Micronutrients No. 1

The Copenhagen Consensus has just decreed that supplying missing micronutrients — especially vitamin A and zinc — is the most important priority for global development. The cost is $60 million per year, yielding benefits in health and cognitive development of over $1 billion.

The Copenhagen Consensus website says:

Despite significant reductions in income poverty in recent years, undernutrition remains widespread. Recent estimates from UNICEF (2006) are that “one out of every four children under five – or 146 million children in the developing world – is underweight for his or her age”, and that “each year, …undernutrition contributes to the deaths of about 5.6 million children under the age of five”. The undernutrition associated with missing micronutrients in poor quality diets is even more widespread than that indicated by underweight alone.

Undernutrition in turn has negative effects on income and on economic growth. Undernutrition leads to increased mortality and morbidity which lead to loss of economic output and increased spending on health. Poor nutrition means that individuals are less productive (both due to physical and mental impairment), and that children benefit less from education.

Reducing undernutrition is one of the Millennium Goals (Goal 1 aims to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger), and is also a key factor underpinning several others. Achieving goals in primary education, reducing child mortality, improving maternal health, and combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases all depend crucially on nutrition.

I downloaded the Challenge Paper and the Executive Summary of it. The word “vegetable” does not appear in either. Nor “diversity”. That’s as far as I’m prepared to go at present.

Nibbles: Taste, Guano, Breeding squared, Satellites, Subsidies, Harakeke, Pomegranate

Where to find seeds

This just in:

Thanks for putting Semilla Besada on your list of seed suppliers. I noted your comment that you could not find a list of seeds, and I am writing to explain why:) As our seeds are heritage or heirloom varieties, they are not on the EU approved list, so it is illegal to make them available for sale. So we have created a Heritage Seed Library, and are offering the opportunity for people living in dryland environments to swap seeds, so that we can keep the genetic biodiversity going, and extend those climate adapted varieties that suit dryland conditions to similar environments. Anyone interested should simply email us through the website. In the meantime, I will put up a link as Seed Swap Club so people can see more clearly how to contact us.

all the best,

Aspen

You can find Semilla Besada among the many links on our Seeds page. And if you know of sources that aren’t there, please share.

The keyhole to self sufficiency

Luigi’s nibble of the keyhole gardens of Lesotho resonated with me for a couple of reasons. First, it showed that at least some people are not sitting about waiting for the rest of the world to solve the food crisis for them. More than that, though, it set me to thinking about this type of garden.

The BBC, with its customary ahistoricity, seems to think keyhole gardens are utterly novel and “home-grown” in Lesotho. Actually, they have a long history. I first came across them in a demonstration garden by Horticulture Therapy (now known as Thrive). They are round beds, raised to make it easy for people in a wheelchair to tend to the plants, and sized so that one can reach the middle of the bed either from outside the circle or from inside the slot that gives the garden its name. To be honest, I’m not sure who invented them. Permaculture practitioners often take credit for popularising the concept, but I’m sure I’ve seen earlier designs, including lung-like ones in which branching paths end in alveoli that allow access to the entire bed.

The point about keyhole type designs (whether raised for wheelchair users or not) is that they eliminate the need to tread on the soil, which is bad because it can lead to compaction and all the evils that brings. Keyholes, however, are just one manifestation of no-dig gardening. ((Which I am not going to link to because there are so many sites, I don’t want to single out any one of them.)) The shape of the bed is immaterial; what matters is that you don’t step on it and that you don’t destroy the soil structure by turning it upside down once or twice a year. And no-dig of this sort is just one manifestation of very intensive horticulture. ((To which I will definitely link: John Jeavons and Mel Bartholomew are the gurus, although there are others.)) And the weird part about no-dig, intensive horticulture is that it seems to be the child of affluence and self-sufficiency.

The poor, who need more than ever to be self-sufficient, have not generally been treated to these techniques.

It isn’t glamorous and it isn’t high tech, but it can deliver far more food than any other method. Not the calories of starchy staples, perhaps, although potatoes and other roots and tubers certainly do well in no-dig beds, but a wonderfully nutritious and satisfying diversity of fruit and vegetables. Furthermore, as the Lesotho example shows, there’s often a surplus to sell nearby.

One problem, I suspect, is that precisely because it isn’t high-tech and glamorous, intensive no-dig horticulture requires cadres of trainers. The system also needs to be tailored to people’s preferences and local conditions. I expect that the best way to propagate it would be to have demonstration villages that could train trainers and send them out into their world to spread the news. Wait a minute! Isn’t that something that Jeffrey Sachs’ Millennium Villages could be doing? ((What do you mean they don’t work?)) But I digress.

It seems to me, sitting here at the back of the Hall of Flags in the belly of the FAO beast, that widespread adoption of intensive, no-dig horticulture wherever poor people have access to at least a little land could do an enormous amount of good. There are opportunities for entrepreneurship and empowerment, and a prospect of real improvement. I just have no idea how to get something like that rolling.

The snatches I’m hearing from the statements and discussions (and I’m not privy to much corridor conversation) are all about high-yielding seeds and fertilizers (made from expensive oil) and irrigation. That package may have done as much good as it can.

Would it hurt to devote a small percentage of the millions being pledged to a different approach? Come to that, would anybody who is as appalled as I am about the same-old same-old being peddled as a solution care to bankroll something different?

It’s all interconnected

I like trying to see the world through other people’s eyes. That’s why I’ve been skimming the blog of Thomas P.M. Barnett, ever since he gave one of the greatest TedTalks I have ever watched. He looks at food as a military strategist, but one who is a leading thinker of new approaches to conflict. I wonder what you’ll think of this headline from his blog:

Urbanization yields globalization yields rising income yields more food demand yields bigger farms yields more migration to cities yields …

A really interesting and really stimulating take on one future of food production. And while we’re on the subject, how about this:

Consumption preferences for genetically heterogeneous varieties, supported by the market either directly or indirectly, are what seems to be key in biodiversity preservation.

That’s the conclusion of a post from the blog at RMAP (Resource Management in Asia-Pacific). Maylee Thavat discusses local seed systems and subsistence farmers, and how the two interact. I think there’s a fundamental issue here, and that’s the distinction between growing food that you and those you interact directly with may eat, and growing something that you sell (in order to buy food). Nor do I think it is limited to subsistence farmers. I’ve talked to industrialized farmers growing hundreds of hectares of potato varieties for the supermarkets who wouldn’t dream of eating the food they sell. They have a couple of rows of a decent variety out the back for their own use.

Maybe you’ve had similar experiences?