You
are visiting
www.rawfoodinfo.com
June
17, 2005
leu@austarnet.com.au
ORGANIC
AGRICULTURE WILL TERMINATE WORLD HUNGER
by Andre Leu
Utilizing advanced organic farming technology to eliminate hunger. Why Genetic
Engineered Food will not solve the World Hunger Issue. Many links to organic
and sustainable technology web sites.
translate http://www.babelfish.altavista.com
Several high-profile advocates of conventional agricultural production have
stated that the world would starve if we all converted to organic agriculture.
They have written articles for science journals and other publications saying
that organic agriculture is not sustainable and produces yields that are significantly
lower than conventional agriculture.
Thus, the push for genetically modified organisms, growth hormones, animal-feed
antibiotics, food irradiation and toxic synthetic chemicals is being justified,
in part, by the rationale that without these products the world will not be
able to feed itself.
Ever since Thomas Malthus wrote An Essay on the Principle of Population in 1798
and first raised the specter of overpopulation, various experts have been predicting
the end of human civilization because of mass starvation.
The theme was popularized again by Paul Ehrlich in his 1968 book, The Population
Bomb. According to Ehrlichs logic, we should all be starving now that
the 21st century has arrived: The battle to feed all of humanity is over.
In the 1970s the world will undergo famines .. hundreds of millions of people
are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.
The only famines that have occurred since 1968 have been in African countries
saddled with corrupt governments, political turmoil, civil wars and periodic
droughts. The world had enough food for these people it was political
and logistical events that prevented them from producing adequate food or stopped
aid from reaching them. Hundreds of millions of people did not starve to death.
The specter of mass starvation is being pushed again as the motive for justifying
GMOs. In June 2003, President Bush stated at a biotechnology conference, We
should encourage the spread of safe, effective biotechnology to win the fight
against global hunger.
We must now ask ourselves: Is global hunger due to a shortage of food production?
In this first decade of the 21st century, many farmers around the world are
facing a great economic crisis of low commodity prices. These low prices are
due to oversupply. Current economic theories hold that prices decrease when
supply is greater than demand. Most of our current production systems are price
driven, with the need for economies of scale to reduce unit costs. The small
profit margins of this economic environment favor enterprises working in terms
of large volume, and as a result the family farm is declining. Many areas of
the United States and Australia have fewer farmers now than 100 years ago, and
the small rural centers they support are disappearing. Hundreds of thousands
of farmers have had to leave their farms in Argentina due to higher production
costs and lower commodity prices. The sugar industry in Australia is on the
verge of collapse for the same reason. Australian dairy farmers continue to
leave the industry since deregulation forced down the prices they receive. Most
of the major industrial countries are subsidizing their farmers so that their
agricultural sectors do not collapse.
Europe, North America, Australia and Brazil are in the process of converting
a large percentage of their arable land from food production to biofuels such
as ethanol in an effort to establish viable markets for their farmers. The latest
push in GMO development is BioPharm, in which plants such as corn, sugarcane
and tobacco are modified to produce new compounds such as hormones, vaccines,
plastics, polymers and other non-food compounds. All of these developments will
mean that less food is grown on some of the worlds most productive farmland.
Grain farmers in India have protested about cheap imports that are sending them
deeper into poverty. Countries such as India and China, once considered as overpopulated
basket cases, export large quantities of food. In fact, India, one of the worlds
most populated countries, is a net food exporter in most years.
South American rainforests are cleared for pasture that is grazed with beef
destined for the hamburger chains of North America. Once the soil is depleted,
new areas are cleared for pasture and old, degraded areas are abandoned to weeds.
In Asia, most of the forests are cleared for timber that is exported to the
developed industrial economies. One of the saddest things about this massive,
wasteful destruction of biodiversity is that very little of the newly cleared
land is used to feed the poor. Most of this production of timber and beef is
exported to the worlds richest economies.
The reality is that the world produces more than enough food to feed everyone
and has more than enough suitable agricultural land to do it. Unfortunately,
due to inefficient, unfair distribution systems and poor farming methods, millions
of people do not receive adequate nutrition.
Can organic agriculture feed the world?
Organic agriculture needs to be able to answer two major questions:
1. Can organic agriculture produce high yields?
2. Can organic agriculture get the food to the people who need it?
An editorial in New Scientist for February 3, 2001, stated that low-tech, sustainable
agriculture is increasing crop yields on poor farms across the world, often
by 70 percent or more. This has been achieved by replacing synthetic chemicals
with natural pest control and natural fertilizers.
Professor Jules Pretty, director of the Centre for Environment and Society at
the University of Essex, wrote, Recent evidence from 20 countries has
found more than 2 million families farming sustainably on more than 4-5 million
hectares. This is no longer marginal. It cannot be ignored. What is remarkable
is not so much the numbers, but that most of this has happened in the past 5-10
years. Moreover, many of the improvements are occurring in remote and resource-poor
areas that had been assumed to be incapable of producing food surpluses.
An excellent example of this type of agricultural extension has been published
in the January 2003 World Vision News. Working in conjunction AusAID, World
Vision linked farmers from the impoverished Makuyu community in Kenya with the
Kenya Institute of Organic Farming (KIOF).
They arranged workshops where KIOF members taught the principles of organic
farming, including compost making, preparing safe organic pesticides, organic
vegetable gardening and organic care of livestock.
Maize yields increased by four to nine times. The organically grown crops produced
yields that were 60 percent higher than crops grown with expensive chemical
fertilizers.
The wonderful thing is that many of these farmers now have a surplus of food
to sell, whereas previously they did not even have enough to eat. They are organizing
marketing co-ops to sell this surplus.
The profits are going back to the community. They have distributed dairy goats,
rabbits, hives and poultry to community members and have planted 20,000 trees,
including 2,000 mangos. Several of the organic farmers are training many other
farmers in the district and helping them to apply organic farming techniques
to their farms.
The mood of the community has changed. They are now confident and empowered
with the knowledge that they can overcome the problems in their community.
These types of simple, community-based organic agricultural models are what
is needed around the world to end rural poverty and starvation, not GMOs and
expensive toxic chemicals.
The Makuyu community in Kenya is not an isolated example. Professor Pretty gives
other examples from around the world of increases in yield when farmers have
replaced synthetic chemicals and shifted to sustainable/organic methods:
223,000 farmers in southern Brazil using green manures and cover crops
of legumes and livestock integration have doubled yields of maize and wheat
to 4-5 tons/hectare.
45,000 farmers in Guatemala and Honduras used regenerative technologies
to triple maize yields to 2-2.5 tons/ha and diversify their upland farms, which
has led to local economic growth that has in turn encouraged remigration back
from the cities.
200,000 farmers across Kenya as part of sustainable agriculture programs
have more than doubled their maize yields to about 2.5 to 3.3 tons/ha and substantially
improved vegetable production through the dry seasons.
100,000 small coffee farmers in Mexico have adopted fully organic production
methods and increased yields by half.
A million wetland rice farmers in Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam have shifted to sustainable
agriculture, where group-based farmer field schools have enabled farmers to
learn alternatives to pesticides and increase their yields by about 10 percent.
Nicolas Parrott of Cardiff University, U.K., authored a report entitled The
Real Green Revolution. He gives case studies that confirm the success of organic
and agroecological farming techniques in the developing world:
In Madhya Pradesh, India, average cotton yields on farms participating
in the Maikaal Bio-Cotton Project are 20 percent higher than on neighboring
conventional farms.
In Madagascar, SRI (System of Rice Intensification) has increased yields
from the usual 2-3 tons per hectare to yields of 6, 8 or 10 tons per hectare.
In Tigray, Ethiopia, a move away from intensive agrochemical usage in
favor of composting has produced an increase in yields and in the range of crops
it is possible to grow.
In the highlands of Bolivia, the use of bonemeal and phosphate rock and
intercropping with nitrogen-fixing lupin species have significantly contributed
to increases in potato yields.
One of the most important aspects of the teaching farmers in these regions to
increase yields with sustainable/organic methods is that the food and fiber
is produced close to where it is needed and in many cases by the people who
need it. It is not produced halfway around the world, transported, and then
sold to them.
Another important aspect is the low input costs. Growers do not need to buy
expensive imported fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. The increase in yields
also comes with lower production costs, allowing a greater profit to these farmers.
Third, the substitution of more labor-intensive activities such as cultural
weeding, composting and intercropping for expensive imported chemical inputs
provides more employment for local and regional communities. This employment
allows landless laborers to pay for their food and other needs.
As in the example of the Makuyu community in Kenya, these benefits lead to a
positive change in the wealth and the mood of the community. These communities
are revitalized, proactive and empowered to improve their future.
Can organic agriculture achieve high yields in developed nations?
Since 1946, the advent of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, improved
crop varieties and industrial paradigms are credited with producing the high
yields of the green revolution. Because organic agriculture avoids
many of these new inputs, it is assumed that it always results in lower yields.
The assumption that greater inputs of synthetic chemical fertilizers and pesticides
are required to increase food yields is not accurate. In a study published in
The Living Land, Professor Pretty looked at projects in seven industrialized
countries of Europe and North America. He reported, Farmers are finding
that they can cut their inputs of costly pesticides and fertilizers substantially,
varying from 20 to 80 percent, and be financially better off. Yields do fall
to begin with (by 10 to 15 percent, typically), but there is compelling evidence
that they soon rise and go on increasing. In the USA, for example, the top quarter
of sustainable agriculture farmers now have higher yields than conventional
farmers, as well as a much lower negative impact on the environment.
Professor George Monbiot, in an article in the Guardian (August 24, 2000), wrote
that wheat grown with manure has produced consistently higher yields for the
past 150 years than wheat grown with chemical nutrients, in U.K. trials.
A study of apple production conducted by Washington State University compared
the economic and environmental sustainability of conventional, organic and integrated
growing systems in apple production. The organic system had equivalent yields
to the other systems. The study also showed that the break-even point was nine
years after planting for the organic system and 15 and 16 years, respectively,
for conventional and integrated farming systems.
In an article published in the peer-review scientific journal Nature, Laurie
Drinkwater and colleagues from the Rodale Institute showed that organic farming
had better environmental outcomes as well as similar yields of both products
and profits when compared to conventional, intensive agriculture.
Gary Zimmer, one of the American pioneers of biological farming, runs an organic
dairy farm with his son in Wisconsin. In 2000 one of his remineralized alfalfa
(lucerne) fields produced a yield four times greater than the average for the
district. He has increased the nutrient value of pasture by 300 percent and
currently calves 150 cows every year without a single health problem.
Dick Thompson, a founding member of the Progressive Farmers of Iowa, engages
in organic farm research in conjunction with the University of Iowa, the Rodale
Institute and the Wallace Institute. He obtains some of the highest yields in
his district using composts, ridge-tilling and crop rotations.
The innovative system of rotationally grazing several species of animals developed
by Joel and Theresa Salatin of Polyface Farm in Virginia is one of the best
examples of a high-yield organic system. They use 100 acres of dryland pasture
to cell-graze cattle, sheep, pigs, meat chickens, laying hens, turkeys, pheasants
and rabbits.
Their system is based on native pastures, without cultivation or new, improved
pasture species. The only input has been the feed for the poultry. This multi-species
rotational grazing system builds one inch of soil a year and returns the family
15 times the income per acre than is received by neighbouring farms using a
set stocking of cattle.
Steve Bartolo, president of the Australian Organic Sugar Producers Association,
produced similar yields of commercial sugar per hectare from his organic Q124
cane and his conventional cane in 2002. The average yield of sugar for his best
organic cane achieved higher tonnes per hectare compared to the average
of all conventionally grown Q124.
Greg Paynter, an organic farmer who works for the Queensland Department of Primary
Industries, conducted the organic section of grain comparison trials at Dalby
Agricultural College in 2002. The organic wheat produced 3.23 tonnes to the
hectare compared to the conventional wheat yield of 2.22 tonnes. This trial
was conducted during one of the worst droughts on record. Graham McNally of
Kialla Farms, one of Australias significant organic pioneers, consistently
achieves yields comparable to those of the conventional farms in his region.
Dr Rick Welsh of the Henry A. Wallace Institute reviewed numerous academic publications
comparing organic and conventional production systems in the United States.
The data showed that the organic systems were more profitable. This profit was
not always due to premiums, but was instead a result of lower production and
input costs as well as more consistent yields. Dr. Welshs study also showed
that organic agriculture produces better yields than conventional agriculture
in adverse weather events, such as droughts or higher-than-average rainfall.
Will GMOs feed the world?
Argentina is a good example of what happens when a country pursues the policies
of market deregulation and GMO crops. It is the third-largest producer of GMO
crops, with 28 percent of the worlds production. By the 1999-2000 season,
more than 80 percent of the total soybean acreage, or 6.6 million hectares,
had been converted to GMOs. These are some of the results according to a study
published by Lehmann and Pengue in the Biotechnology and Development Monitor:
Declining profit margins prices for soybeans declined 28 percent
between 1993 and 1999.
Farmers profit margins fell by half between 1992 and 1999, making
it difficult for many to pay off bank loans for machinery, chemical inputs and
seeds.
A 32 percent decrease in producers between 1992 and 1997, the
number of producers dropped from 170,000 to 116,000, meaning 54,000 farmers
were forced to leave the industry.
At least 50 percent of the acreage is now managed by corporate agriculture.
There is an increasing role of transnational companies in the agricultural
sector.
Industrialization of grain and soybean production has boosted dependence
on foreign agricultural inputs and increased foreign debt.
Removal of import tariffs led to the bankruptcy of domestic farm machinery
manufacturers and a loss of employment.
The commercial seed sector has become increasingly controlled by subsidiaries
of transnational corporations.
Since the above data was published, the Argentinean economy collapsed, causing
riots and the resignations of several governments. The country is now currently
in deep debt, with its economy under the control of the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank. Its standard of living has declined, and thousands
more farmers have been forced off their farms. Rural and urban poverty and hunger
has increased.
According to Caritas Argentina, the social services agency of the Catholic Church
in that country, over 40 percent of all Argentinean children are now undernourished:
World Health Organization standards for daily caloric intake are unmet
for nearly 40 percent of Argentinean children under 18, and for up to half in
the poorer northeast region of the country. Even in the comparatively wealthy
capital city Buenos Aires, at least 19 children have died of malnutrition in
recent months.
If GMOs cannot feed the children in the country that is the worlds third-largest
producer of GMO crops, how will they feed the rest of the world?
Conclusion: Organic agriculture can feed the world.
The data thus shows that it is possible to obtain very good yields using organic
systems. This is not uniform at the moment, with many organic growers not yet
producing at the levels that are achievable. Education on the best practices
in organic agriculture is a cost-effective and simple method of ensuring high
levels of economically, environmentally and socially sustainable production
where it is needed.
Organic agriculture is a viable solution to preventing global hunger because:
It can achieve high yields.
It can achieve these yields in the areas where it is needed most.
It has low inputs.
It is cost-effective and affordable.
It provides more employment so that the impoverished can purchase their
own needs.
It does not require any expensive technical investment.
It costs tens of millions of dollars and takes many years to develop one genetically
modified plant variety. This money would be spent far more productively on organic
agricultural education, research and extension in the areas where we need to
overcome hunger and poverty.
Organic agriculture is the quickest, most efficient, most cost-effective and
fairest way to feed the world.
Andre
Leu is the president of the Organic Producers Association of
Queensland and vice chair of the Organic Federation of Australia.
He can be reached at P.O. Box 800, Mossman, Queensland 4873, Australia.
Andre Leu
leu@austarnet.com.au
http://www.ofa.org.au
information from other organizations' websites:
The USAID website candidly states: "The principal beneficiary of America's
foreign assistance programs has always been the United States. Close to 80%
of the USAID contracts and grants go directly to American firms. Foreign assistance
programs have helped create major markets for agricultural goods, created new
markets for American industrial exports and meant hundreds of thousands of jobs
for Americans."
"Asked if people were going 'too far' by saying that gene-altered humanitarian
exports were part of a strategy to spread the crops around the world, [Neil
E. Harl, a professor of economics at Iowa State University] said: 'I'm not sure
that is going too far.' "
"The hope of the industry is that over time the market is so flooded [with
GMOs] that there's nothing you can do about it. You just sort of surrender."
Don Westfall, biotech industry consultant and vice-president of Promar International,
Toronto Star, January 9 2001
"It is unconscionable that the U.S. administration would use the threat
of mass starvation as means to promote products that potentially carry a wide
range of health and environmental risks... Yet all some folks in the U.S. government
and business communities can think of is how to make even more money off their
suffering,"
James Clancy, president of Canada's National Union of Public and General Employees
"NUPGE condemns famine exploitation to sell GM foods", NUPGE, October
9 2002
"The USA wants to see its corporations control life's most basic resources,
including seeds, food crops and water. Unfortunately for southern Africa, the
drought plays right into this unprincipled strategy." Dr. Lawrence J. Goodwin
of The Africa Faith & Justice Network, a USA-based NGO comprised of Catholic
religious and social justice groups, quoted in AFJN DENOUNCES IMPOSING GM FOOD
AID ON AFRICA
LINK: http://www.percyschmeiser.com http://www.organicconsumers.org http://www.bhopal.net
http://www.foodfirst.org http://www.resistanceisfertile.com http://www.wellbeingjournal.com
http://www.connectotel.com/gmfood http://www.non-gm-farmers.com http://www.geneticsaction.org.uk
http://www.pan-uk.org http://www.natural-law-party.org.uk http://www.gefoodalert.org
http://www.safe-food.org http://www.truefoodnow.org http://www.geaction.org
http://www.gefree.org http://eco.gn.apc.org/pubs/stop_gmo.html, http://www.ourstolenfuture.org
http://www.factoryfarm.org http://www.tilth.org http://www.bastyr.edu, http://www.gmfoodnews.com
http://www.livingnutrition.com http://www.healthmasters.com http://www.notmilk.com
http://www.nomilk.com
---------------------
Reduce or eliminate the use of Chemical fertilizers made from IMPORTED OIL.
Obtain a free copy of the 20 page document: "Nutrient Quantity or Nutrient
Access" (ECHO Development Notes, Issue 74) from http://www.echonet.org
or http://www.echotech.org .. http://www.growingsolutions.com http://www.soilsoup.com
http://www.wormwoman.com .. organic COMPOST TEA- http://www.soilsoup.com http://www.growingsolutions.com
http://www.soildynamics.com http://www.soilsalive.com http://www.redworms.com
..
Compost Tea Manual and CD Rom by Elaine Ingham, http://www.soilfoodweb.com ..
Eco-Farm, book by Charles Walters, http://www.acresusa.com ..
How to Grow World
Record Tomatoes, book by Charles H. Wilber (http://www.abebooks.com http://www.bn.com)
..
Soul of Soil, book by Joseph Smillie, http://www.acresusa.com ..
WORM COMPOSTING- http://www.schundler.com
http://www.wormwoman.com http://www.vermico.com http://www.wormbooks.com http://www.wormdigest.org
http://www.compostworms.com http://www.mastercomposter.com
Worms Eat my Garbage, book by Mary Appelhof, http://www.wormwoman.com http://www.zeri.org
..
The Secret Life Of
Compost, book by Malcolm Beck, http://www.acresusa.com ..
Mulch it, book by Stu Campbell, http://www.abebooks.com ..
Amaranth to Zai Holes:
ideas for growing food under difficult conditions, book by Laura S. Meitzner,
http://www.echonet.org ..
Cinder Block Gardens,
book by Lynn A. Gillespie (http://www.abebooks.com http://www.bn.com)
Lasagna Gardening, book by Patricia Lanza (http://www.abebooks.com http://www.bn.com)
..
Super Nutrition Gardening,
book by William S. Peavy, http://www.acresusa.com ..
Farmers of Forty Centuries, book by by F.H. King, http://www.acresusa.com ..
Perfect Health- http://www.livingnutrition.com
http://www.healthmasters.com http://www.gardenofhealth.com http://www.breathing.com
..
Immunotics, book by
Doctor Robert Roundtree ..
Bible Cure, book by Doctor Reginald Cherry (http://www.abebooks.com http://www.bn.com)
..
---------------------
/==}organic Plants- http://www.organicplants.co.uk http://www.organiccatalog.com
http://www.keirg.freeserve.co.uk/diary/links/catalog.htm
~~}organic Lawn Care- http://dazzling-lawns.online-here.com http://www.seaweedproducts.co.uk
http://www.chemfreelawns.com
~~}organic animal feed- http://www.organicfeed.co.uk http://www.northlandorganic.com
~~}organic Schools: http://www.permaculture-hawaii.com http://www.earthcare.nelson.org.nz
http://www.echonet.org http://www.seedballs.com http://www.planetherbs.com http://www.social-ecology.org
..
~~}organic Farming- http://www.organicnz.org http://www.fertilizeronline.com
http://www.fertilegarden.com http://www.homeharvest.com http://www.remineralize.org
http://www.medpest.com http://www.plantitearth.com http://www.chelseagreen.com
http://www.alseed.com http://www.alternatechinc.com http://www.tidalorganics.ns.ca,
http://www.ota.com http://www.ccof.org http://www.agro-organics.co.za http://www.norganics.com
http://www.bio-organics.com http://www.noamkelp.com http://www.linksorganic.com
http://www.bradfieldind.com http://www.vidasana.org http://www.organicvolunteers.org
http://www.wisn.org http://www.purebarnyard.com/cockadoodledoo http://www.pharmsolutionsinc.com
http://www.organicxseeds.com http://www.chaseorganics.co.uk http://www.growell.co.uk
http://www.gardenknowledge.co.uk http://www.biocanna.com ..
~~}organic Vegan Animal-Free Farming- http://www.veganorganic.net http://www.veganorganiced.org
http://www.biovegan.org
~~}organic Pesticides- http://www.just-green.com http://www.ghorganics.com http://www.plasmaneem.com
http://www.neemfoundation.org http://www.orangeguard.com http://www.garlicbarrier.com
http://www.extremelygreen.com http://www.hotpepperwax.com http://www.milkyspore.com
http://www.nixalite.com http://www.planetnatural.com http://www.renaissanceherbs.com.au
http://www.greenfire.net http://www.hendrikusorganics.com http://www.eonseed.com
http://www.certified-organics.com http://www.arbico.com http://www.biconet.com
http://www.insectary.com http://www.a-1unique.com http://www.rinconvitova.com
http://www.thebeneficialinsectco.com http://www.hunkin.co.nz http://www.bethurum.com
http://www.aggrand.guarding-our-earth.com http://www.eradi-products.com
~~}more information on organic Pesticides- contact local organic farmers, biointensive
farming, permaculture farmers, biodynamic farmers, Kyusei nature farmers and
Heirloom farmers ..
~~}Vinegar - 25% Acetic Acid eliminates Weeds - Brand Names: BurnOut Weed &
Grass Killer, Quik ll, Safer's Superfast Weed and Grass Killer ..
~~}Corn Gluten Weed Control: Brand Names: Corn Weed Blocker 9-1-0, WeedBan Herbicide
..
---------------------
/==}Kyusei Nature Farming, Effective Microorganisms (EM)- http://www.emtech.org
http://www.naturesnovel.com http://www.agriton.nl/apnanman.html http://www.emtechnologynetwork.org
http://www.emro.co.jp, http://www.emtrading.coml, http://www.em-x.net http://www.dirtworks.net
http://www.lindros.co.za,
~~}Biointensive organic Farming and Gardening- http://www.growbiointensive.org
sandcmoore@juno.com Common Ground of Africa (training for small farmers)- vitus@net2000ke.com
..
~~}Winter organic farming and gardening- http://www.fourseasonfarm.com sandcmoore@juno.com
http://www.homepower.com book "Lasagna Gardening" by Patricia Lanza
..
~~}Energy Efficient Greenhouses- sandcmoore@juno.com http://www.homepower.com
..
---------------------
/==}Heirloom gardening and farming- http://www.thomasetty.co.uk http://www.seedsavers.net
http://www.cooltemperate.co.uk http://www.terredesemences.com http://www.genevar.com.au/seedsavers/resources/35.html
http://www.unitedplantsavers.org http://www.crfg.org http://www.seeds.ca, http://www.hdra.org.uk
http://www.primalseeds.org http://www.seedsave.org http://www.territorial-seed.com
http://www.rareseeds.com http://www.rareplants.de, http://www.heirloomseeds.com
http://www.korewildfruitnursery.co.uk
http://www.seedman.com http://www.bioneers.org http://www.arkinstitute.com http://www.organicseed.com
http://www.bountifulgardens.org http://www.heirloomtomatoes.net http://www.thechilewoman.com
http://www.vidaverde.co.uk http://www.save-foundation.net http://www.ukabc.org
http://www.greenpatchseeds.com.au http://www.clivesimms.com http://www.agroforestry.co.uk
http://www.safefoodfight.org http://www.thecampaign.org http://www.futurefoods.com
http://www.tcwfoodcoop.com/irradiation.htm ..
---------------------
/== "Food and Faith: Toward a More Just Way of Life" book by http://www.earthministry.org
..
~~}Video: BILLION dollar CROP- http://www.bullfrogfilms.com http://www.kenex.com
..
---------------------
Renewable Energy:
http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire/display/23328/index.php
Sustainable Technologies for Real economic Progress:
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/92735.php
Eliminate Hunger:
http://www.thrive.org.uk http://www.greenthumbnyc.org http://www.yesmagazine.com/article.asp?ID=576
http://www.communitygarden.org http://www.permaculture.org.uk http://www.camphill.org.uk
http://www.neemfoundation.org http://www.treesforlife.org http://www.livingnutrition.com
http://www.carbon.org http://www.growingsolutions.com http://www.emnz.com http://www.acresusa.com
http://www.growbiointensive.org http://www.tilth.org http://www.naturewise.org.uk
http://www.echonet.org http://www.biodynamic.org.uk http://www.healthmasters.com
http://www.wattsgardenclub.org
http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/ppatch Luke 10:29 http://www.seattletilth.org
http://www.greengridroofs.com http://www.ecoroofsystems.com http://www.miller-roofscapes.co.uk
http://www.zinco.de
Organic Technology for gardeners and farmers:
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/92738.php
Waste not, Want Not:
http://www.wormwoman.com http://www.zeri.org http://www.oceanarks.org http://www.wolvertonenvironmental.com
http://www.emtech.org http://www.bokashi.co.nz ..
Allotments UK:
http://www.organicallotment.co.uk http://www.allotments-uk.com http://www.allotments4all.co.uk
http://www2.eng.cam.ac.uk/~tpl/allotmentkids.html ..
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA):
http://www.cuco.org.uk/index.php?page=3
Please support LOCAL Organic FAMILY farmers. Thank you!!!
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/92737.php
http://www.localharvest.org
USA forces Iraq to use GE Food!
Are you the next victim of USA atrocities?
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/92733.php
USAID forces other countries to use GE Crops and destroy Local Farmers.
Is our country next on Monsanto's Hit List?
http://manila.indymedia.org/?action=newswire&parentview=3763
USA puts farmers and gardeners in Prisons. Are You next?
Will the USA take away your Job and ravish your Family?
http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2005/06/92734.php
http://www.percyschmeiser.com
http://www.organicconsumers.org/monsanto/seedsaving031405.cfm
GE Food:
http://www.grain.org/nfg/?id=319
http://www.gmfoodnews.com/in220505.txt
http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire/display/23307/index.php
http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire/display/23306/index.php
http://www.gmfoodnews.com/gp100505.txt
USA Chemical Pesticides are devastating Children worldwide.
Is your child safe?
http://www.bhopal.net http://www.calhealthyschools.org http://www.watoxics.org
http://www.pesticidereform.org http://www.healthyschoolscampaign.org http://www.safe2use.com
USA corporation POISONS CHILDREN.
Is your child at risk?
http://www.bibleplus.org/health/ms_lupus.htm
How stupid are the Americans?
http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire/display/23308/index.php
Smart Car:
http://www.smart.com
Keep our country and community strong like a rock. Please ban all GM foods from
our country. Please refrain from purchasing or consuming any product containing
GM materials. Please support LOCAL Organic FAMILY farmers. Please use sustainable
technology. Please help disabled people, older people and poor people to grow
their own organic food. Luke 10:29 THANK YOU for your help!!!
"THE TRUTH SHALL SET YOU FREE."
Please email this web page to friends and to electronic Bulletin Boards. Please
print out & distribute.
Please share this information with other people. THANK YOU ~ God bless you.
www.ofa.org.au
add your comments
Melbourne
Indymedia is a website produced by grassroots media makers offering non-corporate
coverage
of struggles, actions and celebrations. Everyone is a witness. Everyone is a
journalist. N© Melbourne Independent
Media Center. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for
non-commercial reuse, reprint, and
rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors
and are not necessarily endorsed by the
Melbourne Independent Media Center.
Back
to Articles/Farm & Garden
Home |
New to
Raw? |
Hotline |
Action Forum |
|
Multi/Media |
Events |
Press/Media
|