“sustainable” – watchword of our times
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Transcript “sustainable” – watchword of our times
The End of Industrialism
“Going Home”
Planning for Hard Times
Presented
by
Pat Murphy, Executive Director
Community Solutions
Yellow Springs, OH 45387
October 27, 2007
Community Solutions – Vision & Mission
Vision – To reduce energy consumption everywhere in every
way through community and personal action
Mission – To provide knowledge and practices to support low
energy lifestyles in the household economic sector (food,
housing, transportation)
Key Assumptions
Peak Oil and Climate Change are interrelated
Must become “sustainable” – watchword of our times
“Sustainability” can be, and must be, measured
Community Solution Historical View
For 10,000 years the world was “Agrarian”
200 + years ago Industrialism began
Steam Engine – James Watt – 1769 (technology)
Wealth of Nations – Adam Smith – 1776 (philosophy)
Fundamental to colonialism – past and present
Industrialism – based on fossil fuels, machines and competition
Agrarianism – based on land, biology (water, air) and cooperation
Industrialism is not sustainable
Agrarianism is sustainable
World will become more Agrarian – one way or the other
An Agrarian world can include bypass surgery and Internet
There are many intermediate technologies
Fossil Fuel History and Future
Major increase in coal burning from 1875 – 1925
Oil usage began in first quarter of 20th century
Oil/Natural gas hyper growth from 1945
Accelerated population growth
Population Increase and CO2
2007
1945
From 2.4 billion people in 1945 to 6.6 billion in 2007
Fossil fuels “feed our economy” – and our population
1 pound of fossil fuel generates 2.6 pounds of CO2
The Beginning of the End
Running low on oil
Petroleum Geologists (ASPO)
All fossil fuels finite
Predictions began in 1970s
Running low on atmosphere
Climate scientists (NOAA)
Carbon absorption finite
Predictions began in 1970s
2006
Sustainability – Defined and Measured
US
Russia
Germany
Japan
UK
Iran
Mexico
Thailand
China
Turkey
Brazil
Cuba
Indonesia
Egypt
Nigeria
Vietnam
Phillipines
India
Pakistan
Ethiopia
Bangladesh
25
20
15
10
5
Sustainable
~1 ton/person
0
Sustainability defined – ~ 1 ton/CO2 per person per year
20 of ~200 nations with 70% of population
The Industrial Century: 1930 – 2030
Olduvai Gorge Metaphor – Richard Duncan – Oil, Gas, Coal
1945 – Country still “Agrarian” – just before hyper growth
Went from 3 boe/c to 12 boe/c – 4 to 1 increase
Energy (and CO2) Inequity
Region
8
7
US
%
Pop.
4.5%
300m
10.5%
700m
85%
5,700m
6
OECD-L
5
4
ROW
3
2
Ratio of US and OECD–L
to ROW (ROW=1)
1
0
Ene rgy
US
CO2
OECD-L
ROW
US per capita energy use/CO2 – 7/ 8 times ROW citizens
US with 4.5% of population has generated 27% of CO2
World and U.S. Household Sector Energy
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
57 World
US
OECD-L
31
28
ROW
US Food
7
9
11
9
US Housing
US Transport
Global Use
US
BOE
US Use
US Ind/Comr
Measure of per capita barrels of oil equivalent (BOE)
Each American uses more energy for food than 5.7 billion
people use for everything!
The “Inconvenient” Truth
Western Industrial “life style” is threatening life itself
China & India (2.5 billion people) have chosen industrialism
Consumerism replaced socialism/communism
Ecological deterioration is accelerating
“What kind of world will we leave our children, grandchildren
and great grandchildren? What will they say of us? Will our
great grand children say, "What kind of monsters must they
have been?“
– US Representative Roscoe Bartlett (Rep) ASPO 2006
Beginning the Change (to Sustainability?)
Three options – Plan A, Plan B, Plan C
Plan A – Business as usual (new fuels). Same lifestyle
Plan B – Replace fossil fuels with wind/solar. Same lifestyle
Plan C – The Party’s Over. Change lifestyle. Cut back fuels
Plan A – Denial – Fuel Cell, Nuclear Fusion, Carbon Capture
The record is bleak. Big potential for war.
Plan B – Substitution – Wind, solar, biofuels
Wind & solar still about 1%. Agri-fuels (food of the poor)
Plan C – Redesign – Curtailment and Community
Use “intermediate” technologies
Reduce consumption – change life style
Focus on household sector – food, house, car
Community Solutions Targets
Vision & Mission Summarized
To reduce energy consumption through community and
personal action in the household economic sector including
food, housing, and transportation
Agrarian Food System – This presentation
House Deep Retrofit – Linda Wigington
Smart Jitney – Bob Steinbach
U.S. Food System – “10 for 1” Ratio
I
N
D
Replaced labor with fossil fuels
U
S
From .05 to 10 fossil calories
Labor efficient, energy negative
land inefficient, soil destructive
Varies by food type
All foods – 1 for 10
Factory meat – 1 for 16
Sodas – 1 for 30
T
L
O
S
S
P
R
O
F
I
T
R
I
A
L
A
G
R
A
R
I
A
N
ROW (5.7 billion) is quasi Agrarian – Mostly Sustainable
Takes no fossil fuel calories to provide food calories
This means 25–50%, or more, of people grow food
Post WWII Policy – Destroy Family Farm
7
6.4
6.5
6.6
6.3
5.6
6
5
4
4
3
3
2.4
2.2
2.1
1980
1990
2000
2
1
0
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
Millions of Farms
In 1945 US was still “Agrarian” to a degree
US “Declared War” on Farmers in late 1940s
Ezra Benson – Eisenhower era (1950s) “Get Big or Get Out”
Earl Butz – Nixon era (1960s) “Adapt or Die”
Battle was over by the 1970s
Needed to Slander Agrarians
We are: worldly–wise, cool, hip, sophisticated, blasé, trendy,
upscale, tony, chic (we being machine people)
They are: provincial, unsophisticated, hayseeds, bumpkins,
yokels, hicks, peasants, hillbillies, natives, indigenous, countycousins, rednecks, clodhoppers, (they being land people)
Our work – empowering. Theirs – back breaking & mind numbing
Probably the biggest blunder (or crime) in history
Hurt 100s of millions of people around the world
Including 10s of millions of Americans
Assault continues with WTO programs
Indigenous farmers (U.S. & worldwide) are becoming serfs
Industrial vs. Agrarian Comparison
Country
US
China
Ratio
300
1,320
4.400
Total area (acres) (106)
2,378
2,370
0.997
Cropland – acres (106)
437
306
0.700
3
510.8
170.267
19.7
2.9
0.147
145.7
0.6
0.004
Population (106)
Ag workers ((106)
CO2/capita
Cropland/ag workers (acres)
Agrarian countries use more labor – for healthier foods, soils
Agricultural workers: US 1%, China 38%
China gets 6 times the calories per acre – while preserving soil
US generates 6 times the CO2 per person
Cuba’s Move to Modern Agrarianism
Experienced Peak Oil 1990
Severe and Rapid
Extreme societal change
Searched country for farmers
In 18 months became 80% Organic
Major reforestation program
Urban gardens 50% of vegetables
Cubans diet changed
Pork to veggies
Free Medical Care/Education/Sports
Few cars/goods, tiny houses
Cuba Before
Rapid change dictated
by hunger, not Fidel
Average Cuban lost 20 lbs.
Government changed land
policies rapidly (like
Roosevelt)
Cuba only country to achieve sustainable development award!
World Wildlife Fund 2006 Living Planet report
UN Human Development Index & Ecological Footprint
Understanding the Food System
Can’t manage if you can’t measure – “to measure is to know”
Need to understand energy/food numbers
Ignore the Supermarkets (Agribusiness) – Look in the fields
Two key divisions of our food system
Meat and Animal Products – “Feed” and Fodder
Contained Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO)
Corn, Soybeans, Hay as raw materials
Most of acreage devoted to this
Plants – Food
Basic food is healthy – grains, vegetables, grass-fed meat
Manufacturing process depletes plant food value
Harvested Acreage – The Basic Numbers
150
Grains
Oilseeds
100
Hay
Sugar
50
Legumes
0
F-V-N
Acres (mlns)
268 million acres planted – the source of our food
All food is plant based – animals are intermediaries
The top 3 support manufactured/CAFO products
Grains – Main Staples (Calorie) Crops
Corn
80
Wheat
60
Sorghum
40
Barley
20
Rice
Oats
0
Acres (mlns)
Millet
Rye
Grains are the basis of animal “manufacturing” process
Limited grains for personal consumption
The Big Grain Crop – Corn
US is world’s largest corn producer
11.8 billion bushels produced in 2004 – 10 billion domestic
Land provides 1,900 pounds per person per year
2,200 pounds average food weight per year per person
Little corn eaten directly – a raw material for meat and sweets
6.2 billion bushels used for CAFO meat
Much of rest for High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS)
“Heroin” of the food system
Michael Pollan – “We are the corn people”
Grains – Wheat
Largest grain crop after corn
Used primarily for human food rather than feed
Domestic use 1,172 million bushels
184 pounds unprocessed wheat consumed per person
Wheat for humans is highly processed – (97% white flour)
White flour (1907) is a nutritionally stripped product
Vitamins added back by processors inadequate – 20 out, 4 in
Raw material for poor quality manufactured foods
Processing removes fiber, vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals
Fed to animals along with 79 million bushels plain wheat
Other grains – sorghum, barley, rice, oats, millet, rye – 12%
Example of lack of variety
Oilseeds
Soybeans
80
Sunflower
60
Peanuts
40
Canola
20
Flaxseeds
Safflower
0
Acres (millions)
Mustard
Soybean – Unnatural food for animals; bad fats for humans
Barely existed in early 20th century
Soybeans
US is world’s largest soybean producer
3,123 million bushels produced in 2004
2,021 million bushels used for domestic consumption
400 pounds per person per year
For animal feed and manufactured food
Soy beans consist of oil, meat, and hulls
After oil extracted, carbohydrate residue fed to animals
Made into harmful trans-fats (hydrogenated soybean oil)
“Cocaine” of the food system
Sunflower, peanut, canola, flaxseed, safflower, mustard – 6%
Hay – Largest crop after grains and oilseeds
Largest crop after corn & soybeans
Perennial grasses/legumes used as feed
158 million tons in 2004
1,073 pounds per person
Enters American diet through beef cattle
and dairy cows
If corn provides meat, hay provides milk
Healthier Crops
150
Grains
Oilseeds
100
Hay
Sugar
50
Legumes
0
F-V-N
Acres (mlns)
4
Vegetables
3
Fruits
2
Sugar
1
Legumes
Nuts
0
Acres (millions)
Very small part of acreage
planted
Priority is for bad food
Sugars, Legumes and Nuts
Sugars
Sugars mostly replaced with high fructose corn syrup
Sugar acreage 60% beets and 40% cane
Legumes
Dried beans, dried peas and lentils
Low energy replacements for CAFO products
.7% U.S. harvested acreage for beans, peas and lentils
Two pounds of beans about equal to one pound meat
Nuts
.3% of harvested acreage for nuts
Nuts can replace some CAFO meat
Fruits, Vegetables, Nuts (F-V-N)
4
3
Fruits
2
Vegetables
1
Nuts
0
Acres (millions)
Surprisingly small amount of acreage
Americans eat about half what’s recommended
Vegetables
Vegetables divided into fresh vegetables
and vegetables for processing.
30 Main Vegetables
artichokes, asparagus, snap beans, lima beans, beets, broccoli,
cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, sweet corn, cucumbers,
eggplant, endive, escarole, garlic, head lettuce, romaine and
leaf lettuce, mushrooms, onions, bell peppers, potatoes,
radishes, spinach, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, green peas, chili
peppers, spinach, and other miscellaneous vegetables
Only 1.1% of farmland is used for growing vegetables.
Very Little Vegetable Diversity – (lbs)
150
Potatoes
Tomatoes
100
Corn
Onions
50
Iceberg
0
Avr of 34
Pounds
Most potato consumption is French Fries
Fruits
Divided into fresh fruits and
fruits for processing.
35 Main Fruits
apples, apricots, avocados, bananas, cherries, cantaloupes,
cranberries, grapes, grapefruit, honeydew, kiwifruit, lemons,
limes, mangoes, nectarines, oranges, papayas, peaches,
pears, pineapples, plums, prunes, strawberries, tangelos,
tangerines, temple oranges, watermelon, blackberries,
boysenberries, cranberries, dates, figs, loganberries, olives,
raspberries, and other miscellaneous fruit and berries.
1.1% of farmland allocated to fruit production
Lack of Fruit Diversity
80
Oranges
Apples
60
Bananas
40
Grapes
20
Watermelon
Pineapple
0
Pounds
Much of the fruit is consumed as beverages
23 others
Acreage Distribution Implications
150
Grains
Oilseeds
100
Hay
Sugar
50
Legumes
0
F-V-N
Acres (mlns)
Most of acreage for meat products and manufactured foods
Corn for CAFO feed and HFCS for grocery manufacturing
Soybeans for CAFO feed and hydrogenated oil for
manufactured foods
Wheat for white flour
Industrialized Food Results
Bad Health
$5,000 yearly medical expenses, $2,300 food expenses
Cheap food contributes to bad health
Tortured animals
Lack of Diversity
Deteriorating soil
Poisoned waterways
Fossil water drawdown
Bad Food and Poor Health
U.S. is the unhealthiest of industrialized rich nations
Life expectancy of 77, lower than Canada’s 80
U.S. medical costs per capita twice European countries
Cheap food means expensive medical care
Two thirds of Americans are overweight or obese
Food system the main culprit
Two major flaws – CAFO meat and Manufactured Foods
Two major destructive foods – Corn and Soybeans
Foolishness vs. Wisdom
US spends ~$2,500 for food and $5,000 for medical care
EU spends ~$3,500 for food and $2,500 for medical care
Atwood Study – Poor Food Choices
Nutritional Density
What People Should Eat
Highest to lowest
Broccoli
Spinach
Brussels Sprouts
Lima Beans
Peas
Asparagus
Artichokes
Cauliflower
Sweet Potatoes
Carrots
Sweet corn
Potatoes
Cabbage
Tomatoes
Banana
Lettuce
Onions
Oranges
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Popularity
What people Eat
Lowest to highest
Tomatoes
Oranges
Potatoes
Lettuce
Sweet Corn
Bananas
Carrots
Cabbage
Onions
Sweet potatoes
Peas
Spinach
Broccoli
Lima beans
Asparagus
Cauliflower
Brussels Sprouts
Artichokes
Torturing Food Animals for Cheap Meat
Animals, like humans, have a natural way of life
Cows, goats, and sheep graze, pigs root, chickens scratch
CAFOs deny these natural behaviors
Extreme stress (pain) for the animal
No sunshine (constant artificial lighting!)
No fresh air (never go outside)
Many other torments
Very short horrible lives
Live in fecal material (ground/air)
Antibiotics required to keep animals alive
High risk to human health
Animal Products – Not Grandparent’s Meat
Animals earlier always part of diet
Hunting and grazing
Animals no longer graze freely
Inhumane CAFO conditions
Fed wrong foods
Diet injures them
Growing feed crops requires enormous amounts of fossil fuels
FAO Report – Livestock's long shadow 2006
Livestock rearing creates more CO2 equivalent than cars
Americans eat twice what they used to
US-271 lbs, Asia-60 lbs, Africa-40 lbs,
Central America-103 lbs
Manufactured Foods – Little Diversity
320,000 food and beverage products in U.S.
Average supermarket carries 30,000- 40,000
People don’t eat 30,000 to 40,000 different things
Recipes not food –combinations of white flour, corn
sweeteners & hydrogenated soybean oil with chemical
flavoring & coloring
America’s “Flavor Industry” along New Jersey Turnpike
Manufactures 2/3 of flavor additives sold in U.S.
Flavoring/ coloring industry annual sales - $1.4 billion
Also provides shaping and texturing products
Takes a lot of fossil fuels for a small number of foods
Soil Destruction & Water Drawdown
Agriculture uses most of U.S water
Ogallala Drawdown occurring
Irrigation vital to food supply
Not sustainable
Erosion
Topsoil becoming more shallow
Part of giant monocultures
Quality of top soil declining – pesticides
1948–50 million lbs. 7% loss to insects
1965–35 million lbs.
1989–806 million lbs.
2000–985 million lbs. 13% loss to insects
Agrochemicals changing soil composition
Why Don’t We Know This?
Major cigarette companies are major food companies
Grocery Manufacturers of America control food info
Michael Pollan – “If it has a health claim, don’t eat it”
$30 billion advertising for food – $10 billion for children
Conspiracy with USDA
Marion Nestle – Food Politics
Explains corporate control
Recommends: Eat less, eat fruits,
vegetables and whole grains, avoid
junk food
Following her advice would
destroy industrial agriculture
And harm medical providers
Food companies control nutrition
And information
USDA supports agribusiness
Summary – Changing Times
Peak Oil and climate change will dramatically alter our future
Can’t have 10-to-1 fossil fuel to calorie ratio any longer
At the core of the change will be a changed diet
Sustainability implies “measurable” Agrarianism
Must reverse tragic move from agrarianism to industrialism
From 2% of employment farmers to 25% (or more)
U.S. will become more Agrarian – like it or not
Agrarianism implies health–of people, animals, landscapes,
soils
Industrial Agriculture is destructive of almost everything
Food consumerism is a disease, not a lifestyle
Recommendations
1. Learn – Ignorance of food system is appalling
Due to deliberate action of food industry and USDA
Learning includes understanding plight of workers & animals
Everyone must master nutrition
2. Cut consumption to minimal healthy levels – 40% less
3. Change your diet to a healthier one – starting NOW
Coming crisis cannot support current medical spending
Eat seasonally and locally
4. Buy from Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farmers
Rebuild family farms
5. Plant a backyard garden – Must see food as life
Wendell Berry – The Unsettling of America
“Earth’s growing numbers raises the specter of a famine more
catastrophic than the world has ever seen.”
Wendell Berry: …we should be at work overhauling all our
assumptions about ourselves and what we have done….If we
are heading toward apocalypse, then obviously we must
undertake an ordeal of preparation. We must cleanse ourselves
of slovenliness, laziness and waste. We must learn to discipline
ourselves, to restrain ourselves, to need less….We must
understand what the health of the earth requires, and we must
put that before all other needs...let us undertake the labors of
wisdom and make the necessary sacrifices of luxury and
comfort”. – The Unsettling of America, 1977