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Food Sovereignty and Climate Change: Smallholder Farming Can Cool Down the Earth * M. Jahi Chappell School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Washington.

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Presentation on theme: "Food Sovereignty and Climate Change: Smallholder Farming Can Cool Down the Earth * M. Jahi Chappell School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Washington."— Presentation transcript:

1 Food Sovereignty and Climate Change: Smallholder Farming Can Cool Down the Earth * M. Jahi Chappell School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Washington State University Vancouver

2 *Effects of Industrial Agriculture on Global Warming and the Potential of Small-Scale Agroecological Techniques to mitigate those Effects B. B. Lin, M. J. Chappell, J. Vandermeer, G. Smith, I. Perfecto, E. Quintero, R. Bezner-Kerr, D. Griffith, S. Ketcham, S. Latta, P. McMichael, K. McGuire, R. Nigh, D. Rocheleau and J. Soluri (in review)

3 Agriculture and Global Climate Change Agriculture generates ~31% of anthropogenic Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) –10-14% from direct emissions –12-17% from agriculture-driven land conversion IPCC 2007; Scialabba and Müller-Lindenlauf 2010

4 Agriculture and Global Climate Change “Little doubt” industrial agriculture is disproportionately responsible for agriculture-generated GHGs Small-scale agroecological farms can help via reducing emissions & sequestering carbon (mitigation) Scialabba and Müller-Lindenlauf 2010; Niggli et al. 2009; Lin et al., in review

5 Agroecological and Industrial Agricultural Approaches Industrial (Green Revolution) methods: pursues high productivity through intensive use of time and space, larger scales, synthetic inputs, mechanization, and homogenization Agroecology: seeks to integrate and replicate existing ecosystem processes, in turn minimizing or eliminating external and synthetic inputs

6 Smallholder Farming Can Cool Down the Earth

7 Agroecological Smallholder Farming Can Cool Down the Earth Our Sustainable Agriculture Works Japan Family Farmers Movement (NOUMINREN)

8 Agriculture and Global Climate Change Land Conversion and Productivity Speaking Practically About Practices Other Issues Food Sovereignty, Human Rights, and Hunger

9 Land Conversion and Productivity: Historically “Spared” Land (and Carbon)? Recent and earlier studies indicate “land- sparing” effect is not generally seen Small number of cases of “land-sparing” tied to increased grain imports; another study found per capita agricultural exports to be one of the most predictive factors for deforestation Angelsen and Kaimowitz 2001; Ewers et al. 2009; Rudel et al. 2009; Perfecto and Vandermeer 2010; DeFries et al. 2010

10 Smallholders and deforestation Significant amounts of deforestation due to large farmers; FAO data from 1990 to 2000 found: –Large landowners responsible for majority of deforestation in Latin America, Asia, Pacific –Smallholders responsible for majority in tropical Africa Harder to measure but vital to consider (and study!): –Industrial/large-scale agriculture helps create the conditions that push small farmers into further deforestation –Direct expropriation of lands, competition, subsidy structures, labor: “lock” on productive resources –Food sovereignty and land reform FAO 2009; Vandermeer et al. 2009Sloan 2007; Weis 2007

11 Smallholders and deforestation DeFries et al. 2010: Small-scale producers are no longer the dominant driver of deforestation in many places (from data set for 2000-2005) –Exports and Urban Population Growth Rate

12 Agricultural Practices Lin et al., in review; based on Smith et al. 2008 + means positive effect on mitigation - means negative effect (more emissions)

13 Agricultural Practices Lin et al., in review; based on Smith et al. 2008 + means positive effect on mitigation - means negative effect (more emissions)

14 Agricultural Practices Niggli et al. 2009, with data from Lal, 2004

15 Other Issues Disruption of Global N and C cycles “From an energy producer to an energy consumer” –Organic/agroecological systems are 20-40% more energy efficient than conventional/industrial systems (e.g. Pimentel 2006) Small farm productivity –Inverse Relationship (Microclimates? More research needed…) –Largest productivity gains likely in least productive areas (Badgley et al. 2007; Hine et al. 2008) The Trouble with Televory and Daly’s Danish Cookies

16 Food Sovereignty and Human Rights Hunger doesn’t come from a lack of food, but a lack of food sovereignty –More than enough food in the world –Structural adjustment, food reserves, international markets, imports/exports Past decreases in hunger have come principally from the provision of human rights Chappell and Lavalle 2009, Weis 2007, Davis 2002; Smith and Haddad 2000

17 Fighting hunger 1970-1995 Smith and Haddad 2000

18 Our Sustainable Agriculture Works Japan Family Farmers Movement (NOUMINREN) “Pay back your Climate Debt!”: Investment in Agroecology, Food Sovereignty and Smallholders as Climate Reparations Food Sovereignty and Human Rights


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