Farming and Local Food

Within the Saskatchewan RCE, food production has always been central to Saskatchewan livelihoods. Saskatchewan was historically called the “breadbasket of the world” based on its wheat exports. However, agricultural livelihoods face the many challenges of low prices, high input costs, a high dependence on increasingly scarce fossil fuels, and ecological challenges associated with crop monocultures and soil degradation. These challenges also present opportunities to move from highly mechanized agriculture to more sustainable forms that focus on local food production and farm self-sufficiency. Similarly, opportunities exist to reduce vulnerability and risk by reorienting ranching and other forms of livestock production away from intensive industrial processes to structures that are more profitable for individuals and family farms. ESD can help consumers understand where their food is coming from with greater transparency between farmers and consumers. Consumers want to know more about food safety, nutrition, treatment of animals, environmental impacts, and working conditions including wage levels. ESD can enable more healthy food consumption where the true costs of food are reflected in fair prices for local producers mediated through new regional relationships. Local food production can also enable individuals and communities to promote their own food security and self-sufficiency by acting in an integrated way as producers, consumers, and managers of wastes. Consumers can be empowered with the knowledge needed to discern food quality along with the skills needed for nutritious food preparation of basic foodstuffs.
With the centrality of market institutions in the modern global economy, building wise consumers and business practices that simultaneously meet economic, social, and ecological bottom lines is central to achieving sustainability. The full life-cycle costs of products and services need to be understood by all if market prices are to reflect their true costs rather than offloading externalities on other organizations, communities, and future generations. At the same time, many livelihood opportunities are available at a local level to meet needs outside of the market (for example, through voluntary activity or individual production aimed at meeting one's own needs). A focus on wise production, consumption, and waste minimization enables important linkages to be made between rural and urban communities and is facilitated by a regional approach to ESD.
RCE response requested for next RCE bulletin and special edition
Please see the note below from the UNU office regarding the next deadline for the RCE Bulletin. Feel free to cc me if you have material you would like to submit. Also, please note the special edition topics.--Roger
Dear RCE colleagues,
As before, the deadline for submissions for the next RCE bulletin is Wednesday, December 16. Please send in news of your RCE's events and activities from Oct-December along with photos, if any. Information on upcoming events is also very welcome.
In addition, we are also considering a special edition of the bulletin focusing on Sustainable Schools.
The Asia-Pacific continental group has been discussing the mode of information and experience sharing on various topics, and one of their recommendations was the development of special editions of the RCE bulletin. We are therefore exploring the possibility of a special on schools.
The special issue will cover:
1. ESD in school curricula
2. Teachers' training programme (pre-service and in-service)
3. Educational materials related to ESD
4. Non-formal school programmes
5. ESD and school systems.
This issue of the bulletin will be a medium for your RCE to promote your activities and perhaps inspire other RCEs' work.
Please let me know of your interest to contribute by Monday, December 7. Final contributions of about 300 words would be required by Monday 21 December.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Sampreethi
Sampreethi Aipanjiguly
Communications Coordinator
ESD Programme, UNU-IAS
- RogerPetry's blog
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online discussion with Pierre Desrochers: is eating local worth it?
Hi;
I've included the text (below) from 2 articles in the Globe and Mail:
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/is-eating-local-worth-it/article1390549/
and
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/professors-square-off-on-local-food/article1390546/
The event is linked from the bottom of the first article.
Best regards,
Daryl
--
Daryl H. Hepting, Ph.D.
Associate Professor * Computer Science Department * CW 308.22
University of Regina * Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada S4S 0A2
dhh@cs.uregina.ca * http://www.cs.uregina.ca/~hepting
tel: (306) 585-5210 * fax: (306) 585-4745 * cell: (306) 596-6312
--
Join us Monday, Dec. 7 at noon EST as Professor Pierre Desrochers takes your questions on the benefits of eating local. In Saturday's Globe and Mail, Global Food Reporter Jessica Leeder wrote about Prof. Desrochers' argument that eating local isn't the best way for Canadians to reduce their carbon footprint:
"It doesn't make sense to have cattle ranges in Southern Ontario where the land can be better used to produce tomatoes or cucumbers," Prof. Desrochers points out. "You end up destroying more jobs by buying uncompetitive local food than the number of jobs you create in the process."
As Ms. Leeder writes, Prof. Desrochers' "food-miles calculus has made him persona non grata all the way from his Mississauga campus to Queen's Park, which is in the midst of pushing local food into Ontario's prisons, hospitals and schools."
Whether you agree with Prof. Desrochers or not, it's a provocative argument. Return to this page on Monday at noon to participate in the discussion with Prof. Desrochers, or leave a question in advance using our Comment function below
--
Sarah Wakefield is a professor in the department of geography at the University of Toronto. Her current research focuses on sustainable food systems, with projects investigating food localism and the role of community service organizations and municipal governments in creating local food security.
Misunderstood food miles
Desrochers Food miles are a marketing fad … which distorts the environmental impacts of agricultural production, the affordability, energy consumption and environmental impact of modern food production.
Wakefield Food miles are only one tool to help consumers see the “big picture” of food production and distribution. …The activists I know would like to see the existing food system transformed into something more environmentally sustainable and socially just. Local food is seen as a part of that transformation, not the ultimate goal.
The road less travelled
Desrochers The distance travelled by a product between producer and consumer is not indicative of the relative “cost” to the environment as expressed in terms of greenhouse gas emissions. The greatest volume of emissions are often incurred during food production or transport between shop and home in the country of consumption.
Flying versus driving
Desrochers A UK consumer driving six miles to buy Kenyan green beans emits more carbon per bean than flying them from Kenya to the United Kingdom. Driving a car to and from the retailers to purchase food contributes 48 per cent of vehicle miles and 13 per cent of CO2 emissions associated with food purchases, according to one U.S. study.
To grow near, or far?
Desrochers Growing locally out of season (in greenhouses, for example) can be more environmentally damaging than importing foods over long distances from producers that use low-carbon technologies.
Wakefield These three points all riff on the same theme: Namely, that food miles are not the only consideration when assessing the environmental impact of the food we eat. It makes sense to pay attention to personal travel to and from shops, and to reduce our greenhouse-gas emissions where possible. It also makes sense to buy food with the lowest possible environmental impact. However, … information about the conditions under which food is produced is hard to come by. When consumers buy local, they can be confident that the environmental and health standards for their region were met. And they can work with farmers and regulators to change things they don't like, something that is far more difficult in a globalized food system.
Buying local hurts
Desrochers A misplaced emphasis on transported distance from producers to retailers as a sustainability indicator will hurt the development of more distant, poorer economies and therefore hurt their capacity to devote more resources to environmental protection.
Wakefield Literally millions of small-scale subsistence farmers have been displaced by export-oriented corporate agriculture. No longer able to feed themselves, they – and their nations – increasingly rely on food purchased in the global marketplace. This can have disastrous consequences when food prices fluctuate.
ONLINE DISCUSSION: Join us Monday, Dec. 7 at noon EST as Prof. Desrochers takes your questions about local food
- DarylHepting's blog
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Agricultural Plastics - workshop on recycling options
According to the Western Producer, western Canadian farmers use 12,000-16,000 grain bags every year, mostly in Saskatchewan. Each of these weighs between 135 and 315 kg. Add to that the twine, silage bags, bale wrap and there's a lot of agricultural plastic out there. Farmers have few choices (most of them bad) for handling this material. Various groups have been calling for action, looking for more environmentally responsible solutions.
The Saskatchewan Waste Reduction Council is hosting a workshop on Options for Recycling Agricultural Plastics
Wednesday, January 20th, 9:30a.m. - 3:00p.m.
at the Confederation Inn in Saskatoon.
The program includes:
-Trends in Ag Plastics in Saskatchewan
-Alberta’s Ag Plastic Recycling Pilot Program — Christina Seidel, Recycling Council of Alberta
-The Pesticide Container Recycling Program—how it works and what we can learn from it — Barry Friesen, CleanFARMS
-Who wants ag plastic? We do — Bevan May, The Plastics Place
-The Moose Jaw Watershed Ag Plastics Recycling Pilot — Tammy Myers, Moose Jaw River Watershed Stewards (tentative)
-Discussion/Interactive Session -Collection options; -Financing options; -How to move forward
This is an opportunity for people concerned about agricultural plastics to have input and work on a solution together.
More details are included in the attached registration form. To register, open the file, fill in the form and submit by email (use the 'submit' button in the top right-hand corner of the file), or fax the completed form to 306-665-2128. Please feel free to forward this email. Martha HollingerSWRC(306) 931-3242
- DarylHepting's blog
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climate vigils? Can we organize them in Regina, Craik, Saskatoon -- and elsewhere?
(From avaaz.org)
Dear friends,
It takes just 3 minutes - simply add a location to the global map:
Click to register a climate vigil.
This is a time to step up. Next month world leaders gather in Copenhagen to thrash out a new global climate agreement. The outcome will only be so bold as we demand - and it could be as dismal as we allow.
The biggest threat? That among the politicking and bureaucracy, the world forgets what's at stake.
So here's the plan: in the middle of the negotiations, we hold candlelight vigils in every corner of the planet to put real human faces on the need for a real climate deal. Together we made September's Global Wake Up Call huge - but at this crucial moment let's double our efforts for a global day of climate action that world leaders and media can't miss.
To get started simply pick a good local vigil location nearby and register it on the global map. From there it's dead easy - just bring some candles and pass out the short provided message for people to take turns reading. It takes less than an hour to organise - and Avaaz members in your area will be invited to attend.
This is a time to step up - let's rise to the occasion.
http://www.avaaz.org/en/real_deal_hosts
We're just weeks away from what is truly the most important moment yet in the world's response to climate change. We do not expect, nor do we accept, anything less than what is needed to save our planet.
Here’s how every event will make a difference:
National pressure - in global negotiations every country makes a difference, for better or for worse. The problem is most of the time international negotiations aren’t closely followed at home - but having local events will show leaders in Canada that this time we’re watching keenly, with the power of a coordinated international movement to name and shame those countries that hold up progress.
World media - creating a world media story takes a world in action. We need to show journalists that this is more than just another protest: it’s a global coordinated day of action on a massive scale. We have demonstrated that this works -- our Global Wake Up Call and the 350 day of action both generated huge global press coverage earlier this year. Now, in the middle of the Copenhagen talks, the media moment is even bigger. Thousands of vigils around the planet will give this day of action the scale we need to make an even bigger global media impact.
Photographic evidence- Photos of every vigil from around the world will be printed and delivered to negotiators and world leaders in Copenhagen - they are evidence that people around the world have the very same ambitious goal for our planet: a real climate deal. All action photos will be also be posted on the internet for millions of Avaaz members to see and distributed to the global media.
This is a time to step up - let's all of us seize the opportunity:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/real_deal_hosts
Thanks for all that you do,
Ricken, Ben, Taren, Iain, Sam, Alice, Milena, Paul, Luis, Julius, Lisa and the whole Avaaz team.

Want to support Avaaz? We're entirely funded by donations and receive no money from governments or corporations. Our dedicated online team ensures even the smallest contributions go a long way -- donate here.
ABOUT AVAAZ Avaaz.org is an independent, not-for-profit global campaigning organization that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people inform global decision-making. (Avaaz means "voice" in many languages.) Avaaz receives no money from governments or corporations, and is staffed by a global team based in Ottawa, London, Rio de Janeiro, New York, Buenos Aires, and Geneva. Click here to learn more about our largest campaigns. Don't forget to check out our Facebook and Myspaceand Bebo pages! You can also follow Avaaz on Twitter!
You are getting this message because you signed "September 21st Global Wake-Up Call" on 2009-09-16 using the email address hepting@cs.uregina.ca. To ensure that Avaaz messages reach your inbox, please add avaaz@avaaz.org to your address book. To change your email address, language settings, or other personal information, click here:https://secure.avaaz.org/act/index.php?r=profile&user=1447dfbfcd39ec697fabf0500643fd7a〈=en or simply click here to unsubscribe.
To contact Avaaz, please do not reply to this email. Instead, write to us via the webform at http://www.avaaz.org/en/contact. You can also call us at +1-888-922-8229 (US) or +55 21 2509 0368 (Brazil).
- DarylHepting's blog
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Call for Application
The Canadian Commission for UNESCO is currently looking for interested young Canadians, between the ages of 15 and 30 years old, to become new members of its Youth Advisory Group (YAG).
Being a member of the Youth Advisory Group requires a time commitment, approximately between 2 to 3 hours a month or more, depending on ongoing projects and activities. The members are asked to share their point of view regarding a variety of issues and to support the development of new partnerships and projects in the communities. They may also be called upon to participate in events, at the local, national or international levels. Members of the YAG are in constant communication with the Programme Officer, Youth, with their Provincial YAG Coordinator, and with the other members of the Group. They may also cooperate with the Commission’s other partners. Potential candidates for YAG membership must want, and be able, to dedicate the necessary effort and commitment required. New YAG members will be expected to help implement the 2010 YAG Plan of Action, to come in January 2010. This Plan of Action will be based on recommendations contained in the 2009 Pan-Canadian Youth consultation report (see attached document).
Before December 23, 2009- Please complete the enclosed application form and return it with a copy of your résumé and a cover letter to:
Marie-Christine Lecompte
Programme Officer - Youth
Canadian Commission for UNESCO
350 Albert Street, P.O. Box 1047
Ottawa, Ontario, K1P 5V8
Phone: (613) 566-4414 ext. 5567
Fax: (613) 566-4405
- JonYee's blog
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