Guest guest Posted March 6, 2006 Report Share Posted March 6, 2006 > > <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC " -//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 > Transitional//EN " > > <HTML><HEAD> > <META http-equiv=Content-Type content= " text/html; > charset=iso-8859-1 " > > <META content= " MSHTML 6.00.2800.1106 " > name=GENERATOR> > <STYLE></STYLE> > </HEAD> > <BODY bgColor=#ffffff> > <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2> > <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2><FONT size=3><STRONG><FONT > size=4><FONT size=3>Editor's Note:</FONT> > </FONT><FONT size=3>This article from > the LA Times highlights the growth of sustainable > agriculture. > This approach contrasts with industrial approaches > to farming, > emphasizing knowledge of where food comes from and > how it has been produced, as > compared to industrial food production where > questionable practices are often > employed to bring cheap food to consumers at great > cost to human, animal > and environmental health. Local sustainable > agriculture > initiatives offer advantages from three > perspectives: human health and > food safety; the strengthening of local economies; > land, environmental > and animal > quality. </FONT></STRONG></FONT></FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2><FONT size=3><STRONG><FONT > size=4>Think Global, Eat Local > </FONT></STRONG></FONT><STRONG><BR>The > sustainable food movement that began with Berkeley > chef Alice Waters has > blossomed in Portland, Ore. Are its proponents just > dreaming? Or is a real > revolution underway?</STRONG></FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2><STRONG><A > href= " http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=dgynxnbab.0.xrinxnbab.w4bsxqn6.5369 & p=http://www.l\ atimes.com/features/printedition/magazine/ " > > target=_blank shape=rect><FONT color=#003399>Los > Angeles Times > Magazine</FONT></A></STRONG> - July 31, 2005 > </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>By Jim Robbins</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Greg Higgins, chef and owner > of the tony downtown Portland restaurant Higgins, > walks to the back of his > bustling kitchen and opens a door into the heart of > the latest environmental > movement. The walk-in refrigerator is crammed with > sides of beef covered with > blankets of fat, glassy-eyed fish, rows of > restaurant-made sausage and ham, > trays of fresh vegetables in plastic tubs and > assorted comestibles, nearly all > of it originating within 100 miles of here, in what > Higgins calls the Portland > " foodshed. " Virtually every item is brought in and > dropped off by the farmer who > raised it. " There's nothing more threatened than the > American farmer, " says the > tall, burly Higgins a little later, as he swirls and > sips a glass of Oregon > white wine. " The goal is to keep them in > business. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>A personal connection > between a restaurant chef and the people who grow > his beef or broccoli rabe > might not sound radical, but it's a major element of > a burgeoning movement. It's > called " sustainable food " —a chain of supply and > demand that theoretically could > continue in perpetuity. A shorter food chain cuts > down on oil consumption, puts > money in the pockets of disappearing farmers, is > more humane, helps protect soil > and water and, best of all, usually delivers food > that tastes better. Alice > Waters of Chez Panisse in Berkeley is credited with > starting the movement in the > U.S. Now, from the ivy-covered dorms at Yale to the > public schools at Berkeley > to the grocery stores, white-tablecloth restaurants > and fast-food joints of > Portland, a grass-roots movement is sprouting that > emphasizes food with a local > pedigree.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>That this kind of > relationship is even news is an indication of how > crazy the food production and > distribution system has become. Brian Halweil of the > Worldwatch Institute, an > environmental research organization, estimates that > just 1% or 2% of America's > food is locally grown. He thinks the locally grown > share could easily reach 40% > or 50%, " and there's no reason why we couldn't grow > all of our food. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>The produce in the average > American dinner is trucked about 1,500 miles to get > to the plate, according to a > 2001 study by the Leopold Center for Sustainable > Agriculture at Iowa State > University, up an estimated 22% during the past two > decades. And growing food is > no longer an artisanal process, but a commodity. > Large food producers focus on > supplying products as cheaply as possible, and > consumers are waking up to the > fact that something's wrong. Things are getting > weird out there in Hooterville: > cloned cattle and sheep, genetically modified > " Frankenfoods, " schools of > pen-raised and chemically dyed salmon, E. coli in > beef, mercury and PCBs in > fish, chickens crammed into cages the size of a > sheet of paper, and giant hog > farms that pollute watersheds and raise a stink for > miles. Acres of topsoil get > washed away by large-scale farming and pesticides > wind up in human breast milk. > Small farm and ranch families are disappearing, > while large corporate farms reap > huge federal subsidies, sometimes for growing > nothing.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Peter de Garmo is the owner > of Pastaworks, a sustainable grocery store in > Portland, and the founder of the > Portland chapter of Slow Food, a group that seeks > sustainability in food. > " Large-scale farming comes at an incredible cost, " > he says. " It's subsidized by > the public at large without the public knowing it > subsidizes it. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Some consumers are rebelling > against the global marketplace and seeking out food > whose history is known and > friendly. While there are alternatives to mainstream > food—organic, biodynamic, > fair trade and others—the idea of a sustainable food > system is generating the > most interest.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>The granola-and-Birkenstock > types aren't the only ones behind the movement. The > rock-rib Republican governor > of South Dakota, Mike Rounds, supports a state > program that requires animals to > be tracked from birth, fed high-quality feed, > treated humanely and otherwise > remain well-cared for, under penalty of felony > charges. Sustainable food is > served in the restaurants of Yellowstone, Yosemite > and other national parks. In > Italy last year, 4,300 small farmers, chefs and > other small-scale producers from > around the world gathered for a conference called > Terra Madre, or Mother Earth, > to consider alternatives to the present food supply > system.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Sustainable food " is growing > beyond the culinary fringe, " says Worldwatch's > Halweil, who also is the author > of " Eat Here: Reclaiming Homegrown Pleasures in a > Global Supermarket. " " It's > showing up in restaurants, supermarkets, even > Wal-Mart. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>A cascade of factors are > driving this new attitude toward food. In 2001, the > U.S. Surgeon General > released a " Call to Action " that found more than 60% > of Americans are overweight > or obese, which is a major contributor to Type 2, or > adult-onset, diabetes. Food > scares also have raised awareness. In the 1980s, it > was Alar, a chemical sprayed > on apples that was shown to cause cancer, especially > in children. In the 1990s, > it was genetically modified organisms—the high-tech > swapping of genes between > disparate species to, for example, increase the > output of milk in dairy > cows.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>But more than any single > factor, mad cow disease in Europe has made people > rethink what they put in their > bodies. Mad cow, or bovine spongiform > encephalopathy, is believed to be caused > by an abnormal protein that leads to brain damage > and eventually kills the > infected cow. In humans, it's believed to cause a > variant form of > Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, which leads to a slow and > agonizing death as the > disease attacks the brain.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>But it's in the food-savvy > city of Portland that the new food economy has taken > root, and where the future > may be taking shape.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>One of the first groups to > respond to the decline in food quality was an > organization called the Chefs > Collaborative, which has some 1,000 chef members, > including current Oregon > chapter chair Greg Higgins. Higgins grew up on a > truck farm near Buffalo, N.Y., > one of six children in a single-parent family. He > wandered west to cook, and > opened his Portland restaurant with a partner in > 1994. About that time, he says, > he noticed that both the taste and the look of food > were changing. " The > cauliflower I was getting didn't look or taste like > the cauliflower I picked as > a kid, " he says. " It lacked flavor, intensity, > character and depth. " But the > revelation came when a salesman talked him into > trying farm-raised salmon. " I > didn't like the way it smelled, I didn't like the > way it felt, and it smeared > orange on my cutting board " from the coloring dye, > he says.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Higgins is the godfather of > sustainable food in Portland, a movement that > started in earnest in the mid- to > late-1990s. This progressive, environmentally aware > town with European > sensibilities is filled with savvy gourmets and food > activists. With its > embarrassment of gastronomic riches—wild mushrooms > and salmon, an array of > berries and fruit, organic dairy farms, rustic > bakeries, coffee roasters, > vineyards and a crop of top chefs—Portland has > become a destination for serious > eaters. The city was quick to grasp the idea that > changing food choices made > sense on every level and would ripple out into the > natural, cultural and > economic systems. Sustainable food has crept into > nearly every culinary > crevice.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>It's nearly impossible to > find white-tablecloth restaurants here, for > instance, that would dare serve > farm-raised salmon. There were two farmers' markets > in the 1980s; now there are > more than 20. Community Supported Agriculture, a > movement in which people buy > shares of produce from a farm family before it is > grown, is booming. Higgins and > other chefs meet regularly with fishermen and > farmers.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Sustainability would not > mean much if it were relegated to the world of elite > restaurants or expensive > organic grocery stores. In Portland the goal of food > activists is to permeate > even the culinary demimonde with local and > sustainable alternatives. > Burgerville, for example, a 39-store fast-food > restaurant chain based in nearby > Vancouver, Wash., buys all of its beef from the > sustainable ranchers at a co-op > called Country Natural Beef and local dairy products > that are not genetically > modified, and it's trying to work out a way to buy > no-till sustainable wheat > from eastern Washington. It also offers a special > milkshake based on Oregon's > hazelnut season. " Food safety is the No. 1 issue in > our business, " says Jack > Graves, Burgerville's chief cultural officer. " And > the way to ensure that is to > know where the food is coming from. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>New Seasons Market is a > sustainable grocery store chain that has thrived in > Portland, a fusion of Whole > Foods and Safeway, with twists of its own. " Our goal > is to try and change the > food system, " says Brian Rohter, chief executive of > New Seasons Market. " People > want to buy locally. We give them the > opportunity. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>The five New Seasons markets > are as large, cheery and well-lighted as any modern > grocery store. You can buy > organic chickens and tofu, but also Doritos and Diet > Pepsi. Things are most > obviously different in the produce section. The > provenance of apples from China > and Chile is conspicuous on their labels. Apples > from Oregon are labeled with > the name and location of the farms where they were > grown. So much of the produce > is bought locally, one greengrocer's sole job is to > make contact with > Portland-area farmers and arrange to buy their wares > for New Seasons > markets.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>In the fish department, the > fish are graded with green, red and yellow signs, a > system developed by Monterey > Bay Aquarium called Seafood Watch, which publishes a > list of seafood that's > caught or farmed sustainably. Red means they are not > sustainably caught; green > means they meet the sustainable criteria. Virtually > all of the meat is locally > and sustainably raised. New Seasons just started a > program to mark with a > special sticker all of its 35,000 products that > originate or have value added in > Oregon, Northern California and > Washington.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Sustainability obviously > makes some things more complicated. It's much more > work to find vendors and > manage 20 sources for produce rather than deal with > one institutional provider. > And small outfits have trouble providing quantity. > Restaurants have to bend—they > don't serve salmon all year, and only serve > vegetables in season. That's why > even proponents say this is not an effort to replace > the big food companies, but > only to replace what they can.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Price also is one of the > drawbacks to buying food from small-scale producers. > Pork in the grocery store > is less than $3 a pound; the pork Higgins buys is > $9. But proponents of > sustainable food say that the price of goods on the > grocery store shelf is > deceptive. Large-scale operations can sell goods > cheaply because of cheap labor, > or by " borrowing " against the future by causing soil > erosion or groundwater > depletion, or because they get the lion's share of > the federal subsidies. Often > the global food supply is filled with hormones or > pesticides, or is otherwise > not as healthy.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2> " You can pay your farmer, " > says Higgins of the Chefs Collaborative, " or you can > pay your > doctor. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Rohter says that when most > things are near equal, but people know food is local > or sustainably raised, > consumers overwhelmingly will buy local products. > " We're not going to guilt-trip > anybody or make judgments about what they buy, " he > says. " But we share as much > information as possible. Eaters should be able to > make informed > choices. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>At Clint Krebs' spread in > the middle of the sun-baked eastern Oregon desert, > he points out the wagon ruts > from the Oregon Trail that passed through here. His > grandparents opened a store > in what they called Cecil, but it closed as the > homesteaders drifted away from > this harsh, dry land. The store still stands, a > monument to the ghost towns that > now dot the rural landscape. As he drives through > sheds filled with hundreds of > sheep milling about with their rickety newborn lambs > and points out grazing > cattle, he describes the changes brought about after > he joined forces with the > Hatfields.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Doc and Connie Hatfield, the > Roy Rogers and Dale Evans of the sustainable beef > movement, founded Country > Natural Beef with 13 other ranch families in 1986 at > their High Desert Ranch > near Brothers, an hour or so out of Bend. " We were > going broke, " Connie says. > She decided to talk to a guy at the local gym to > find out why eating beef was so > roundly condemned. " He was a big Jack LaLanne type > with muscles, " she says. To > her surprise, he told her he loved beef, but he > couldn't get it without > antibiotics, hormones and excess fat.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>A market was born. During > the last two decades a new ranching philosophy has > evolved on the high desert of > Oregon, moving ranchers out of the anonymous > commodity business and toward a > higher-quality branded product. " De-commodify or > die, " Connie says. While the > co-op has grown to 70 families, it cannot keep up > with the demand, and the > Hatfields and other co-op families are teaching > fellow ranchers the same > approach, from Texas to Montana. " We turn someone > who wants to buy beef down > every week, " Doc says. " Supply is our problem, not > the market. " As Connie puts > it: " If you're truthful, you don't have to advertise > it. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Krebs says his life, and the > lives of other ranchers, has changed on every level. > They stopped using hormones > and antibiotics and started feeding minerals and > handling the animals in less > stressful ways. Sensitive riparian areas were fenced > off, and cattle are moved > more often. And he and other ranchers now try harder > to understand their > customers. The hardest part for some, Krebs says, is > the " meet and greet. " > " Every rancher in the co-op spends two days a year > in front of a meat counter > meeting customers, " he says. " For a lot of these > ranchers, the thought of going > to Portland is difficult. But everyone has enjoyed > it. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>They fetch a premium for > their efforts. On average during the past decade, > ranchers in the Country > Natural Beef co-op got $120 more for each cow they > sold over the price of > traditional commodity beef. And their land is > healthier because their operations > better meet environmental standards and are verified > by an independent third > party, the Food Alliance. Young ranch families are > coming back to work a ranch > they thought they might have to leave forever. As a > result, some Western towns > may survive—or even thrive.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>While Portland may be the > capital, the push for a sustainable food system is a > fledgling national > movement. Catering institutions that run the > kitchens on corporate and college > campuses have rallied around the idea, in large > measure because they have been > pressured by college students, but for other reasons > as well. " We were losing > flavor on the plate, " says Maisie Ganzler, director > of communications and > strategic initiatives for Bon Appétit Management > Co., a Palo Alto-based > corporation that serves 55 million meals a year at > institutions such as Oracle > Corp., Cisco Systems and the Massachusetts Institute > of Technology. " Tomatoes > didn't taste like tomatoes anymore. We realized we > had lost contact with our > food supply—it's bred and grown to travel, not for > flavor. " They launched a > " Farm to Fork " initiative that allows all of their > chefs to buy ingredients > grown within 150 miles of their kitchen—a tenth of > the travel distance of the > produce in an average American meal.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>The true test, of course, > will be the large corporations that dominate the > global food system. Five > supermarket chains account for 42% of U.S. retail > food sales, according to a > 2001 University of Missouri study, but they're > apparently paying closer > attention to growing consumer awareness about > food.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Even Wal-Mart, one of those > five corporations and widely considered hostile to > local economies, has > participated in " buy local " produce programs. Beyond > food retailing, > Anheuser-Busch recently announced that it would stop > buying rice to brew beer in > its home state of Missouri if the state allowed the > planting of genetically > modified rice. McDonald's website proclaims the > company's commitment to the > humane treatment of animals, and McDonald's and > Burger King are discouraging > beef producers from routinely using antibiotics in > beef, which some studies > suggest may lead to reduced effectiveness of > antibiotics in humans.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>The impact of these gestures > is not yet clear. And mainstream food producers see > locally grown food as a fad. > The National Cattlemen's Beef Assn. in Denver says > that while it supports > Country Natural Beef, its safeguards are unnecessary > but appeal to " people who > might not otherwise eat beef, " says Dr. Gary Weber, > an animal scientist who is > the director of regulatory affairs for the beef > association. Of the U.S. > Department of Agriculture inspection and > certification process, he says: " We're > very confident with all of the levels of protection > in place. We have the safest > beef supply in the world. " While antibiotics and > hormones are used in cattle, > Weber says they are carefully monitored. " We're > dedicated to making decisions > based on science. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Food activists say it's time > to look at the big picture. Brian Halweil of the > Worldwatch Institute argues > that a highly centralized food supply imported from > around the world and > controlled by a handful of companies leaves us much > more vulnerable to > disruption in the oil supply or climate warming. > " Because agriculture depends on > stable and predictable weather, it will be most > affected by climate change, " he > says. " Anything we can do to make the global food > source more diverse or more > decentralized will help us cope with that shock. " > Terrorism also has given the > movement a boost— " food security " is a term that > wasn't heard much before Sept. > 11, 2001.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>In his best-selling book, > " Collapse, " UCLA geography professor Jared Diamond > argues that what has brought > down past civilizations, from the Norse settlers in > Greenland to the inhabitants > of Easter Island, was that they created ways of life > that simply couldn't be > sustained over the long haul. Many food activists > say that locally raised food > may never completely replace corporate farming, but > it could grow to play much > more of a complementary role.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Perhaps the most compelling > aspect of the sustainable food movement is how > quickly a community can create a > local food economy. It doesn't take global > agreements, and it doesn't require > new legislation. Every locally grown tomato or > hamburger from a nearby cow, the > foodies say, is a vote for a less-polluting, > safer—and more delicious—way of > life.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2><STRONG>Understanding > sustainable food</STRONG></FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Unlike the term " organic, " > " sustainable " has no official government definition, > and other definitions can > be slippery. And because customers will pay a > premium, many businesses claim > that their food is sustainable when it > isn't.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>A recent study by the New > York Times of eight New York City stores offering > wild salmon, for example, > found that six were really selling farm-raised fish. > A Wall Street Journal > article found that the organic grocery chain Whole > Foods was misleading > consumers by implying that 5% of the retail price of > fair trade coffee was going > to growers, when it was 5% of the wholesale > price.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>Understanding sustainable > food means understanding three types of labels. > " First party " means the producer > is making the claims. " Second party " means an > industry group has evaluated the > product. Urvashi Rangan, an environmental health > scientist at the Yonkers, > N.Y.-based Consumers Union, says the best labels are > " third party " labels, in > which an independent organization evaluates the > claims being made.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>One of the largest third > party labels—and rated as accurate by Consumers > Union—is Portland-based Food > Alliance, which certifies 225 farms and ranches in > 16 states and tries to bring > some order to the chaos of " sustainable. " Growers > pay a minimum of $400 in > annual fees to the Food Alliance, which dispatches > an inspector to assess such > things as the reduction or elimination of > pesticides, whether working conditions > for laborers are safe and fair, how well soil and > water resources are conserved, > and whether animals are treated humanely. Farms are > inspected every three years > and are required to file annual reports. > Occasionally there are spot > audits.</FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2> " For all this they expect > market advantage, " says Scott Exo, executive > director of Food Alliance. " Access > to new markets, greater market share, price > premium. " </FONT></P> > <P><FONT face= " Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " > size=2>*Researcher Jessica Gelt > contributed to this story.</FONT></P> > <P><STRONG>WHO WE ARE: This e-mail service shares > information to help more > people discuss crucial policy issues affecting > global food security. The > service is managed by Amber McNair of the University > of Toronto in partnership > with the Centre for Urban Health Initiatives (CUHI) > and Wayne Roberts of > the Toronto Food Policy Council, in partnership with > the Community Food Security > Coalition, World Hunger Year, and International > Partners for Sustainable > Agriculture. <BR>Please help by sending information > or names and e-mail > addresses of co-workers who'd like to receive this > service, to </STRONG><A > href= " foodnews " ><STRONG>foodnews</STRONG></A><B\ R></P></FONT></DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML> > <p> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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