Tag Archives: food-production

Peru’s Asparagus Industry Is Sucking Wells Dry

Image credit: Nick Hepworth/Progressio/Water Witness Intl Whenever I go to my mom’s for dinner, there is asparagus. She’s 92 and thinks that getting cheap and fresh asparagus year round from Peru is proof that all is well in the world, a gift of globalism and technology. But as Felicity Lawrence notes in the Guardian, it is not such a great gift for anyone. Firstly, they are running out of water…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Peru’s Asparagus Industry Is Sucking Wells Dry

George Monbiot Girds For Bruising Battle Against The Madness of Vertical Farms

StudioMobile: Vertical farm in Dubai George Monbiot is one of the better environmental writers around, and also one of the most controversial. He acknowledges the fact and says “I find myself at odds with other greens almost as often as I find myself fighting our common enemies. I’ve had bruising battles over a long series of miracle solutions supported by my friends.” And now he is ready to rumble once again, on that issue that is front of mind for every environmentalist: Vertical farms. He writes

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George Monbiot Girds For Bruising Battle Against The Madness of Vertical Farms

Sting Opens a Food Store (in Italy)

Images from Daily Mail What is it about celebrities and food and shops? We’ve got Prince Charles and his farm store, Liz Hurley and her organic vegetables and Jo Wood (ex-Rolling Stone wife) and hers… It’s not like they ever work there…. Now we have S… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Sting Opens a Food Store (in Italy)

Yum! iPhone App Pairs Sustainable Seafood with Recipes and Wines

Image via Blue Ocean Institute FishPhone has been around for years. It’s a way to text a question about seafood to the Blue Ocean Institute to find out what options are sustainable, all while you’re standing in the store isle. But the handy tool has just gotten much fancier, with a new iPhone app that pairs sustainable seafood options with recipes and wines. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Yum! iPhone App Pairs Sustainable Seafood with Recipes and Wines

Will Slaughtermobiles Send Industrial Killing Floors To The Gut Pile Of History?

Image credit: mobileslaughter.com When I was kid in Wisconsin every self-respecting city had it’s own brewery, and a “soda pop” bottler, and an actual butcher. At the largest scale, slaughtery achieved regional prominence – Green Bay Packers got their name from meat packing for example – and farm markets were how you got truly fresh produce. So began the Baby Boom. The succeeding half-century, eliminating local supply chains through industrial consolidation, saw the death of most local food and beverage producers. Meat included. Now, thankfully, there are signs of cre… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Will Slaughtermobiles Send Industrial Killing Floors To The Gut Pile Of History?

Green Food Choice May Not Be So Green

ScienceDaily (Apr. 1, 2010) — If everyone became vegan and so ate only fruit and vegetables, then the reduction in greenhouse emissions for the whole of food consumption would be a mere 7%. The widespread adoption of vegetarianism would have even less impact, while organic food production actually leads to a net increase in greenhouse gas emissions. Those are the conclusions of a research paper published in the journal Progress in Industrial Ecology. Helmi Risku-Norja and Sirpa Kurppa of MTT Agrifood Research Finland, working with Juha Helenius of the Department of Agricultural Sciences, University of Helsinki, have determined that the cultivation of soil for whatever purpose, whether growing crops or raising livestock is the primary source of greenhouse gas emissions in food production, not fertiliser production, animal husbandry, nor agricultural energy requirements. The team explains that for current average food consumption, in Finland, emissions from soil represent 62% of the total emissions. Greenhouses gases released by cows and sheep account for 24%, and energy consumption and fertiliser manufacture about 8% each. The greenhouse emissions performance for extensive organic production is poor, they explain, despite this approach to farming being considered the “green” option, the lower efficiency requires the cultivation of greater areas of soil, which counteracts many of the benefits. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions through food consumption would require large-scale changes among the entire population, the team points out. They suggest that rather than stressing the impact of an individual citizen's dietary choices, we should be paying more attention to social learning and to the notion of working towards food sustainability and security. In general, sustainable consumption might be possible by introducing services to substitute for material consumption. Although food itself cannot be substituted, a lot can be done at the household level to improve sustainability of food provisioning and reduce food wastage. “There is a pressing need to design effective policy measures,” says Risku-Norja. “Consumer information is important from the viewpoint of food and sustainability education, leading eventually to adopting more sustainable lifestyles in the coming generations,” the team concludes. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/04/100401101521.htm added by: versasrev