Monthly Archive for October, 2009

BAD: Hunger and Climate Change

Here is my whole, unedited post for Blog Action Day 2009 which originally posted at the Give Life Meaning blog.  This version includes a line about shooting oneself, an important discussion about nitrogen and this handsome chart about the nitrogen life-cycle. 

nitrogencyclesmall

It’s Blog Action Day 2009, a day when the bloggers unite online for a cause.  It’s sort of like USA for Africa’s “We are the World,” except with 50% less singing, 100% more typing and 23% more Hall and Oates (at least in my case).  This year, the cause is climate change, which makes this year’s Blog Action Day sort of like “blogosphere for the atmosphere.”   

The topic got me thinking to 2003 when the Pentagon was asked what they thought was the biggest threat to national security. The Pentagon didn’t say terrorism.  They didn’t say banking, national health care or reality shows.

They said climate change.

That’s right.  The Pentagon, still recovering after 9/11, in a time when the correct answer to any question was global terrorism, said the greatest risk to U.S. national security was climate change.

Not because we would get a little hot, or that Al Gore would win the Nobel Peace Prize, but because climate change would lead to world-wide hunger, food insecurity and famine, which would foment political instability and war. 

In the end, it all comes back to food.  The report here is pretty unsettling. 

Climatically, the gradual change view of the future assumes that agriculture will continue to thrive and growing seasons will lengthen…Overall, global food production under many typical climate scenarios increases. This view of climate change may be a dangerous act of self-deception, as increasingly we are facing weather related disasters – more hurricanes, monsoons, floods, and dry-spells – in regions around the world. [Emphasis mine]

This reminds me of the halcyon days before 2008, when all signs pointed to an economy would continue to expand, unabated.  There were a few people who sagely saw the meltdown coming but 99.9% of us ignored the warning signs that our economy was deeply troubled.  We know how that ended.  Now try, if you can, to imagine the banking collapse of 2008 translated to The Climate, a system that no government can bail out or nationalize. 

Weather-related events have an enormous impact on society, as they influence food supply, conditions in cities and communities, as well as access to clean water and energy.  For example, a recent report by the Climate Action Network of Australia projects that climate change is likely to reduce rainfall in the rangelands, which could lead to a 15 per cent drop in grass productivity.  This, in turn, could lead to reductions in the average weight of cattle by 12 per cent, significantly reducing beef supply. Under such conditions, dairy cows are projected to produce 30% less milk, and new pests are likely to spread in fruit-growing areas. Additionally, such conditions are projected to lead to 10% less water for drinking. Based on model projections of coming change conditions such as these could occur in several food producing regions around the world at the same time within the next 15-30years, challenging the notion that society’s ability to adapt will make climate change manageable. 

That’s only the introduction.  The rest of the report makes you want to shoot yourself.

As the climate has been slowly changing, we have begun to see more water tension, more soil erosion and therefore less fertility and harsher growing conditions.  Steven Chu, a Nobel Laureate and President Obama’s Secretary of Energy, said, “I don’t think the American public has gripped in its gut what could happen. We’re looking at a scenario where there’s no more agriculture in California.”  

Growing food is a delicate interaction between seed, soil and water to harvest the energy of the sun.  The seed’s journey to food can only take place in nutrient rich soil and temperate climates.  California did not become the nation’s largest agricultural producer because of chance.  It had an ideal climate and the Haber process had found a way to quickly fix nitrogen to make inorganic fertilizer.  

Natural methods of fertilization like spreading manure, composting waste and growing cover crops takes time.  The use of synthetic fertilizer increased our food production by leaps and bounds and in the era of industrialization, this practice was unbelievably productive and we thrived.  A full 40% of the world’s population is alive today because of our ability to synthetically fix nitrogen. 

However, in an unfortunate Catch-22, fixing nitrogen – and therefore modern agriculture itself – is fatally dependent on fossil fuels, the burning of which is a key contributor to climate change.  On average, 10 calories of fossil fuel energy must be burned in order to produce 1 calorie of food energy.  The largest portion of fossil fuel usage (40%) goes into the creation of the synthetic, nutrient-rich fertilizers (and pesticides) on which industrial agriculture depends. 

This is why when the price of oil went through the roof last summer, food prices went right along with them.  Gas had become too expensive but farmers adapted by running their machinery less.  They couldn’t, however, buy less fertilizer, which had skyrocketed in price.  Once you introduce large amounts of synthetic fertilizer to soil, as we have over the last sixty years, it needs more and more to maintain its level of productivity; in this way, synthetic fertilizer is soil’s methamphetamine.

The spike in food prices had a terrible effect on hunger nationwide.  As food prices rose, wages stagnated.  Here locally, many Angelenos fell off the edge of getting by and became food insecure.  Unfortunately, since food prices are sticky, once they go up, they aren’t quick to come down because the their prices are set by companies (the prices for commodities are set daily on an open market).   As unemployment has ripped through Los Angeles County, more and more people are out of work and having to deal with high food prices, driving a record number of people to food pantries. 

Conventional agriculture, though abundantly productive, is in an existential bind.  It is at once intrinsically tied to nature and dependent on a temperate climate, yet its very practice, if continued in its current fashion, furthers the very changes in climate that will bring about its – and our – demise. 

On the other hand, sustainable agriculture, which develops and fosters natural, holistic relationships between the environment and food production, still has many very serious questions to answer about whether it can feed and sustain a worldwide population that is expected to jump to 9 billion by 2050. 

Thankfully, very smart and committed people are beginning to talk about this stuff.  Wendell Berry, Wes Jackson and Fred Kirschenmann, three of the most thoughtful men on this subject, advocate a 50-year farm bill.   Michael R. Dimock’s Roots of Change is rolling out an awareness and education campaign on the nitrogen challenge that we face.  MacArthur fellow Will Allen and his Growing Power organization will revolutionize urban agriculture. 

Agriculture and the climate are so closely tied that you can’t fix one system without fixing the other.  We must examine our food system in order to create improved systems of production and distribution to end hunger, take control of rising health care costs and slow climate change.  Here are some things you can do to fight hunger and climate change:

  • Help green L.A. by planting a food garden in your home or in a community garden
  • Donate your harvest to food banks and food pantries
  • Learn about sustainable agriculture practices

500th post!

I had been putting off posting what was to be my 500th post for weeks, months, (years? gasp) until I found something worthy to write about.  Inspiration never truly struck so I’m posting a little ditty I wrote for The Jewish Federation’s Fed Up with Hunger initiative, which originally appeared on their Give Life Meaning blog.

maslows_hierarchy_clear
There were exactly three requirements at the college I attended – take a freshman literature class, a foreign language and a quantitative (math) class. My college must have invented fuzzy math since it allowed you to fulfill the quantitative requirement by taking psychology, such as I did. Being the math whiz that I am, I still almost failed the course. Not only did the rudimentary statistics elude me, so did the habit of going to class. It’s fitting that my wife is a PhD in psychology.

I was talking to the Dr. Missus about Fed Up with Hunger and she mentioned Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. According to her, eating and other essential human needs like breathing and drinking make up the base of Maslow’s hierarchy. This base level must be satisfied before higher-order activities in human life can be achieved – you know, the things that make up a civil society like morality, creativity, spontaneity, acceptance of facts, self-esteem, friendship, family, so on and so forth. Forget her smart talk, the layman’s translation is: the Hierarchy is like psychological Jenga; if you take out the lower blocks, you lose.

This is why I’m Fed Up with Hunger. Hunger deprives the people suffering from it – and the society as a whole – of their potential.

However, since nobody is starving in the streets, hunger in the first world is sort of an opaque problem. If you’re a busy person with a job and you and your family are lucky enough to not be directly affected by hunger and food insecurity, it can be difficult to really be fed up with hunger in a world so full of food.  In fact, food is so overabundant, we waste a full third of the food we produce, so I can see how an appeal to end hunger might not really connect and hit you where you live. 

But it does.  And in a big way.   

If you are a parent, your child likely attends school with children who are food insecure. In LAUSD, about 3 out of 4 children qualify for the free-and-reduced lunch program. As studies show, hungry children are less attentive, meaning they have more difficulty learning, and as they are more disruptive, they also impede the learning of their your kids. Also, hunger and malnutrition are contributing factors to childhood obesity, which in Los Angeles is reaching epidemic numbers. In L.A. County, more than 1 in 5 children in the 5th, 7th and 9th grades are obese .

If you are a local business leader, you are losing out on $500 million of annual economic purchasing power in the hands of your customers because Los Angeles County’s participation in the Food Stamps program is only at 50%. While it’s true that Food Stamps can only be used to purchase food and other essentials, they generate over $1 billion of local economic activity annually, so even if food retail is not the business you are in, you still get the rippling economic benefits of the best fiscal stimulus the federal government can provide. Furthermore, you are footing part of the $5.8 billion in annual lost productivity due to hunger and malnutrition issues in Los Angeles County

If you are an environmentalist, wasting food is exactly like wasting resources like land, water and sunlight. Annually, over 100 billion pounds of edible food (1/3 of our country’s total food production) is not eaten, which is equivalent to wasting 10 trillion gallons of water a year. That amount of food waste, which could more than adequately feed our nation’s hungry, is like wasting the amount of water in the Hoover Dam every year. Currently, only 2.5% of all food waste is recycled. The rest of the 97.8% sits in landfills creating methane tons and tons of gas. By volume, food waste is both the largest contributor of water waste and methane gas production in the world.

If you are a labor leader, protecting workers’ rights also means protecting workers’ ability to work. Hunger and malnutrition effectively short circuit peoples’ wills to work, making them less productive, unfocused, and sick more often.

If you are a local elected official, you should very be fed up, especially in a time of such fiscal difficulty. Because of L.A.’s low participation rate in the Food Stamp program, you are losing out on around $10,000,000 in local tax revenue and $65,000,000 at the state level.

If you are a federal elected official, you should be horrified that the total economic cost to the United States of hunger and malnutrition is conservatively estimated at $90 billion a year. The cost of ending hunger is about $25 billion. I’m no mathlete, but even I know that that saves around $65 billion, give or take. Meanwhile, as we are so consumed by the health care debate, it’s important to note that it will be impossible to rein in the rising cost of healthcare without taking a look at the things we eat.

If you are in the military/law enforement, you are a natural ally to strengthen the nutritional value of school lunches because you have noticed that 3 out of 4 adults of military age are physically unfit to serve. Close readers of history will remember that the National School Lunch program began in 1946 as a measure of national security. President Truman started the program after reading a study that showed many young men had been rejected from the World War II draft due to medical conditions caused by childhood malnutrition. We have a similar problem now as the military has been lowering its fitness and BMI index requirements for new troops due to our expanding national waistline. If we don’t appropriately address the food our young children eat, we will not have a military fit enough to protect our country nor a police force fit enough to protect out neighborhoods.

If you are a health care provider, you are seeing many more diet-related illnesses than ever before – and that’s only of the people who can come in to see you because they have health insurance. As you know, hunger and malnutrition lead to a host of preventable diseases and illnesses. Furthermore, the health care costs of malnutrition and obesity in California is over $20.7 billion annually and Los Angeles County accounts for more than a quarter of that cost, spending $6 billion a year.

If you are a concerned member of a community, neighborhood council, or homeowners’ association, you are likely fed up with crime in your neighborhood. Good news! Hard science has proven a link between poor nutrition and violent aggression (Joseph Hibbeln’s “Seafood Consumption and Homicide Mortality”, Bernard Gesch’s pioneering research on Omega-3’s, and USC’s Adrian Raine, with whom the Dr. Missus almost studied under, who is continuing the great work in this field) and social science has proven that in communities and neighborhoods where people are fed, crime goes down because desperation decreases. Rather than being fed up at the result of poverty and hunger, you should be fed up with their root causes and do something about them because when they fester, they lead to declining property values and crime.

If you are a person of faith, feeding the hungry is central to your faith. Whether you ascribe to the concept of tikkun olam in Judaism, compassion in Christianity, zakat in Islam, and d?na in Buddhism, you are doing God’s work by helping those who are not as fortunate.

I could go on but I think you get the picture. No matter who you are, you are affected by hunger and food insecurity. Getting beyond that, more than anything else, ending hunger is just the moral, right thing to do. Please join us in this fight.




Farm Bill
can a grassroots movement seed a new economy? FriendsOfSlowMoney.com