD, 2008). With the spotlight once more on agriculture, and with many critical issues that need resolving, finding the answer to the question of the nature of agricultural development required has never been more pressing.

     

    “Business-as-Usual is no Longer an Option”

    The International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) sought to examine this question. This is the most rigorous and comprehensive assessment of agriculture to date. Co-sponsored by the World Bank, FAO, UNEP, UNDP, WHO, UNESCO and GEF, its report clearly concluded that a radical change is needed in agricultural policy and practice, in order to address hunger and poverty, social inequities and environmental sustainability (IAASTD, 2008).

    The report’s central message is that the business-as-usual scenario of industrial farming, input and energy intensiveness, collateral damage to the environment and marginalization of small-scale farmers is no longer tenable. While past emphasis on production and yields had brought benefits, such as afforded under the Green Revolution, this was at tremendous cost to the environment and social equity.

    more: http://www.oaklandinstitute.org/?q=node/view/494

    November 9, 2008

    10 Everyday Technologies with world-saving potential

    Filed under: tech — Tags: — parnet @ 4:43 pm

    …In the real world, technologies that are affordable and practical are not so simple to create, but they can make a huge impact on people’s lives. Instead of calling on complex solutions (reliant on engines and imported resources) for low-tech problems (such as cooking and lighting), some researchers are now developing what they call “confluent” technologies—ones that are effective, affordable, and sustainable for use in the developing world. Here’s a look at the latest breakthroughs: (more…)

    November 7, 2008

    Eight nations warn EU over biofuel barriers

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 1:49 pm

    Eight developing nations warned the European Union on Thursday they could file a World Trade Organisation complaint over what they see as unfair barriers being raised against their biofuels.The EU, which is currently fine-tuning its biofuel regulations, should steer away from dictating where developing nations can grow biofuels and where they can not, said a draft letter seen by Reuters.

    The EU’s final stance will be decided in coming weeks between member states and the European Parliament, which has so far angered biofuel producers by suggesting dozens of restrictions.

    “They impose unjustifiably complex requirements,” said the draft letter. “Some of our countries don’t exclude the possibility of defending their rights in the World Trade Organisation, as a last resort.”

    “The letter is being signed today by the ambassadors of Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Malawi, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Indonesia and Malaysia,” said a diplomat from one of the countries.

    Reuters

    Deserts could solve the energy crisis

    Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — parnet @ 1:47 pm

    August 6, 2008

    Paris Declaration on aid a form of collective colonialism by donors

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 1:35 pm

    by Yash Tandon    – http://www.bdafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=9072&Itemid=5821

    August 1, 2008: At first glance, the Paris Declaration (PD) looks benign. It recognises faults of the present system, and sets out sensible principles. Why, then, are the developing countries not all that excited? Many have signed on to the PD, but apparently without fully analysing the implications of its proposals. (more…)

    July 18, 2008

    The (Not-So) Sudden Crisis of the Global Food Ecomony

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 12:15 am

    by Tony Weis – Canadian Dimension magazine, July/August 2008

    A Long-Term, Slow-Motion Crisis

    The current rapid rise in food prices is both a manifestation and
    magnification of the contradictions of the global food economy. The
    global food economy is immensely imbalanced and unstable. In 2006,
    before food prices began to rise, 854 million people suffered from
    chronic hunger and malnourishment, which the Food and Agricultural
    Organization (FAO) described as a “covert famine.” At the same time,
    the World Health Organization was calling obesity a “global epidemic,”
    with the population of obese people topping one billion. The FAO
    estimated that enough food was produced to feed the world
    one-and-a-half times over. So, it should come as no great surprise that
    millions were becoming increasingly food-insecure amidst last year’s
    record grain harvest.

    To appreciate the basic dynamics of the rise in prices and how these
    are magnifying global consumption imbalances, we need to focus on the
    system of production that dominates world trade in food, the industrial
    grain-livestock complex in the temperate world, and its chief actors,
    the transnational corporations (TNCs). More than half of the world’s
    agro-exports and an even larger share of the world’s grain and
    livestock exports come from a very small number of countries, like the
    U.S., Brazil, Argentina, Canada, Australia and France, which together
    represent less than two per cent of the world’s farmers. The flipside
    of this is the precarious dependence upon grain imports in most of the
    world’s poorest countries.
    (more…)

    July 17, 2008

    Agro-Profiteering and Predictable Food Scarcity

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 5:46 pm

    The Human Right to Eat

    By JOAN P. MENCHER

    Somini Sengupta’s front-page article, “India’s Growth Outstrips Crops” (New York Times, June 22, 2008) points out various reasons for the current shortage of staple foods in India– including rapidly sinking water tables, inadequate government investment in agriculture and especially in irrigation and access to loans for farmers,  agricultural land being sold for residential use since the profits from agriculture were so poor.  Between 1968 and 1998 India’s production of  cereals had doubled, but between 1998 and 2008 it has gone down due to the cancellation of  government  support prices, which followed the advice of the World Bank and the United States economists.  Based on my own field research on agricultural  issues in India over the last fifty years I have always been surprised by the disconnect between what farmers tell me and what I hear from economists (most of whom rarely visit many farms).  I see a very different  picture.

    more: http://www.counterpunch.org/mencher06282008.html

    July 5, 2008

    Secret report: biofuel (made in U.S.A.) caused food crisis

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 3:16 pm

    Internal World Bank study delivers blow to plant energy drive

    Biofuels have forced global food prices up by 75% – far more than previously estimated – according to a confidential World Bank report obtained by the Guardian.

    The damning unpublished assessment is based on the most detailed analysis of the crisis so far, carried out by an internationally-respected economist at global financial body.

    The figure emphatically contradicts the US government’s claims that plant-derived fuels contribute less than 3% to food-price rises. It will add to pressure on governments in Washington and across Europe, which have turned to plant-derived fuels to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and reduce their dependence on imported oil.

    Senior development sources believe the report, completed in April, has not been published to avoid embarrassing President George Bush.

    “It would put the World Bank in a political hot-spot with the White House,” said one yesterday.

    The news comes at a critical point in the world’s negotiations on biofuels policy. Leaders of the G8 industrialised countries meet next week in Hokkaido, Japan, where they will discuss the food crisis and come under intense lobbying from campaigners calling for a moratorium on the use of plant-derived fuels.

    It will also put pressure on the British government, which is due to release its own report on the impact of biofuels, the Gallagher Report. The Guardian has previously reported that the British study will state that plant fuels have played a “significant” part in pushing up food prices to record levels. Although it was expected last week, the report has still not been released. (more…)

    820 milioni di persone sottonutrite: più della metà lavora proprio nella produzione di cibo.

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 3:01 pm
    ROMA - ...
    Nei paesi in via di sviluppo 820 milioni di persone sono sottonutriti e,
    nota la Fao, al danno si aggiunge la beffa: metà di questi affamati sono
    contadini, il 30 per cento pescatori e gente che abita in campagna, il 20
    per cento poveri urbanizzati. Dunque più di metà della popolazione che non
    ha abbastanza cibo è costituita da persone che per lavoro producono cibo.
    Vuol dire che nel meccanismo si è rotto qualcosa. E questo qualcosa è legato
    "alle due maggiori sfide che abbiamo di fronte nella battaglia contro
    l'insicurezza alimentare e la malnutrizione: il cambiamento climatico e il
    crescente uso dei raccolti agricoli come fonte di energia". (more...)

    July 3, 2008

    Sustainable Bioenergy potential

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 2:50 pm

    California, United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

    Biofuels can be a sustainable part of the world’s energy future, especially if bioenergy agriculture is developed on currently abandoned or degraded agricultural lands, report scientists from the Carnegie Institution and Stanford University. Using these lands for energy crops, instead of converting existing croplands or clearing new land, avoids competition with food production and preserves carbon-storing forests needed to mitigate climate change. Sustainable bioenergy is likely to satisfy no more than 10% of the demand in the energy-intensive economies of North America, Europe and Asia. But for some developing countries, notably in Sub-Saharan Africa, the potential exists to supply many times their current energy needs without compromising food supply or destroying forests.

    “Our study shows that there is clearly a potential for developing sustainable bioenergy, and we’ve been able to identify areas where biomass can be grown for energy, without endangering food security or making climate change worse.”

    Chris Field, Director, Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution

    Elliot Campbell, Robert Genova and Christopher Field of the Carnegie Institution’s Department of Global Ecology, with David Lobell of Stanford University, estimated the global extent of abandoned crop and pastureland and calculated their potential for sustainable bioenergy production from historical land-use data, satellite imaging and ecosystem models. Agricultural areas that have been converted to urban areas or have reverted to forests were not included in the assessment.  (more…)

    GREEN ‘GOLD RUSH’

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 2:46 pm

    Probably the most telling statistic in a new report on global New Energy investment trends: Despite the impact of the credit crisis on financial markets, overall investment in New Energy during the first half of 2008 has been just ABOVE levels in the first half of 2007 (a boom year).

    Achim Steiner, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP): “Just as thousands were drawn to California and the Klondike in the late 1800s, the green energy gold rush is attracting legions of modern-day prospectors in all parts of the globe…What is unfolding is nothing less than a fundamental transformation of the world’s energy infrastructure.” (more…)

    CRUDE OIL : THE SUPPLY OUTLOOK

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:09 am
    The main purpose of this paper is to project the future availability of crude oil up to 2030. Since crude oil is the most important energy carrier at a global scale and since all kinds of transport rely heavily on oil, the future availability of crude oil is of paramount interest. At present, widely diverging projections exist in parallel which would require completely different actions by politics, business and individuals.The scope of these projections is similar to that of the World Energy Outlook by the International Energy Agency (IEA). However, no assumptions or projections regarding the oil price are made.

    World oil production between 1935 and 2005 and the extrapolation up to 2030 as projected by the authors is sketched in Figure 40. This includes natural gas liquids (NGL) and oil from tar sands.

    According to this scenario, peak oil occured in 2006 with a peak production of 81 Mb/d.

    Extensive report (PDF) from Energy Watch Group

     

    UN reports big jump in ‘green energy’ investment

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 6:47 am

    UNITED NATIONS (AP) Global investors plowed $148 billion into new wind, solar and other alternative energy assets last year, in what the United Nations describes as a ”green energy gold rush” gaining speed the last several years.

    The spike in investment 60 percent above the $92.6 billion spent on such projects in 2006 reflects sharply rising concerns over climate change and energy prices, U.N. officials said in a report Tuesday. In 2005, alternative energy drew $58.5 billion in new money.

    An additional $56 billion changed hands on mergers and acquisitions involving alternative energy last year another sign the ”clean energy” industry is maturing in the eyes of investors, U.N. Undersecretary-General Achim Steiner said.

    Steiner, who heads the U.N. Environment Program, said the agency’s report on global trends in sustainable energy investment indicates a ”green energy gold rush is attracting legions of modern-day prospectors in all parts of the globe.” (more…)

    New UN report urges companies to boost business with world’s poor

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 6:06 am

    1 July 2008 – The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has encouraged companies to expand beyond traditional business practices and offered them strategies and tools to bring in the world’s poor as partners for economic growth, in a new report released today.Part of UNDP’s Growing Inclusive Market’s initiative, “Creating Value for All: Strategies for Doing Business with the Poor” draws on extensive case studies and demonstrates the effectiveness of more inclusive business models.

    The report highlights the untapped potential of the poor for consumption, production, innovation, and business activity. The more companies include the poor, the more likely they are to not only boost growth but also contribute to the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – the global anti-poverty targets to be achieved by 2015.

    “The power of poor people to benefit from market activity lies in their ability to participate in markets and take advantage of market opportunities,” UNDP Administrator Kemal Dervis stated. “Business models that include the poor require broad support and offer gains for all.”

    The report offers five strategies that private businesses have successfully used to overcome the most common obstacles to doing business with the poor. They include adapting products and services, investing in infrastructure or training to remove constraints, and leveraging the strengths of the poor to increase labour and management pool and expand local knowledge.

    “There is room for many more inclusive business models. There is room for more inclusive markets. And there is room for much greater value creation,” noted the report, which showcases 50 case studies from around the world which demonstrate that companies can increase profit while boosting their impact on local communities.

    Among the examples is a company in China that offered affordable computers and training to rural farmers via a low-cost operating system and software that is easier for customers with limited education, thus expanding its market base.

    In the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where the banking sector was decimated by years of war, a mobile phone company offered encrypted short message service technology to allow customers to wire money. The company now has two million customers in the vast African nation.

    The report also offers new tools for interested businesses, such as heat maps – which offer a visual overview of the market or services landscape and a first look at potential new markets.

     

     

     

    News Tracker: past stories on this issue

    UN and British Government launch business push for MDG

    source

    July 2, 2008

    Some 1.5 bln people may starve due to land erosion – FAO

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 4:08 pm
      
    MILAN (Reuters) – Rising land degradation reduces crop yields and may threaten food security of about a quarter of the world’ population, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Wednesday.

    Food security has been highlighted in recent months as soaring crop prices resulting from poor harvests, low stocks, high fuel prices and rising demand, risks causing starvation for millions of people in the developing world.

    “An estimated 1.5 billion people, or a quarter of the world’s population, depend directly on land that is being degraded,” FAO said in a statement presenting a study based on data taken over a 20-year period.

    Long-term land degradation has been increasing around the world and affects more than 20 percent of all cultivated areas, 30 percent of forests and 10 percent of grasslands, FAO said (more…)

    Quest for renewable energy is new ‘green gold rush’: UNEP

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 4:05 pm
    Nairobi: The world is enjoying a “green energy gold rush”, the UN’s environmental agency said as it published a report outlining a 60% hike in investment in renewable energy in 2007.
    The UN Environment Programme (UNEP) study, published in Nairobi, said more than $148 billion of new funds were ploughed into the quest for cleaner energy last year. (more…)

    June 30, 2008

    Thinking Outside the Barrel

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 11:51 pm

    From: Thinking Outside the Barrel About OPEC and the Oil Weapon

    Cutting Edge June 30th 2008

     

    …Expanding U.S. fuel choices to include biofuels imported from developing countries can actually help ameliorate world poverty and hunger. Sugar, from which ethanol can be cheaply and efficiently produced, is now grown in 100 countries—many of which are poor and on the receiving end of U.S. development aid. Encouraging these countries to increase their output and become fuel suppliers (and by removing our protectionist 54 cent-per-gallon Brazilian sugar ethanol tariff) could have far-reaching implications for their economic development. By creating economic interdependence with countries in Africa, Asia, and the southern hemisphere, the United States can strengthen ties with the developing world, help reduce poverty, and wean itself from oil. (more…)

    Africa: Summit to Debate Soaring Food, Oil Prices

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 11:03 am
    Source: http://www.peakoil.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=40388
    Africa needs to urgently address the issues of soaring food and oil prices and take appropriate measures as they negatively impact on poor households, said African Union Commission Chairman Jean Ping.”We need to discuss and analyse all possible solutions on these sky-rocketing prices including transport costs which compound food prices,” said Mr Ping while addressing delegates during the official opening of the 13th Ordinary Session of Executive Council of the African Union in Sharm-El-Shaikh on Friday.

    Mr Ping said the escalating food prices had raised food production which, in turn, increased demand on bio-fuels.

    “We need to find a common solution, especially in the critical food and security area.

    “There is a great need for both emergency and long term goals to be put in place with strong policy measures while scaling up our resources in trying to meet this challenge,” said Mr Ping on Friday.

    Between 2007 and 2008, food and oil prices have increased by 50 percent and the impact on food production imports remained high resulting in the poor being the hardest hit.

    On Thursday, the South African government called on all governments throughout Africa to unite against high fuel prices.

    Addressing the media in Pretoria on Thursday after a meeting with stakeholders in the energy sector and representatives from Transnet, Deputy Director General in the Department of Minerals and Energy Nhlanhla Gumede said the government was concerned about the high fuel prices which resulted in even higher food prices.

    “It is not something that the South African government can deal with alone, private companies and governments throughout the world must collectively deal with the issue,” he said, adding that government needed partners.

    AllAfrica

     

    Bioenergy potential of reviving abandoned agricultural land

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 10:56 am
    Across the globe, hundreds of millions of acres of once-productive agricultural land lie abandoned, according to a new report from researchers at Stanford University and the Carnegie Institution for Science.
    From: http://www.worldofrenewables.com/index.php?do=viewarticle&artid=1968

    If this land was used to grow crops for conversion into biofuel, it could help ease the energy crunch without worsening the world food shortage or contributing to global warming.
    Critics blame biofuel production for contributing to recent global food shortages, which have spawned riots. Although much of the current supply of biofuels comes from crops that could be used for food, biofuels need not be a villain taking food from the mouths of the hungry, the researchers say. Neither, however, are biofuels likely to be the magic bullet that slays the dinosaur of our dependence on fossil fuels.
    “Our results showed that if you used all these abandoned agricultural lands, you might obtain up to 8 percent of current energy needs,” said Elliott Campbell, a postdoctoral fellow in biology at Stanford University and lead author of the report scheduled to be published June 25 in the online edition of Environmental Science and Technology. “So this result is basically showing us that biofuels could be a meaningful, but a small portion of our total energy future.” (more…)

    EurObserver publishes report on 2007 European biofuel use

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 10:44 am

    In 2007, the EU used 7.7m tons of oil equivalent (TOE), which accounted for 2.6 percent of all fuels used for road transport that year. This is half of the 2010 target of 5.75 percent usage of biofuels, which means that Europeans will need more imports and to increase production if this target isn’t changed.

    Europe’s leader in biofuel use is Germany, burning more than 4 million TOEs, followed by France (1.4 million), Austria (0.4 million) and Spain (0.35 million). EurObserv’ER published a report on EU biofuel use under sponsorship of the European Commission as well as the European Agency for Environment and Energy Control. Get it here.

    [Source: Eurobserver]

    Promising Solar Power Technologies

    Filed under: tech — parnet @ 10:36 am
    by: Mike “Mish” Shedlock
    http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
    New cost effective solar energy products are on the near horizon. Let’s take a look at some of the promising ones.

    MIT reports prototype solar dish passes first tests.

    A team led by MIT students this week successfully tested a prototype of what may be the most cost-efficient solar power system in the world–one team members believe has the potential to revolutionize global energy production. (more…)

    June 27, 2008

    Market Madness: How Speculators are Manipulating & Profiting from the Global Food and Oil Crisis

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 10:31 pm

    By A.K. Gupta
    June 27, 2008 | Posted in Columns , IndyBlog | full: http://www.indypendent.org/2008/06/27/market-madness/ 

    … “Any number of reasons has been put forth for rising commodity and food prices: diminishing inventories of grains, greater consumption of animal products in Asia, a growing global population, global warming, biofuels, natural limits, financial speculation, the falling dollar, escalating crude oil prices, World Bank and IMF policies, hoarding, export restrictions, and more. In one way or another, all of these factor into inflation. But it’s not a jumble of reasons; there are a few critical causal chains and feedback loops behind the chaos. In broad terms, the nature of the globalized economy-the role of financial speculation, the dumping of subsidized foodstuffs from Western farmers in poor countries forced to “liberalize” their agricultural sectors, the declining dollar, and the overheated oil market-is why prices are shooting up. What ties all these factors together is politics. It’s a political decision to allow rampant speculation in commodities; it’s a political decision to decrease regulation of commodities trading; it’s a political decision to devalue the dollar by increasing deficits and cutting interest rates; it’s a political decision to force poor countries to dismantle supports for their farming sector; it’s a political decision to force the poor to buy food in the marketplace, instead of making access to food a basic human right.

    The Return of Malthus

    Much of the debate boils down to politics versus natural limits. This debate stretches back more than 200 years to Thomas Malthus’s 1798 “Essay on the Principle of Population,” in which he argued, as John Bellamy Foster put it, “There is a constant pressure of population against food supply which has always applied and will always apply.” Without retracing the debate over hundreds of years (Foster’s 1998 essay in Monthly Review, “Malthus’ Essay on Population at Age 200: A Marxian View,” is an excellent introduction), it’s critical to note that it’s still of great relevance today. Many people who speak of natural limits-such as the “peak oil” or “peak food” crowd-are neo- Malthusians. They often exhibit hostility toward the poor like Malthus, who wrote, “We cannot, in the nature of things, assist the poor, in any way, without enabling them to rear up to manhood a greater number of their children.”

    Some involved in the debate today, such as Lester Brown and the World Watch Institute, tread close to the Malthusian line in warning of the “population problem” and arguing that it is a major reason why commodity prices are rising. Despite talk of increased food aid-which involves buying more subsidized Western foodstuffs and dumping them in impoverished countries, thereby further undermining their food security by bankrupting small farmers who can’t compete against free foods- there is a willingness to let the poor die en masse in adherence to the neoliberal agenda.

    There are, of course, limits to everything-food, population, energy. But as Marx argued in the Grundrisse, overpopulation is “a historically determined relation, in no way determined by abstract numbers or by the absolute limit of the productivity of the necessaries of life, but by limits posited by specific conditions of production.” It is these limits imposed-such as biofuel production and speculation-that are behind the global food crisis.

    On the other side, there is a strategy to blame the developing world for both the food and fuel crisis. China and India, with their booming economies, are held as culprits for the rising demand and thus shrinking supplies of food and energy supplies. India and China’s population and caloric intake is increasing, particularly that of meat and dairy products. But this is a decades-long trend. There is no way that steady growth over 20 or 30 years could cause commodity prices to double in a year or 2. For example, from 1990 to 2003, India’s caloric intake grew by 155 calories a person, barely 12 calories a year, while China’s grew by 231 calories, or 18 calories a year. (During this same period, the intake of the average American increased by 310 calories.) At the same time, despite adverse climatic events such as large crop failures in Australia, the world’s cereal output has increased. Part of the problem, notes Raj Patel, is that by one estimate, “740 million tons of grains were fed to animals last year and that would cover the food deficit at the moment 14 times over.” (more…)

    Seeing the African Challenge in a Single Graph

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 5:20 pm

     

    Our allies at the Global Footprint Network and WWF have released their new report Africa: Ecological Footprint and Human Well-Being, on pathways towards sustainable development. It’s a sharp piece of work, with explanations of the broader trends involved, analysis of the particular situations of several representative nations, and some good thinking about the critical roles leapfrogging technologies, sustainable cities, water management and biodiversity conservation will play in Africa’s future. If you’re looking for a quick primer on sustainable development in Africa, you should start here.

    But what really hit me is this graph, which seems to sum up the fundamental challenge in one image:

    L’olio di Jatropha, una fonte di energia che potrebbe liberare l’Africa dalla povertà

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 11:49 am

    Jatropha Curcas: un nuovo biodiesel
    Le Suore che coltivano l’elettricità

    In Tanzania le sorelle Vincenziane fanno crescere con poche cure e poca acqua una pianta i cui semi assicurano ottimo carburante. L’india l’ha inserita nel suo piano per l’indipendenza energetica e l’azienda inglese D1 quotata all’Aim di Londra ha fiutato il business.

    All’Equatore il sole tramonta alle sei, tutto l’anno. Alla latitudine di Kaja Peric, che è nata in Bosnia da famiglia croata, ma vive nel profondo sud della Tanzania, il sole scompare solo mezz’ora più tardi. Dopodiché, non è detto che ci sia la luce. «Non esiste una rete elettrica nazionale e nelle città qui intorno, i quotidiani black-out possono durare anche otto ore. Ma non nel nostro convento», dice sorella Kaja con un dolce sorriso. «Noi, l’energia ce la coltiviamo nel giardino».
    Dietro al convento delle sorelle Vincenzìane a Mbinga – un villaggio sperso nel niente della foresta tropicale, non lontano dal Mozambico – più che un giardino, c’è qualche ettaro di coltivazioni. La congregazione, che fa capo al convento di Untermarchtal, ìn Germania, gestìsce in quest’area 18 strutture per circa 300 bambini orfani, sordi e handicappati, grazie a un manipolo di 185 suore (sette delle quali europee): in totale, un bel numero di bocche che da sfamare. Ma, insieme a mais e girasoli, le sorelle coltivano per davvero anche che l’elettricità.
    Kaja, responsabile del progetto, sta facendo crescere dietro al convento 50 mila esemplari di Jatropha Curcas. La pianta che potrebbe cambiare, se non i destini del mondo, almeno quelli dell’Africa.
    «È davvero miracolosa», assicura Kaja mentre ne accarezza le foglie, nel bel mezzo di questa scena tropicale che declina tutti i toni del verde. «Abbiamo comìnciato due anni fa, partendo dai semi. Semplicemente tagliando i primi rami e innestandoli per terra abbiamo coperto tre ettari.
    Quest’anno il raccolto sarà ancora modesto. Ma l’anno prossimo avremo raggiunto l’indipendenza energetica». (more…)

    June 26, 2008

    Africa’s Unnatural Disaster

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 1:34 pm
    Sameer Dossani | June 26, 2008

    Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco

     

     

    Foreign Policy In Focus  -  http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5324
     

    While the mainstream media doesn’t always ignore the pressing issue of hunger in Africa, it rarely explores the root causes of this problem. Behind most news on the issue, there’s an assumption that casts hunger as a natural result of unfortunate weather conditions, coupled with bureaucratic inefficiency and bad economic planning. (more…)

    June 23, 2008

    Manufacturing A Food Crisis – By Walden Bello

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:53 am
    17 May, 2008 – The Nation
    When tens of thousands of people staged demonstrations in Mexico last year to protest a 60 percent increase in the price of tortillas, many analysts pointed to biofuel as the culprit. Because of US government subsidies, American farmers were devoting more and more acreage to corn for ethanol than for food, which sparked a steep rise in corn prices. The diversion of corn from tortillas to biofuel was certainly one cause of skyrocketing prices, though speculation on biofuel demand by transnational middlemen may have played a bigger role. However, an intriguing question escaped many observers: how on earth did Mexicans, who live in the land where corn was domesticated, become dependent on US imports in the first place? (more…)

    Un hambre infame – Por Boaventura de Sousa Santos *

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:51 am
    Conocido hace tiempo por los que estudian la cuestión alimentaria, el escándalo finalmente estalló en la opinión pública: la sustitución de la agricultura familiar, campesina, orientada a la autosuficiencia alimentaria y a los mercados locales, por la gran agroindustria, orientada al monocultivo de productos de exportación (flores, soja, etc.), lejos de resolver el problema de la alimentación mundial, lo agrava. (more…)

    Capitalismo, agro-industria e alternative per la sovranità alimentare

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:50 am
    di Ian Angus – da Socialist Voice (Traduzione di Curzio Bettio)

    Nessuna carenza di cibo
    Il punto di partenza della nostra analisi deve essere questo: attualmente
    non esiste alcuna carenza di cibo nel mondo.

    Il sistema dei profitti
    La risposta può essere condensata in un’unica frase. L’industria alimentare
    globale non è organizzata per fornire cibo agli affamati; è organizzata per
    generare profitti per le imprese del settore agro-alimentare. Ed infatti, i
    giganti del settore agro-alimentare stanno acquisendo il loro obiettivo.
    Quest’anno, i profitti delle compagnie agro-alimentari hanno svettato ben
    sopra ai livelli dell’ultimo anno, mentre la gente affamata, da Haiti
    all’Egitto e al Senegal, è scesa per le strade per protestare contro
    l’aumento dei prezzi degli alimenti. I dati seguenti si riferiscono ai primi
    tre mesi del 2008.[ 6]

    Le compagnie citate, più poche altre, vendono e comprano prodotti per
    l’agricoltura in tutto il mondo in regime di monopolio e di quasi-monopolio.
    Sei imprese controllano l’85% del commercio mondiale di granaglie; tre
    controllano l’83% del cacao; tre controllano l’80% del commercio della
    banana.[7] (more…)

    Papers from the FAO High-Level Conference on World Food Security: the Challenges of Climate Change and Bioenergy

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:43 am
    Papers from the FAO High-Level Conference on World Food Security: the Challenges of Climate Change and Bioenergy, Rome, 3-5 June 2008.

    Here: http://www.fao.org/foodclimate/conference/doclist/en/?no_cache=1

    la Wto ed il Doha Round non serviranno a risolvere la crisi alimentare

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:42 am
    Fair e Tradewatch al vertice FAO assieme a Our world is not for sale:
    la Wto ed il Doha Round non serviranno a risolvere la crisi alimentare

    Chiudere il ciclo di liberalizzazioni commerciali in ambito agricolo, industriale e dei servizi promosso dall’Organizzazione Mondiale del Commercio (WTO) nel round negoziale lanciato a Doha nel 2001 non servira’ a risolvere la crisi alimentare. Un duro documento di protesta e’ stato lanciato dal network internazionale ‘Our world is not for sale’ e sottoscritto da 32 reti internazionali, 205 tra coordinamenti e ong di tutto il mondo tra i quali gli italiani Campagna per la Riforma della Banca Mondiale, Fair, Fondazione Zanchetta e Trade Watch, in occasione della seconda giornata di lavori della conferenza FAO sulla sicurezza alimentare.Nel testo, indirizzato al segretario generale ONU Ban Ki-moon, al Direttore Generale della FAO Jacques Diouf, Director General, al Direttore generale della WTO Pascal Lamy, ai presidenti della Banca Mondiale e del Fondo Mondiale Internazionale Robert Zoellick e Dominique Strauss-Kahn oltre che ad Angel Gurria, Segretario generale dell’Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), le organizzazioni dicono di essere convinte che le regole in discussione nel Doha Round ”intensificheranno la crisi rendendo i prezzi dei generi alimentari ancora piu’ volatili, aumentando la dipendenza dei paesi in via di sviluppo dalle importazioni, e rafforzando il potere dell’agrobusiness nei mercati alimentari e agricoli”. A riprova portano i profitti delle principali imprese del settore in tempo di crisi: Cargill, che ha annunciato che i profitti del suo terzo quadrimestre sono cresciuti dell’86%, Bunge che nell’ultimo quadrimestre del 2007 aveva riportato un aumento del 77% rispetto al 2006, e Archer Daniel Midland’s le cui entrate nel 2007 sono cresciute del 65%.Cinque le richieste delle ong – da Action Aid ad Attac, dalle ong cattoliche della CIDSE a Friends of the Earth, da Fair a CRBM a Focus on the Global South, a Oxfam alla Via Campesina – rivolte alle organizzazioni internazionali per risolvere davvero la crisi alimentare. Innanzitutto chiedono di mettere a disposizione di Governi e comunita’ strumenti per rafforzare la loro sovranita’ alimentare, sostenere l’agricoltura familiare, proteggere la produzione dal dumping anche attraverso meccanismi di dazi e tariffe.

    In secondo luogo le ong pensano che la volatilita’ dei prezzi agricole debba essere affrontata attraverso politiche nazionali e azioni internazionali che assicurino un reddito stabile ai produttori, a partire dalla creazione di nuove riserve strategiche e di misure di stabilizzazione dei prezzi e di controllo sui movimenti finanziari speculativi.

    Al terzo punto le ong della campagna ”Our world is not for sale” chiedono la costruzione di reti di salvataggio e di sistemi di distribuzione alimentare pubblica per impedire che i consumatori piu’ poveri facciano la fame.

    La quarta richiesta e’ quella di una riforma del sistema di aiuto pubblico alimentare perche’, invece di trasformarsi in una forma di importazione distorsiva della produzione e del mercato locale, garantisca fondi con i quali i Governi locali possano acquistare cibo dai produttori locali o dei paesi limitrofi, trasformandosi in un’ulteriore leva di sviluppo.

    I paesi in via di sviluppo, infine, secondo le ONG, non dovrebbero essere coinvolti in negoziati di liberalizzazioni sul commercio di servizi finanziari nell’ambito del General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) o di altri negoziati multilaterali o bilaterali, perche’ questo non potrebbe che avere un impatto molto negativo sull’accesso dei contadini al credito, alle assicurazioni o al risparmio, gia’ oggi assai scarso.

    Summit FAO: il grano alle stelle… di Monica Di Sisto (Fair) ed Antonio Onorati (Crocevia)
    Abbiamo sentito ripetere in questi mesi che se i prezzi internazionali del grano sono in crescita vertiginosa, e le strade del mondo si riempiono di persone affamate e arrabbiate, questo è colpa di cinesi e indiani che mangiano di più. I più cattivi, però, come al solito sono i cinesi: il loro consumo di carne totale tra maiale, manzo e varia animalità è cresciuto dal 1990 del 142%.
    Il bestiame mangia tanti cereali e il disastro, condito con qualche eccesso di entusiasmo sui biocarburanti, è così servito: ben 40 Paesi sono stati scossi negli ultimi mesi da vere e proprie rivolte di gente a stomaco vuoto, e ben 21 di essi si trovano in quell’Africa già tanto martoriata.
    Daryll E. Ray, dell’Agricultural Policy Analysis Center dell’Università del Tennessee però non ha creduto ad una ricetta così semplicistica e si è messo a verificare da vicino questo fenomeno, diremmo, gastronomico quanto macabro, dati alla mano.

    La prima sorpresa deriva dal fatto che se la Cina ha deciso di mangiare più carne, in realtà ne ha prodotta talmente tanta da rimanere saldamente un Paese esportatore netto. Ma c’è di più. Nel 1996 il USDA World Agricultural Outlook Board, la proiezione statunitense più autorevole sui mercati agricoli internazionali, aveva previsto che nel 2005, proprio per la crescita demografica e dei redditi incessante, la Cina sarebbe diventata un’importatrice netta di grano, con un flusso in entrata di almeno 10,7 milioni di tonnellate provenienti in gran parte dagli Stati Uniti stessi.

    La Cina, in realtà, con un gioco sapiente di produzione, di protezione del mercato interno alla faccia delle richieste di maggiore liberalizzazione che le rivolge incessantemente l’Organizzazione Mondiale del Commercio, e di un buon utilizzo del meccanismo dello stoccaggio, non ha avuto bisogno di guardarsi intorno: nel 2005, infatti, risultava essere ancora un esportatore netto di grano, con ben 15,2 milioni di tonnellate in viaggio intorno al mondo. Dunque se il mondo soffre la fame, e se quegli 850 milioni di persone che nel mondo la patiscono probabilmente aumenteranno nei prossimi anni, non è proprio colpa dei cinesi. Che cosa sta succedendo allora?
    Continua su www.faircoop.it/fairwatch.htm dove, cliccando su “ultime notizie” troverete approfondimenti sul Summit della FAO e il testo completo dell’appello delle Ong

    Who’s to blame for Food & Fuel Prices?

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:41 am
    By: wakeupfromyourslumber on: 07.06.2008


    The food and oil crisis is caused by runaway speculation.

    –Runaway speculation was caused by total de-regulation, and by the regulators (CFTC) being in on the scam.
    –After the sub-prime mortgage meltdown, the criminals (banksters, hedge fund managers, etc) moved into the commodities markets.
    –To restore sanity, we must regulate all commodity exchanges worldwide, and we must increase margin requirements for commodity traders. (That is, we must demand that players put up a lot more money, and take on a lot more risk).
    –We need not discuss the weak dollar (which plays a role) or rising demand from China, India, etc. Our immediate priority is to re-regulate the commodities markets NOW, and stop this insane bubble from metastasizing further. We absolutely must get food and oil prices under control. Otherwise the USA is headed for a depression, and much of the world is headed for famine.
    Thanks for reading. Link

    Destroying African Agriculture – by Walden Bello

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:37 am
    by Walden Bello
    Global Research, June 5, 2008
    Foreign Policy in Focus

    Biofuel production is certainly one of the culprits in the current global food crisis. But while the diversion of corn from food to biofuel feedstock has been a factor in food prices shooting up, the more primordial problem has been the conversion of economies that are largely food-self-sufficient into chronic food importers.

    Here the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the World Trade Organization (WTO) figure as much more important villains. Whether in Latin America, Asia, or Africa, the story has been the same: the destabilization of peasant producers by a one-two punch of IMF-World Bank structural adjustment programs that gutted government investment in the countryside followed by the massive influx of subsidized U.S. and European Union agricultural imports after the WTO’s Agreement on Agriculture pried open markets.
    (more…)

    How Europe Underdevelops Africa – And How Some Fight Back!

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:36 am
    By PATRICK BONDand RICHARD KAMIDZA

    In even the most exploitative African sites of repression and capital accumulation, sometimes corporations take a hit, and victims sometimes unite on continental lines instead of being divided-and-conquered. Turns in the class struggle might have surprised Walter Rodney, the political economist whose 1972 classic How Europe Underdeveloped Africa provided detailed critiques of corporate looting.

    In early June, the British-Dutch firm Shell Oil – one of Rodney’s targets – was instructed to depart from the Ogoniland region within the Niger Delta, where in 1995 Shell officials were responsible for the execution of Ken Saro-Wiwa by Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha. After decades of abuse, women protesters, local NGOs and the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) gave Shell the shove. France’s Total appears next in line, in part because of additional pressure from the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta.

    Across the continent, exploitation by other European capitalists and politicians has become so extreme that something has to break. Although it was six months ago that the European Union’s ultramanipulative trade negotiator, Peter Mandelson, cajoled 18 weak African leaderships – including crisis-ridden Cote d’Ivoire, neoliberal Ghana and numerous frightened agro-exporting countries – into the trap of signing interim “Economic Partnership Agreements” (EPAs), a backlash is now growing.

    An Addis Ababa conference from June 9-11 brought officials from the African Union and a few African states together with critical academics and scholar-activists allied to the Council for the Development of Social Science Research (Codesria). It’s extremely rare to find genuine coincidence of interests, and even possible strategic agreement, between these camps. (more…)

    The World Food Summit: A Lost Opportunity

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:33 am
    (June 10, 2008)
    The World Food Summit declaration neglects to address the root causes of global food insecurity. World leaders failed to reach a solution on biofuel production, even though the International Food Policy Research Institute calculated that “production of biofuel is responsible for 30% of the rise in food prices.” Furthermore, the declaration urged governments to reduce trade restrictions, even though trade liberalization is one of the main causes of the food crisis. (openDemocracy) http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/hunger/general/2008/0610criticism.htm

    The Myth of ‘Failed State’ in Africa: A Question on Atomistic Social Ontology?

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:33 am
    (April 29, 2008)
    Who is to blame for the plight of Africa’s failed states? Author Caglan Dolek argues that richer nations created the concept of the “failed state” to avoid taking responsibility for political instability in Africa. This failed state “myth” de-contextualizes African countries from their historical and social circumstances. In reality, colonization, post-colonial dependency, and the imposition of neo-liberal structural adjustment programs contributed to Africa’s struggles. And, blaming Africa for Africa’s problems, allows richer countries to justify their own interventions, thus perpetuating the cycle of Africa’s difficulties. (Journal of Turkish Weekly) http://www.globalpolicy.org/nations/sovereign/failed/2008/0429myth.htm

    Peasant farmers offer the best chance of feeding the world. So why do we treat them with contempt?

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 9:32 am
    by George Monbiot Published in the Guardian (June 10 2008)

    …Though the rich world’s governments won’t hear it, the issue of whether or not the world will be fed is partly a function of ownership. This reflects an unexpected discovery. It was first made in 1962 by the Nobel economist Amartya Sen {2}, and has since been confirmed by dozens of further studies.

    There is an inverse relationship between the size of farms and the amount of crops they produce per hectare. The smaller they are, the greater the yield. In some cases, the difference is enormous. A recent study of farming in Turkey, for example, found that farms of less than one hectare are twenty times as productive as farms of over ten hectares {3}.

    Sen’s observation has been tested in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Malaysia, Thailand, Java, the Phillippines, Brazil, Colombia and Paraguay. It appears to hold almost everywhere. The finding would be surprising in any industry, as we have come to associate efficiency with scale. In farming, it seems particularly odd, because small producers are less likely to own machinery, less likely to have capital or access to credit, and less likely to know about the latest techniques. (more…)

    Global Limits Of Biomass Energy

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:30 am
    http://www.peakoil.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=39803

    Biomass energy—energy generated from agricultural waste or specially grown energy crops—has been widely touted as a clean, renewable alternative to fossil fuels. Research is booming to improve energy crops and methods of converting crops to fuel. Already, Brazil gets 30% of its automotive fuel from ethanol distilled from sugar cane. But critics warn that “energy farming” will gobble up land needed to grow food or will impinge on natural ecosystems, possibly even worsening the climate crisis.

    In the February Trends in Ecology and Evolution, Global Ecology director Chris Field, with postdoctoral fellow Elliott Campbell and a colleague, took a sober look at the prospects for biomass energy. They found that while biomass has many benefits—in principle it can be carbon neutral—there are limits to the extent that it can sustainably contribute to global energy needs. For example, the total mass of carbon fixed by all croplands worldwide each year (about 7 billion tons) is still less than that released by fossil fuel emissions (7.7 billion tons). This fact, the authors write, “highlights the challenge of replacing a substantial part of the fossil fuel system with a system based on biomass.”

    Globally, suitable abandoned cropland and pastureland amounts to approximately 1.5 million square miles. Realistically, energy crops raised on this land could be expected to yield about 27 exajoules of energy each year. This is a huge amount of energy—an exajoule is a billion billion joules, equivalent to 172 million barrels of oil. Yet the biomass yield could still satisfy only about 5% of global primary energy consumption by humans, which in 2005 was 483 exajoules.
    Science Daily

    Hemp Biomass for Energy

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 9:30 am

    Tim Castleman  © Fuel and Fiber Company, 2001, 2006

    Table of Contents 2
    Introduction 3
    Ways biomass can be used for energy production 3
    Burning: 3
    Oils: 3
    Conversion of cellulose to alcohol: 4
    About Hemp 5
    Hemp seed oil for Bio Diesel 5
    Production of oil 5
    Production of Bio-Diesel 5
    Hemp Cellulose for Ethanol 6
    Forest Thinning and Slash, Mill Wastes 6
    Agricultural Waste 7
    MSW (Municipal Solid Waste) 7
    Dedicated Energy Crops 8
    Barriers 8
    Benefits 8
    The Fuel and Fiber Company Method 9
    Hemp Biomass Production Model Using the Fuel and Fiber Company Method 10
    Economic Impact 11
    Employment 11
    Construction 11
    Related agricultural activities 11
    Environmental Impact 11
    Endnotes & References 12

    Full text online here: http://fuelandfiber.com/Hemp4NRG/Hemp4NRGRV3.htm
    See also this: http://www.chanvre-info.ch/info/en/Natural-diesel-Examination-of-hemp.html

    Poverty Reduction – Can Renewable Energy make a real contribution?

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:27 am

    The second thematic programme of the Global Network on Energy for Sustainable Development (GNESD) focuses on renewable energy technologies and poverty. The aim of this activity is to identify the possible contribution of such technologies to poverty alleviation and to provide concrete policy guidance aimed at overcoming barriers to their dissemination and uptake.
    Paper online at:
    http://www.gnesd.org/Downloadables/PovertyReductionSPM.pdf
    Read the consolidated report from the Regional Workshops on Electricity and Development in Africa, Asia and Latin America
    More GNESD publications

    Food Policies Leave People Hungry

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 9:24 am
    by Yifat Susskind
    Global Research, June 11, 2008 – The Capital Times (Madison, Wisconsin) – 2008-06-10

    Last week the U.N. convened world leaders in Rome to hammer out solutions to the food crisis.
    Once again policy leaders are forgetting that food is about people. Over the past few months, 30 countries have been wracked by food riots. The government of Haiti has been toppled. Rice reserves in the Philippines are now under armed guard.

    And U.S. corporate agribusinesses have a starring role in this disaster. Farmers in poor countries have gone broke by the millions because they can’t compete with the artificially low prices of U.S. food imports.

    Take Mexico, for example. Under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the U.S. demanded that Mexico open up its markets to cheap U.S. corn. Since NAFTA took effect, U.S. corn exports to Mexico have tripled, flooding the Mexican market and causing domestic corn prices to drop by more than 70 percent. As a result, most of the country’s 15 million corn farmers have gone from being poor — but getting by — to watching their children go hungry. Mexican President Felipe Calderon explains the food crisis in his country as a direct outcome of U.S. food policy.

    The same story is repeated in nearly every country where the food crisis is raging.

    (more…)

    African Development Review

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:22 am
    African Development Review
    April/Avril 2008 – Vol. 20 Issue 1 Page 1-162
    Full text online
    List of contents and downloads here

    Energy for Development: the Potential Role of Renewable Energy in Meeting the MDGs

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:21 am

    The Energy Challenge for Achieving the Millennium Development Goals

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:21 am
    The Energy Challenge for Achieving the Millennium Development Goals, published in 2005 by UN-Energy, renewable energy is also considered part of the solution to enables environmental sustainability. The report presents specific recommendations for linking production and access to energy services to poverty reduction programmes and national MDG strategies and campaigns. Leading agencies for that first publication of the collaborative UN effort were Worldbank and UNDP.

    Renewable Energy Technologies for Rural Electrification.

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:20 am
    The Alliance for Rural Electrification (ARE) published in 2007 a position paper on the role of the private sector in the deployment of Renewable Energy Technologies for Rural Electrification. The document presents renewable energy products and services for rural electrification, identifies challenges, and delivers recommendations on how to face the challenges ahead.

    Promoting Renewable Energy Technologies in Developing Countries through the Clean Development Mechanism

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:19 am

    Renewable Energy Technologies for Poverty Alleviation – Initial Assessment Report: South Africa

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:18 am
    Global Network on Energy for Sustainable Development (GNESD): Renewable Energy Technologies for Poverty Alleviation – Initial Assessment Report: South Africa by Gisela Prasad, Eugene Visagie2005

    The role of renewable energy in the development of productive activities in rural West Africa: the case of Senegal

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:17 am
    Global Network on Energy for Sustainable Development (GNESD): The role of renewable energy in the development of productive activities in rural West Africa: the case of Senegal by Mr. Sécou Sarr, Dr. Jean Phillipe Thomas2005

    June 22, 2008

    From Fossil to Future Fuels

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:55 pm
    British-German Environment Forum: From Fossil to Future Fuels 2004

    Powering Poverty Reduction

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:54 pm
    Intermediate Technology Development Group (ITDG): Powering Poverty Reduction 2004

    Reducing Rural Poverty through Increased Access to Energy Services: A Review of the Multifunctional Platform Project in Mali

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:54 pm

    Implementation of Renewable Energy Technologies: Project Opportunities and Barriers, Summary of Country Studies

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:53 pm

    UNEP Collaborating Centre on Energy and Environment, Risø National Laboratory: Implementation of Renewable Energy Technologies: Project Opportunities and Barriers, Summary of Country Studies by Fenhann, J.; Painuly, J.P2002

    Producing Electricity from Renewable Energy Sources: Energy Sector Framework in 15 Countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:52 pm

    Sustainable Energy for Poverty Reduction: An Action Plan

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 9:51 pm
    Greenpeace, ITDG: Sustainable Energy for Poverty Reduction: An Action Plan by Alison Doig and Paul Horseman2002

    World Bank: Energy and Development Report 2000: Energy Services and the World’s Poor 2000

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:51 pm

    Agenda 21

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 9:50 pm
    United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED): Agenda 21 1992

    Trends in Sustainable Development Africa Report (full report)

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:50 pm

    Innovation for Sustainable Development: Local Case Studies from Africa

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:49 pm

    Renewable Energy Toolkit (REToolkit)

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 9:48 pm

    REToolKit provides a broad set of tools to assist Bank staff and country counterparts to improve the design and implementation of renewable energy (RE) projects, incorporates best practices and lessons learned from RE projects supported by the WBG and others, and is operationally oriented to address practical implementation needs at each stage in the project cycle.

    REToolKit will help you to identify and design feasible RE projects, determine appropriate promotional policies, identify sustainable business models, finance mechanisms and regulatory frameworks – and utilize the best available project tools, including technical standards and generic terms of reference.

    Energy Indicators for Sustainable Development: Guidelines and Methodologies (2005)

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 9:46 pm

    Sustainable Development Report on Africa (SDRA)

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 9:45 pm
    The Economic Commission for Africa has released the second edition of its flagship
    publication, the Sustainable Development Report on Africa (SDRA). This edition of SDRA
    is devoted to a five-year review of the implementation of the World Summit on
    Sustainable Development Outcomes in Africa (WSSD+5). Several African countries have
    made progress in economic governance, public financial management and accountability
    and the integrity of the monetary and financial systems. As a result, the situation in
    Africa today is better than it was a decade or so ago. However, a great deal remains
    to be done. In the area of corporate governance, countries have made efforts to
    promote private sector-led growth and development.
    http://www.uneca.org/eca_resources/Publications/books/sdra/index.htm

    Development Gateway Highlight: Business for the Environment

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 7:15 pm
    B4E, the Global Business Summit for the Environment, is the leading international
    conference focusing on business and the environment. B4E 2008, held in Singapore on
    April 22, highlighted the most urgent environmental challenges facing the world today
    and discussed business-driven solutions for mitigating and adapting to climate change.
    Important topics addressed include resource efficiencies, renewable energies, new
    business models and climate strategies. Delegates shared best practices for
    identifying and managing the risks posed by climate change and uncover opportunities
    for developing competitive advantages.

    During the Summit, CEOs and senior executives from leading global companies joined
    leaders from government, international agencies, NGOs, and other organizations to
    discuss the issues, forge partnerships and explore solutions for a greener future.
    http://tinyurl.com/67nmfv

    Africa´s economic growth in 2007 again well above the long-term trend

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 7:07 pm
    Africa´s average real GDP grew by 5.7 per cent in 2007. The 2008 African Economic
    Outlook report , jointly published by the African Development Bank, the OECD
    Development Centre and the UNECA expects the rate of GDP growth to strengthen to about
    6 per cent in 2008 and in 2009. The 2008 African Economic Outlook focuses on Technical
    Skills Development. It also presents a comprehensive analysis of the economic, social
    and political developments on the continent. Now in its seventh year, the AEO is the
    only report on Africa which applies a common analytical framework to every country,
    every year. Produced by the OECD Development Centre, the African Development Bank and,
    for the first time this year, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, the
    AEO is the essential reference on Africa. It benefits from the support of the European
    Commission. http://tinyurl.com/5wyzzu

    Stepping up the ladder: how business can help achieve the MDGs

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 7:07 pm
    Business and development is the topic to watch and work on in 2008, as businesses
    respond to sustained pressure to contribute to the MDGs. Maintain the pressure, manage
    the engagement, and the prize is a new contribution by business to poverty reduction
    and sustainable livelihoods: social welfare contributions and links to social
    enterprises, yes, but also new procurement practices and new kinds of partnership with
    local communities and local government. To understand the potential, think of business
    engagement as a (short) ladder with three – possibly four – steps.
    http://tinyurl.com/59asvl

    Regional Economic Outlook: Sub-Saharan Africa

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 7:05 pm
    http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/reo/2008/AFR/eng/sreo0408.pdf
    The region’s prospects continue to be promising, but global developments pose
    increased risks to the outlook. Growth in sub-Saharan Africa should again average
    about 6½ percent in 2008 with oil exporters leading the way; meanwhile, growth in oil
    importers is expected to taper off, though only modestly. With food and energy prices
    still rising, inflation is projected to average about 8½ percent this year for
    countries in the region, setting aside Zimbabwe. Risks in 2008 are tilted to the
    downside, but the region is better placed today to withstand a worsening of the global
    environment.

    Local Economic Development Strategic Planning and Practice Casebook

    Filed under: Uncategorized — parnet @ 7:04 pm
    http://tinyurl.com/6n25wc
    As a practical product of the World Bank program, this LED Strategic Planning and
    Practice Casebook seeks to help the reader understand municipal approaches to LED
    strategic planning by identifying good practice in strategic planning methodology. The
    Casebook serves as a collection of six local economic development strategies that
    provide examples of good practice from across Europe and from the Cities of Change
    network. The Casebook also contains good practice notes and comments.

    MDG Targets: Misunderstood or Misconceived?

    Filed under: research — parnet @ 5:28 pm
    Author: Hamid Tabatabai
    Series: One Pager No. 33

    Click here to download: http://www.undp-povertycentre.org/pub/IPCOnePager33.pdf

    Globalization of Food and Agriculture and the Poor

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 5:27 pm
    Globalization of Food and Agriculture and the Poor New book examines the way globalization of agri-food systems affects the world’s poor and its impact on food and nutrition security in developing countries.
    http://www.ifpri.org/pubs/otherpubs/globalpoor.asp

    Sustainable Biofuels Consensus

    Filed under: biofuel news — parnet @ 5:26 pm

    3 new UN reports on Africa development

    Filed under: reports — parnet @ 5:25 pm

    Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation

    Filed under: political economy — parnet @ 5:23 pm

    Review of F. William Engdahl’s book published by Global Research
    By Arun Shrivastava
    URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9379
    Global Research, June 19, 2008

    Last three or four years have seen a number of books, documentaries and articles on the dangers of Genetically Modified (GM) seeds. Majority has focused on adverse health and environmental impact; almost none on the geo-politics of GM seeds, and particularly seeds as a weapon of mass destruction. Engdahl has addressed this issue but the crop seed is one of the many “Seeds of Destruction” in this book. (more…)

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