Food Futures Now
*Organic *Sustainable
*Fossil Fuel Free
Mae-Wan Ho
Sam Burcher, Lim Li Ching & others

How organic agriculture and localised food (and
energy) systems can potentially compensate for all greenhouse
gas emissions due to human activities and free us from
fossil fuels
Most compelling! A succinct and pithy appraisal
of the current state of the planet - and just the right
resolutions.
Sir Julian Rose , a leading exponent
of organic farming, Chair of the Association of Rural
Businesses
This excellent and timely report makes clear how
vital it is that we make the right choices on how to
produce and distribute our food in tackling climate
change, and what those choices should be.
Dr. Caroline Lucas , Member of the
European Parliament
Highlights
- The largest single study in the world in Ethiopia
shows composting gives 30 percent more crop
yields than chemical fertilizers
- Scientists, too, find organic out yields
conventional agriculture by a factor of 1.3, and
green manure alone could provide all nitrogen
needs
- Local farmers in Sahel defied the dire
predictions of scientists and policy-makers by
greening the desert and creating a haven of trees
- Organic urban agriculture feeds Cuba without
fossil fuels
- Organic agriculture and localised food systems
mitigate 30 percent of the world's greenhouse gas
emissions and save one-sixth of energy
consumption
- Anaerobic digestion of farm and food wastes in
zero-emission food and energy farms could boost
total energy savings to 49.7 percent and
greenhouse gas savings to 54 percent
- Cleaner, safer environment, greater biodiversity,
more nutritious healthier foods
- Higher income and independence for farmers, more
employment opportunities
- Regenerate local economies, revitalize local,
indigenous knowledge, create social wealth.
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Preface
Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, and it
is accelerating, says the latest Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) Report, released 17 November
2007. Eleven of the past twelve years are among the
warmest since records began. Sea levels are rising faster
than predicted. Heavy rains, droughts and heat waves are
more frequent, and happening over larger areas of the
globe. Cyclone Sidr hit Bangladesh two days earlier
leaving a death toll of more than 10 000 and rising, a
dramatic enactment of the increase in intense
tropical cyclone activity.
It will be much worse as the century progresses, IPCC
predicts, and has very high confidence that
human activities are to blame, most of all, in burning
fossil fuels. The annual growth rate of CO2 in
the atmosphere has jumped from an average of 1.4 ppm a
year since 1960 to 1.9 ppm over the past ten years.
The good news is we can do a lot to mitigate global
warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. IPCC tells
us that keeping CO2 levels down to the most
stringent levels will cost less than 0.16 percent of
Global GDP a year up to 2030. Surprisingly, however, IPPC
has failed to mention organic agriculture or sustainable
food systems in mitigating climate change.
That is why Food Futures Now is so timely. It
documents how organic, sustainable agriculture and
localised food (and energy) systems can potentially
compensate for all greenhouse gas emissions due to human
activity and free us entirely from fossil fuels. It is a
unique combination of the latest scientific analyses,
case studies on farmer-led research, and especially
farmers' own experiences and innovations that often
confound academic scientists wedded to outmoded and
obsolete theories. There is a welcome mix of practical
know-how and new theoretical concepts to put things in
the broadest perspective.
This volume is the second report of ISIS' Sustainable
World Initiative, launched April 2005, to make
our food system sustainable, ameliorate climate change
and guarantee food security for all. We produced
the first report, Which
Energy? [1] in 2006, when it became clear that
sustainable energy use is also a key issue, as fossil
energies are depleting and demand for unsustainable
biofuels is threatening food security and
accelerating climate change. In that report, we made 18
recommendations for a mixture of renewable energy options
at the medium, small, and micro-generation levels,
including biogas from anaerobic digestion of biological
wastes, solar and wind power. We ruled out nuclear
energy, any energy-intensive extraction of fossil fuels
or carbon capture and storage process that extends our
dependence on fossil fuels, and energy crops for biofuels
(unless they are shown to be truly sustainable).
We also recommended organic, low input sustainable
farming for mitigating climate change, especially
integrated food and energy production, with emphasis on
the use of local resources, and consumption at the point
of production.
The present volume is an extended, in-depth argument
for this option, also touching on the transformation of
the dominant knowledge system it entails.
I hope everyone will read it, policy-makers and
citizens alike, scientists, farmers and the general
public. Food Futures Now is a manual for social
revolution to a post-fossil fuel economy that will
restore the good life to all.
Mae-Wan Ho
February 2008
Contents
Challenges
-1 -
Why We Need Organic Sustainable Food
Systems Now
A global shift to sustainable food systems is
urgently needed if we are to survive global warming,
failing harvests, falling water tables and fossil fuels
shortage
Sustainable food systems offer many synergistic
benefits for tackling climate change, improving health
and the environment and reducing poverty and inequality
- 2 -
Beware the Doubly Green
Revolution
The fake moral crusade to feed the world with
genetically modified crops promoted as the second Doubly
Green Revolution is doing even more damage than the
first
The bad genetics involved has failed the test in
science and in the real world
- 3 -
Sustainable Agriculture: Critical
Ecological, Social & Economic Issues
Major changes in international aid, financial and
trade policies are needed if agriculture is to be truly
sustainable
- 4 -
Agriculture without Farmers
EU, US and WTO agricultural policies are sweeping
farmers off the land, creating poverty and threatening
world food security
- 5 -
Biofuels = Biodevastation, Hunger
& False Carbon Credits
A mandatory certification scheme for biofuels is
needed to protect the earth's most sensitive forest
ecosystems, to stabilise climate and to safeguard our
food security
- 6 -
Save Our Seeds
New threats from genetic engineering to the
world's gene banks highlights the importance of in
situ conservation and seed saving in local
communities for sustainable food systems and food
security
- 7 -
Organic Boom Around the World
Challenges of Certification and Corporate Makeover
Certification is costly and complex and the
organic food system is being taken over by food
corporations that undermine its traditional values
- 8 -
The Real Costs of Food Miles
Behind the statistics is a globalised food trade
that's exacerbating poverty and climate change
Local food systems must be supported if we are to
feed the world
Overall Benefits
- 9 -
Scientists Find Organic Agriculture
Can Feed the World & More
Comprehensive study gives the lie to claims that
organic agriculture cannot feed the world because it
gives low yields and there is insufficient organic
fertilizer
Organic agriculture gives higher yields overall
for the world
- 10 -
FAO Promotes Organic Agriculture
FAO Report says organic farming fights hunger,
tackles climate change, good for farmers, consumers and
the environment
- 11 -
Greening Ethiopia for Food Security
& end Poverty
A remarkable project reversing the ecological and
social damages of the Green Revolution that have locked
the country in poverty
The world's largest single study of its kind now
shows that composting increases yields two to three-fold
and outperforms chemical fertilizers by more than 30
percent
- 12 -
Organic Cuba without Fossil Fuels
Cuba's experience has opened our eyes to
agriculture without fossil fuels, a possibility rapidly
turning into a necessity for mitigating climate change as
world production of petroleum has also peaked
-13 -
Organic Yields on Par with
Conventional and Ahead During
Drought Years, but Health and Environment Benefit Most
A long-term farm trial in the US comparing organic
and conventional management comes out in favour of
organic in all respects, with the greatest benefits for
health and the environment
- 14 -
Organic Cotton Beats Bt Cotton in
India
Organic cotton from indigenous varieties
incomparably superior to genetically modified Bt cotton
in all respects
Agronomic Benefits
- 15 -
Organic Production Works Soon after
Conversion
A study shows organic production outperforms
conventional in crop yield, soil fertility, pest
reduction and economic return, soon after conversion from
conventional
- 16 -
System of Rice Intensification
Increases Yields
The first reality check of a low-input
rice-growing system turned out very favourable, and more
successes documented since
- 17 -
Brother Paul's Organic Cotton and
Vegetable Farm
Jesuit brother broke all the rules he learned in
agricultural college and showed how to bring food
security to the world
Environment and Health Benefits
- 18 -
Cleaner Healthier Environment for All
Organic agriculture greatly reduces environmental
pollution from nitrates and pesticides, increases
agricultural and natural biodiversity, improves health
for plants, animals and people, and urgently needed for
saving the honeybee
- 19 -
Mitigating Climate Change
Organic, sustainable agriculture that localize
food systems has the potential to mitigate nearly a third
of global greenhouse gas emissions and save one-sixth of
global energy use
- 20 -
Organic Farms Make Healthy Produce
Make Healthy People
Organic foods are richer in minerals, vitamins and
antioxidants that protect against cancer and degenerative
diseases, and relatively free from harmful chemicals and
additives that cause diseases
- 21 -
Picking Cotton Carefully
Cotton is known as white gold in some
parts of the world, but the price in pesticide poisonings
and the decimation of ecosystems is too high to pay; a
shift to organic cotton farming should be made mandatory
Socioeconomic Benefits
- 22 -
Socially Sustainable Production
Evidence shows that production for local and
national markets that puts farmers first increases
productivity and food security, reduces poverty and
hunger, and results in preserving rural life and
economies while benefiting health and the environment
- 23 -
Stem Farmers' Suicides with Organic
Farming
Amid a rising epidemic of farmers' suicides in
India, an organic farmer appeals to the father of the
Green Revolution to embrace organic agriculture
- 24 -
Organic Farmer Who Values His Freedom
Above All
Moses & Mary Mulenga work hard on their
organic farm and is richly rewarded in ways other than
simply financial
Special Practices and Systems
- 25 -
Greening the Desert
How Farmers in Sahel Confound Scientists
Scientists are catching up with farmers on how
local knowledge and cooperation can work miracles
- 26 -
One Bird Ten Thousand Treasures
Ducklings in paddy fields turned weeds to
resources and increases yield and leisure for farmers
- 27 -
Fantastic Rice Yield Fact or Fantasy
A low-input rice cultivation system invented in
Madagascar and spreading all over the world is apparently
exposed as without scientific basis, not so; the
scientists are ignorant
- 28 -
Saving the World with Biodynamic
Farming
The importance of marginal farmers in India using
an emergent agricultural knowledge system against the
corporate takeover of farms
- 29 -
Food for Thought
A small, diverse and self-sufficient farm in
Britain that means to set an example for the rest of the
country
- 30 -
Multiple Uses of Forests
A global trend away from monoculture tree
plantations towards multiple uses of native forests is
good for conserving forest ecosystems, but progress is
hampered by a dominant paradigm that treats forests like
cornfields
- 31 -
Sustainable Polycultures for Asia and
Europe
Agro-forestry and other polycultures increase
productivity and sustainability
- 32 -
Circular Economy of the Pond-Dyke
System
A land-water farming system developed over the
past two thousand years offer strong support for the idea
that a sustainable system operate in closed cycles like
an organisms
- 33 -
Dream Farm
Abundantly productive farms with zero input and
zero emission powered by waste-gobbling bugs and human
ingenuity
- 34 -
Dream Farm 2: Organic Sustainable and
Fossil Fuel Free
How to offset all anthropogenic carbon emissions
and use no fossil fuels
An integrated food and energy farm to beat climate
change and a path to social revolution
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