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Press Release, September 2007
FAO Report says organic farming fights hunger, tackles
climate change, good for farmers, consumers and the
environment. Sam Burcher
FAO favours organic agriculture
The United Nations Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO)
has come out in favour of organic agriculture. Its report
Organic Agriculture and Food Security explicitly states that
organic agriculture can address local and global food
security challenges [1]. Organic farming is no longer to be
considered a niche market within developed countries, but a
vibrant commercial agricultural system practised in 120
countries, covering 31 million hectares (ha) of cultivated
land plus 62 million ha of certified wild harvested areas.
The organic market was worth US$40 billion in 2006, and
expected to reach US$70 billion by 2012.
Nadia Scialabba, an FAO official, defined organic
agriculture as: “A holistic production management system
that avoids the use of synthetic fertilizers and pesticides,
and genetically modified organisms, minimizes pollution of
air, soil and water, and optimises the health and
productivity of plants, animals and people.”
The strongest benefits of organic agriculture, Scialabba
said, are its reliance on fossil fuel independent, locally
available resources that incur minimal agro-ecological
stresses and are cost effective.
She described organic
agriculture as a “neo-traditional food system” which
combines modern science and indigenous knowledge.
The FAO Report strongly suggests that a worldwide shift to
organic agriculture can fight world hunger and at the same
time tackle climate change. According to FAO’s previous
World Food Summit report [2], conventional agriculture,
together with deforestation and rangeland burning, are
responsible for 30 percent of the CO2 and 90 percent of
nitrous oxide emissions worldwide.
Organic agriculture overcomes paradox of conventional food
production systems as follows:
Global food supply is sufficient, but 850 million are undernourished and go hungry
Use of chemical agricultural inputs is increasing; yet grain productivity is dwindling to seriously low levels
Costs of agricultural inputs are rising, but commodity costs have been in steady decline over the past five decades.
Knowledge is increasingly provided through fast information technologies, but nutritionally related diseases are rising
Industrialised food systems cause deaths through pesticide poisonings and high numbers of farmer have committed suicides, while millions of jobs have been lost in rural areas.
In contrast, organic agriculture offers an alternative food system that improves agricultural performance to better provide access to food, nutritional adequacy, environmental quality, economic efficiency, and social equity.
This is crucial if agricultural production in developing countries is to rise by 56 percent by 2030 to meet nutritional needs, as stated in the Report.
More at http://www.i-sis.org.uk/FAOPromotesOrganicAgriculture.php
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