Biofuels Report

A very extensive report on the current state of biofuels was published by Grain yesterday.

As we approach ‘Peak Oil’, the point at which world oil production ends it’s long period of steady increases and begins to decline instead, a mad rush to find alternatives has begun. Instead of investing in conservation technologies, or more appropriate ways to generate energy from biomass, we are insisting on producing liquid we can put into our cars. This threatens widespread environmental damage and the resulting loss of biodiversity.

Increasing Irrelevance of Organic Certification

In the US changes are underway to allow 38 non-organic ingredients in food certified as organic. Increasingly food companies want to sell certified organic food containing non-organic ingredients when organic ingredients are not available.

This comes amid the realization that for some time now beer sold in the US as certified organic has in fact contained non-organic hops. This is due to an interesting loophole in the organic certification rules that allows food in the US to be certified organic when up to 5% of it’s ingredients are non-organic.

There are similar moves in Europe to centralize organic certification on a EU level, allow 5% non-organic ingredients and allow 0.9% GM ingredients. Many people may find it difficult to find anything wrong with this last point, 0.9% GM ingredients, because they think some contamination is inevitable. In fact by being this lax simply guarantees our food supply will become contaminated to this level. It’s not inevitable and if we buy food expecting it to be GM free, it should simply be GM free.

Also while food in Europe containing genetically modified organisms are considered GM, food that is made with the assistance of GM organisms is not. For example the artificial sweetener aspartame, ‘vegetarian’ rennet in hard cheeses as well as many food supplements fall into this category and are allowed in certified organic foods.

A similar thing happened with Fair Trade certification. We all want to believe we can help people in the developing world by spending more money on Fair Trade products. Increasingly there are stories of very lax enforcement of Fair Trade standards and of farmers who aren’t paid at all for their products. Even when the rules are followed, and farmers are paid, the extra they receive under Fair Trade schemes is very small compared to the extra we as consumers pay for the products.

If you want organic food, the only meaningful way to get it is growing it yourself or buying it from a local source you trust.  You also simply have to avoid processed foods. The same thing is true with Fair Trade. We all live near farmers or other local businesses who are having a hard time in the current economy, and it’s better to spend your money on these people than on goods imported half way across the world with a meaningless certification attached to them.

Blight Warning for Europe

My friend Lieven reports potato and tomato blight in his area of Belgium. If you live in Northern Europe and are growing either of these, keep an eye on your plants!

In particular, blight likes cool nights, warm days and wet weather.

On potatoes, blight shows up as gray spots on the leaves that spread. On tomatoes, it usually shows up as black or grey spots or rings on the stems and foliage and blemishes on the fruit.

For tomatoes it’s almost always very quickly fatal. Usually if you try to quickly harvest tomatoes on the plant for indoor ripening, they will already be infected and will rot within a few days. Because the plants are very contagious, and the spores of blight last a long time in the ground, usually the only prudent course of action is to destroy infected plants as quickly as possible. Don’t compost infected plants! Burn them or dispose of them in the trash.

My understanding is for potatoes there are some alternates to destroying your plants, and early harvest or removing the plant’s foliage are sometimes options. I’m not experienced enough of a potato grower to offer advice on this, so perhaps some other people will post some suggestions.

If you come in contact with infected plants, be sure to shower and change your clothes before handling plants that aren’t yet infected.

There are no chemical or organic treatments available to home gardeners that are effective once your plants become infected.

Ornithologists Call for Zero Growth

Male Townsend' Warbler during spring migration near Oliver

This comes from a recent post on Anarchocyclist.

The British Columbia Field Ornithologists (BCFO) recently called for a ‘steady state economy’, that fluctuates but doesn’t expand as a necessary step to conserve biodiversity. The details of this can be seen on their about page.

Noteworthy is the following from their preamble:

There is increasing evidence that North American economic growth is having negative effects on the long-term ecological and economic welfare of North America and the world.

Fatal Plant Diseases

A post on this very important topic appeared on the Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog a few days ago while I was away. There are few more important issues impacting biodiversity than this one, and not just plants but animals too.

Almost too long ago to be remembered was the Irish Potato Famine. In this case it was a potato disease we now call late blight. The problem was the emergence of a new fungal disease combined with a food supply nearly completely dependent on a single crop. After the famine, the solution that emerged seemed too simple, a fungicide. Does this mean now potatoes can be sprayed with a chemical and we don’t have to worry about the disease anymore?

Not quite. The fungicides used to combat late blight are not only very toxic and expensive, but they can only be used to prevent and not cure late blight. That means when conditions are ripe for an outbreak, farmers must spray their crops every few days (more often if it rains) and they normally need to continue applying chemicals all the way until harvest.

Late blight is a quickly mutating disease, and every few years new chemicals need to be developed to control the disease, because the old ones stop working. These chemicals generally need to be made stronger and more toxic.

Until recently this disease reproduced asexually, which was very important because this limited it’s ability to mutate. In the last few years two distinct strains of the disease have met and begun sexual reproduction.

Now, about 150 years after the Irish Potato Famine, we are facing an unprecedented outbreak of similar fungal diseases in a wide variety of plants and animals. Blight, rust and smut diseases are now present in a wide variety of crops, and animals like frogs are being killed by fungal diseases in large numbers all over the world. The world’s food system is almost entirely dependent on two crops, corn and soy. These two crops are what feeds nearly all farm animals, and is the basis of nearly all processed foods. Corn in particular is becoming infected with fungal smut diseases.

The chemical companies aren’t worried, because for them it’s good business. They are confident they will continue to be able to manufacture more and newer chemicals as needed. Seed companies too can often develop resistant varieties, in the nick of time. The expense of these seeds and chemicals are often heavily subsided by governments, so the true cost is rarely passed on to consumers.

Any remaining costs that aren’t covered by subsidies are pushed back to farmers, who are rarely in a position to easily afford them. Farmers are usually powerless to approach the situation in a constructive way with biodiversity or practicing good crop rotation, because these options are commercially inviable or even illegal in some cases.

In recent years the responsibility for preserving our heritage varieties of plants has been transfered to commercial interests, who are reluctant to pay for preserving varieties vulnerable to these diseases.

Politicians are only too happy to accept short term solutions, because as long as they can finish their term in office without it becoming a serious problem, that’s all that matters to them.

We are quickly heading toward a very serious situation. Almost anyone who has been gardening for more than a few years will tell you these plant diseases have been getting much more of a problem. We really need to find ways to address the environmental causes for these diseases, and make politicians and others more aware of these problems so that action will be taken. If we aren’t there already, we will soon reach the point of no return.