Tag Food

Monbiot on peak oil and food production

Mon­biot on peak oil and food pro­duc­tion:

If the whis­tleblowers are right, we should be stock­pil­ing … If we are taken by sur­prise, if we have failed to replace oil before the sup­ply peaks then crashes, the global eco­nomy is stuffed. But noth­ing the whistle-blowers said has scared me as much as the con­ver­sa­tion I had last week with a Pem­broke­shire farmer.

Wyn Evans, who runs a mixed farm of 170 acres, has been try­ing to reduce his depend­ency on fossil fuels since 1977. He has installed an anaer­obic digester, a wind tur­bine, solar pan­els and a ground-sourced heat pump. He has sought wherever pos­sible to replace diesel with his own elec­tri­city. Instead of using his tractor to spread slurry, he pumps it from the digester on to nearby fields. He’s replaced his tractor-driven irrig­a­tion sys­tem with an elec­tric one, and set up a new sys­tem for dry­ing hay indoors, which means he has to turn it in the field only once. Whatever else he does is likely to pro­duce smal­ler sav­ings. But these innov­a­tions have reduced his use of diesel by only around 25%.

We prac­tic­ally eat oil.

Food for thought

Chan­nel 4’s Dis­patches last night: Do You Know What’s in Your Break­fast? A reminder that, in cap­it­al­ism, it’s not the job of the food industry to provide good healthy food. Their job is to make as much money by whatever means neces­sary, even if that means sneak­ing copi­ous amounts of sat­ur­ated fat, sugar and salt into your child’s diet.

Australian town bans bottled water sales

Someone’s cot­toned onto the fact that they’re being conned:

[The town of] Bundanoon’s battle against the bottle has been brew­ing for years, ever since a Sydney-based bever­age com­pany announced plans to build a water extrac­tion plant in the town. Res­id­ents were furi­ous over the pro­spect of an out­sider tak­ing their water, truck­ing it up to Sydney for pro­cessing and then selling it back to them. The town is still fight­ing the company’s pro­posal in court.

Then in March, Huw King­ston, who owns the town’s com­bin­a­tion cafe and bike shop, had a thought: If the town was so against host­ing a water bot­tling com­pany, why not ban the end product?

On Wed­nes­day, 356 people turned up for a vote — the biggest turnout ever at a town meeting.

Only two people voted no. One said he was wor­ried ban­ning bottled water would encour­age people to drink sug­ary drinks. The other was Geoff Parker, dir­ector of the Aus­tralasian Bottled Water Insti­tute — which rep­res­ents the bottled water industry.

Abel & Cole upgrade

Abel & Cole have upgraded their web­site and added new lines of products. Great web­site. Great com­pany. Highly recommended.

Politicised

To keep the wheels rolling while I attempt to bal­ance work and other com­mit­ments with this blog I’ve decided to start post­ing some writ­ing I did back when I became politi­cised in the early days, which got me won­der­ing how I did become politicised…