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Paula Crossfield

Paula Crossfield

Posted: July 10, 2009 12:34 PM

G-8 Promises $20 Billion in Agricultural Aid: Real Change or Business as Usual?


Today, the Group of 8 meeting in L'Aquila, Italy pledged 20 billion dollars in agricultural aid, responding to a request made yesterday by President Obama. For the first time, instead of being given directly as food aid, these funds are set to be allotted for building an agricultural economy in nations in need, specifically in Africa. Just what this agricultural infrastructure entails (the fine print mentions fertilizer and seed, grain storage vessels and plant variety research) could be the key to whether the plan actually seeks to feed many of the billion people on earth who are now hungry, or whether the U.S. and other nations will, instead, further fuel the food crisis.

Yesterday in speaking with Allafrica.com, President Obama discussed today's trip to Ghana, and his ideas for alleviating hunger in Africa. In just a few words, he revealed a bit about his economic agenda there, too:

"Now, I also think on the ground in many of these countries, how we think about not high-tech stuff but low-tech technologies to, for example, improve food production is vitally important."

Low-tech technologies could imply better education around sustainable farming practices and food storage. But "improving food production" sounds a lot like boosting yields, similar to what Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack said at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs in June ("If we can help countries become more productive themselves then they will be in a better position to feed their own people"). Both messages imply that not enough food is currently being produced to feed the world population. But as I've argued before, hunger is not a yield problem. Feeding people is about access, which is lacking even in the United States, where around 36 million people are food insecure. Speculation on commodities, the same practice that bottomed out our financial sector, has resulted in higher food prices and by extension, a food crisis, because people could not afford to buy food.

And yet these overtures are all too familiar. The president is echoing the wording featured in advertisements by companies like Monsanto, in whose interest it is that we continue to pursue GM seeds abroad (Monsanto holds 90% of seed patents) even though in the last 20 years these seeds have failed to produce the higher yields and drought tolerance they have promised. In an economic crisis, perhaps there is discussion that we can stimulate our economy by getting Africans hooked on our seeds and the herbicides/pesticides they require. But it will surely not be Africans who benefit from this arrangement.

Obama continued:

"And I'm still frustrated over the fact that the green revolution that we introduced into India in the '60s, we haven't yet introduced into Africa in 2009."

There are very good reasons why we have never introduced a Green Revolution into Africa, namely because there is broad consensus that the Green Revolution in India has been a failure, with Indian farmers in debt, bound to paying high costs for seed and pesticides, committing suicide at much higher rates, and resulting in a depleted water table and a poisoned environment, and by extension, higher rates of cancer. If President Obama is lacking this information, it is his cabinet that is to blame.

Agricultural development is a loaded phrase, vague in the way political phrases can be, because the way it is implemented depends on the viewpoints of those involved in decision making. President Obama is currently embedded in a bubble featuring some of the fervent promoters of the biotech industry and a Green Revolution in Africa, such as Nina Fedoroff, who is a biotechnology researcher currently serving as Hilary Clinton's adviser on science and technology, and Rajiv Shah who left his post at The Gates Foundation's Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) to serve as the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Research, Education, and Economics (REE) and Chief Scientist at the USDA. One can't help but wonder, then, if by requesting this money from the G8 in the name of charity we are instead trying to promote our own economy.

Right now, with most studies being sponsored by industry, millions of dollars being spent on lobbying by agribusiness in Washington, and a revolving door that brings people from private sector agricultural companies to Capital Hill, the public is being given one side of the story on biotechnology. Six European countries have now banned the planting of GMOs in their fields based on this lack of information, following what is called the "Precautionary Principle:" that if there is no scientific consensus, there is a responsibility to intervene and protect the public from possible harm. Instead, the U.S. is conducting a scientific experiment on its people, and the results have been alarming.

Aside from the the impact GMOs have on our health, on which study has been lacking, these crops are responsible for massive pollution and depletion of our waterways, and require high oil inputs and a stable climate to produce. This is not sustainable. Isn't it then a bit short-sighted to promote GMOs and commodity crops in Africa, where 80% of the population is rural, and 33 million farms each farming 2 hectares or less are producing 90% of the continent's food?

If we really want to help the hungry, we should invest in tools, arable land for communities, and education about sustainable farming in Africa. We should teach seed-saving and intercropping, so that diets will be diverse and healthy. Most of all, we should avoid a one-size-fits-all approach to hunger, as there are no easy answers. Empowering locals to work within their own climate, governance and culture will ensure that real strides are made in alleviating hunger. Otherwise, instead of teaching Africans to fish, we will be giving Africans fish with the hook of dependence still attached.

Update: The full G8 summit statement on food security can be read here. It is wide-sweeping, and a lot more focused on localized efforts than this piece had predicted. We shall see what the outcome of this statement will be.

[If you feel strongly that GMOs should not be a part of international development policy, sign the CREDO Action petition and let your legislators know!]

Originally published on Civil Eats

Follow Paula Crossfield on Twitter: www.twitter.com/civileater

Today, the Group of 8 meeting in L'Aquila, Italy pledged 20 billion dollars in agricultural aid, responding to a request made yesterday by President Obama. For the first time, instead of being given d...
Today, the Group of 8 meeting in L'Aquila, Italy pledged 20 billion dollars in agricultural aid, responding to a request made yesterday by President Obama. For the first time, instead of being given d...
 
 
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12:54 PM on 07/14/2009
Thanks for clearing confusion about the Green Revolution in India, which has indeed been a total failure. http://www.ecohearth.com/eco-news/eco-op-ed/637-monoculture-agribusiness-harvesting-the-seeds-of-suicide.html
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
11:25 AM on 07/13/2009
If CAP&TRADE passes exported food prices will rise causing millions of deaths from starvation.

""This has MONSANTO written all over it. GMO and Round-up ready crops to poison the land and it's people, Africa does not need that kind of help.""
11:02 AM on 07/13/2009
This has MONSANTO written all over it. GMO and Round-up ready crops to poison the land and it's people, Africa does not need that kind of help.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TJCole
07:47 PM on 07/12/2009
If we stop using Corn for Fuel and grew Industrial Hemp for Cellulose Ethanol and bio diesel from it's seeds that would be a big help to the world food prices and shortages...!

Hemp 4 Fuel...

http://hemp4fuel.com/

See the Why Hemp..?, section too...

Grow Here, Grow Now..!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
moonflowerjewelry
Buy American made, no excuses.
10:45 AM on 07/12/2009
As long as the agricultural model is based on monoculture, corporate farms and exporting food to other nations people will continue to live in squalor hunger and poverty even as they are employed by the corporate farms. look at another article on farming communities in California's Imperial Valley. Our model of agriculture is a destroyer of environment, culture and dignity of the people who live and work in the shadows the corporate farm.
07:27 AM on 07/12/2009
As usual, blame speculation when you don't want to face the real problem. Speculation in commodity markets does not cause higher prices. Speculation allows for people to buy commodities cheaper using the futures market, when commodity producers don't want to sell, holding out for higher prices. The same is true for commodity producers, they can sell commodities at higher prices when those wanting the commodities don't want to pay the higher price. The proper use of the markets by those using commodities is called hedging. Unfortunately, too many people don't understand hedging, which is a great way to help market commodities.
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07:47 PM on 07/11/2009
Business as usual - money down the drain.
11:02 AM on 07/11/2009
If you want to save the planet, STOP HAVING SO MANY BABIES!

Sure its noble when people live longer and better health means more kids can survive, BUT WHAT WILL HAPPEN WHEN WE RUN OUT OF FOOD AND WATER AND ROOM for all of these people?

You guys have to start thinking about population control, the Bilderbacks are and so are the billionairs like Bill Gates.

In order for this planet to survive we have to start to control population!
10:36 AM on 07/11/2009
Something for nothing has never been the policy of the United States.

The reason China is beating us in Africa and South America is, to some degree, they have a policy of someting for something.

The US still believes that bombs and covert actions will force countries to sign on the dotted line.
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EthnicHeart
04:52 AM on 07/11/2009
This is a critically important issue that most people, including the author of this article, do not understand. The idea that "rural people" don't know how to feed themselves is a widespread stereotype used to justify further exploitation. If they didn't know how to feed themselves then how did their ancestors survive there? Many rural people, whether indigenous or not, typically have problems because of increasingly losing land to more powerful landowners, difficulty of transporting produce to market, and little or no access to fair markets. Being robbed at the marketplace is the biggest incentive to abandon self-sufficient agriculture and move to urban slums. Money alone isn't the solution. In a world where the majority now live in cities, efficient countryside food production is more important than ever. People need to stop taking food for granted and become educated about where it comes from and who gets exploited. And political pressure for rural social justice is just as important as any economic investment. This issue deserves much more attention and anthropological wisdom instead of merely thinking on the basis of stereotypes.
03:25 PM on 07/11/2009
good post
08:16 AM on 07/12/2009
Sort of true, but the bottom line is really that Governments want cheap food to feed the masses. They want to put rural folks on the bottom of the rung economically. This usually backfires into food shortages because they won't pay a real price to the farmer, and they quit farming going to the city, leaving food shortages.

The other issue is that no one wants to pay to store grain etc from the good times ( high yields ) to prepare for the bad times ( low yields because of drought and flood ).
11:24 PM on 07/10/2009
It has been announced that the G8 is dead.
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10:43 PM on 07/10/2009
Agricultural development is a good path for the global ag businesses (from the US mid west) to make millions. They contribute well and have good lobbyists.