What US Congress now knows

As we mentioned 10 days ago, the US Congress had a briefing on Climate Change and Agriculture on 16 June 2010. The AAAS, which co-sponsored the briefing, uploaded some of the presentations, but the one that interested us most didn’t work. Fortunately the speaker, Professor Paul Gepts of UC Davis, is a good friend of this blog, and he let us have a proper copy of his presentation on Agricultural Biodiversity and Plant Breeding: Adapting to Global Climate Change.

Professor Gepts told us, “Please keep in mind the fact that this presentation had to be around 10 min long (and no more!) and that it had to address a general public of congressional staffers.” We think he did a pretty good job.

Sheep at Floatingsheep and among the Navajo

Floatingsheep.org is a great website “dedicated to mapping and analyzing user generated Google Map placemarks.” Always fun, it occasionally even tackles agrobiodiversity issues. I’m still waiting for the guys to look at the distribution of the crops of the world, but for now I’ll have to settle for livestock. Here’s a quick look. There are closeups of different regions on the original post.

Those sheep hotspots in Arizona and New Mexico are no doubt due to the revival of the Navajo’s churro, the subject of an NPR story yesterday. And of one of our longer posts some months back. Yep, nothing much gets past us.

Blind about how to fix vitamin A deficiency

ResearchBlogging.org Reading The great Vitamin A fiasco, 1 by Professor Michael Latham of Cornell University, I had to force myself not to punch the air and shout “Yes!”. More than once. Mainly because he provides the backstory and the supporting evidence that makes sense of a deep-seated feeling I’ve long had, that food has been sidelined as a response to malnutrition.

No, I’m not exaggerating. Richer countries emphasize eating more and more diverse fruit and vegetables for better health. No matter that few people pay any attention. The advice is sound. Developing countries? Fuggedabout it. High-tech, simplistic solutions are the order of the day, often purveyed as medical cures for specific diseases. Latham’s critique is pretty devastating. He shows, first off, that massive doses of vitamin A — the overwhelmingly dominant solution to vitamin A deficiency — have had little impact on child mortality. Where deaths are falling, and they are, there is no evidence that this is caused by vitamin A supplements. Indeed, in some well-conducted studies vitamin A is associated with more deaths.

Latham points out the many ways in which the medical establishment has captured micronutrient malnutrition and how to deal with it, in the process blocking other approaches that often have multiple benefits. Not only are vitamin A interventions ineffective, he says:

They use up precious human and material resources. Most of all, they impede other approaches to the prevention of vitamin A deficiency, best initiated at national and local level, which need much more support. These include breastfeeding, and the protection and development of healthy, affordable and appropriate food systems and supplies. Such approaches also protect against other diseases, are sustainable, enhance well-being, and have social, cultural, economic and environmental benefits.

Food-based approaches were the primary recommendations adopted when micronutrient deficiencies began to be recognized and tackled in the early 1990s, but they were comprehensively eclipsed by the merchants of silver-bullets, who offered simplicity and, say it softly, profits and power. 2 Latham carefully documents the shift from food to pharmaceuticals and shows how it was not sustainable, ignored and suppressed evidence, blocked other approaches, thus denying developing countries their multiple benefits, and might actually have done more harm than good, especially where megadoses of vitamin A were given to children regardless of need. 3 But he is also hopeful, warning that, in the absence of evidence, donor fatigue may at last be setting in. Will developing countries continue these efforts when they have to pay for them themselves?

When explicitly asked if China would take over funding for this if the donor ended its support, officials in the Chinese ministry of health consulted among themselves and replied: ‘Anyone who wants to come to China to do something beneficial for our children is welcome’. (Greiner T, personal communication). Asian elegance in delivering difficult messages is always impressive.

Maybe countries will then be willing to adopt food-based approaches, and we won’t have to keep bleating about agricultural biodiversity’s potential contributions being ignored. Now that really would be something to punch the air for.

Saving crops through mechanization on three continents

While irrigation and market improvements could help, it would be reduction of processing time from hours to minutes made possible by mechanical hullers that might achieve most, “allowing women to take advantage of both their preferences for reduced labour loads and for the taste of millets in their everyday diets.”

I’ve quoted this before. It comes from a study looking at how so-called “minor” millets could be revitalized in India. A similar story of rescue of a traditional crop through the mechanization of processing is unfolding on another continent for quinoa. I was reminded of both by reading about the recent history of maize processing in Mexico on Rachel Laudan’s blog, which we have also blogged about.

…in Mexico, right up until about twenty years ago, large numbers of Mexican women were spending five hours a day grinding. Just imagine Mexico City: every household had somebody grinding tortillas. The landscape of Mexico City up until fifty years ago, and in many ways even later, is one of bakeries that make wheat breads for the upper class or perhaps for breakfast or the evening meal, and then in every household, somewhere in a back room, somebody grinding maize to make tortillas for the main meal of the day.

This has been completely changed, of course, by the wet-grinding mill, the tortilla-making machine, and finally, quite recently, the dehydration and packaging of wet-ground maize. One wonders whether bread would have made more of an inroad into Mexican cuisine, culture or no culture, if it hadn’t been for this revolution in processing. The resulting tortillas don’t taste as nice as home-made, but that’s a price most are willing to pay.

Mexican women that I have talked to are very explicit about this trade-off. They know it doesn’t taste as good; they don’t care. Because if they want to have time, if they want to work, if they want to send their kids to school, then taste is less important than having that bit of extra money, and moving into the middle class. They have very self-consciously made this decision. In the last ten years, the number of women working in Mexico has gone up from about thirty-three percent to nearly fifty percent. One reason for that—it’s not the only reason, but it is a very important reason—is that we’ve had a revolution in the processing of maize for tortillas.

Is a similar trade-off to be expected for those Indian millets and quinoa? And if so, can anything be done about it? In Mexico, they are already coming up with better tortilla machines “that rotate and flip the tortillas like you do on the comal, so they’re much closer to the taste of the handmade ones.” So says Rachel Laudan, adding: “…I think there will be a movement for good tortillas.” What I want to know is whether these tortilla machines will come to East Africa, so that we can eat maize meal in forms other than the very dull ugali.