Food Miles

, written by Jeremy Dore gb flag

Beans from Egypt

The topic of food miles – the distance produce has travelled before reaching the supermarket shelf – has been causing a stir here in the UK.  The increasing numbers of fresh vegetables and fruit which are transported as air-freight have started to become headline news.  Even the big supermarkets are responding to pressure and starting to label produce according to how it reached us.

It’s not hard to see why – it has all the makings of a good plot.  There’s the wealthy corporate players; ‘Customers demand fresh strawberries in December and we fly them in to meet that demand.’  Then the eco-warriors: ‘Air-freight is a major contributor to global warming.’ To add an extra layer of interest there are ethical issues: ‘Out of season crops provide a valuable cash crop for developing communities in Africa.’ And finally Joe Bloggs from round the corner: ‘Why should I care where it comes from?’  Decide to scrap air-freight and you risk bankrupting poor farmers in developing countries and reduced sales.  Decide to keep it and you’re open to charges of environmental suicide and pandering to the pressure of big retailers.

Please don’t misunderstand me – I don’t want to minimise the importance of these issues.  In fact I was pleased to see that the Soil Association – the largest Organic certification body in the UK – recently held a consultation on the issue.  Of course, it’s a very difficult subject but the conclusions they reached seem fair: Air-freighted produce can now only be certified organic if the agriculture meets their strict ‘ethical production’ guidelines (or that of the Fairtrade Foundation) demonstrating benefit to poorer farmers.  Furthermore they must work to reduce dependence on air-freight.

Ship

An article in January’s UK ‘Organic Gardening’ magazine takes a different tack: In a flight of fantasy John Walker writes, pretending it’s the year 2027, about the newly introduced ‘Home Growing Act’ which gives tax-breaks for anyone growing their own produce as part of wide-sweeping measures to tackle global warming.  It’s certainly an interesting proposition.  Unfortunately I think it’s a little unrealistic, though many gardeners would love to think otherwise.

Home growing is of course a great answer to the problem of food miles.  But in our busy modern lives I think there is an additional factor to take into consideration: food-metres.  Allotments, where you get a decent space to grow-your-own, are all well and good but lots of people, myself included, find them hard to squeeze into the time-pressured days that involve work and family as well.  The problem seems best measured by how far away your growing space is from your home or place of work – what I call the ‘food-metres’.  If it’s more than 500 food-metres, I’ll bet that you’ll find it difficult to visit daily.  Over a couple of thousand food-metres and it’s definitely out-of-sight, out-of-mind and becomes more of a chore.

I might not fully agree with John Walker’s article about 2027 but one thing he mentions that I’d really like to see is houses and town-developments automatically including ‘growplots’ – really local areas for growing your own food.  That would put home-grown produce firmly back at the centre of the community.  A truly local solution to a problem of global proportions…

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Comments

 
"I enjoy growing my own Fruit and Vegetables in my own small garden,but there is never enough room for all that I want to grow.I have been on the waiting list for a local(about 1 and a half miles away) allotment for two years, with no suceess as yet.There appear to be vacant or little used plots down there.Why can't the allotment owners(the council) make the holders use them or lose them ?? The problem is there are not enough allotments now because so many have been developed on due to lack of use in the last 10-15 years.Now a reassurgence of interest in growing veg again and we are stuck with no communial land."
DavidM31 on Monday 7 January 2008
"Yes, it took me nearly three years to get half an allotment - they certainly seem to be in short supply. If the national trend for people to start growing their own produce continues then councils will need to provide more land. There are some interesting private allotments springing up but usually with a higher price tag."
Jeremy Dore on Monday 7 January 2008
"Food miles and plant miles could be reduced if gardeners trade their surpluses through www.theplantexchange.co.uk - also I think you could save money as garden centres etc.. always charge top wack"
Stew on Friday 1 February 2008
"I know what you are saying re motivation and distance an allotment plot is from home. Maybe I am an exception but mine is 25 miles from my home (only 1/2 mile from where I work!) and I am very keen so I have for over 18 months kept up my plot before or after work and when in that locality for other things. Being very aware of the food miles thing in current media attention I avoid going unless necessary or for a full day. Interesting to see some of the food miles hype debunked in Sun Telegraph 3/2/08 where imported NZ lamb and apples are still making smaller footprint (by a third and half respectively!) because their production and delivery by sea make them more environmentally friendly than local products. Amazing but true!"
Rob on Monday 4 February 2008
"Yes, but how good is their animal husbandry - in New Zealand, they only have one shepherd to 3000 sheep - here we need that one to fill in paperwork to show we are complying with the regulations, have ear tags that give traceability etc... for the powers that be in Westminster and Brussels, before we start looking after the sheep. There is none of this in NZ - hence lower costs and no mountains of paper, no miles in civil servants cars inspecting and checking.. etc.. This is not a level playing field Stew"
Stew on Monday 4 February 2008
"Well maybe level playing fields are not what it is about :-') Plain old competition there! Bit like the USA (and EC ?)subsidizing their products against Australian competition and the Aussies still cheaper being in US market.Not that Australia a good example of low carbon footprint - only just joining Kyoto agreements. I would imagine they just get on with the husbandry without the form filling and long drives into Wales from Brussels or London. You may be relieved to know that serious questions re shipping input contribs to carbon footprints may now makes those figures look silly (Guardian of last week or so)."
Rob on Wednesday 20 February 2008
"The supermarkets have controlled the lamb price, hence a very low price to producers (not the consumer)in the UK market place. This meant that New Zealand has not been sending any lamb over here until recently - sadly our sheep farmers will go out of business and then we will depend on imports and we will have to pay a proper going rate whatever the supermarkets do"
Stew on Thursday 21 February 2008

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