Australian Farm Institute Executive Director Mick Keogh says the
international local food movement brings the potential for a retreat from
globalised agricultural markets.
Unwittingly
the local food movement also has the potential to dramatically increase
agriculture’s impact on the environment, he says.
A
‘locavore’ is defined as a person who seeks to only consume food that is grown
less than 160 km away. More generally, the 2008 U.S. Farm Bill, defines local
food as produced and consumed within a state, or that is consumed less than 640
km from where it is produced.
“Irrespective of the validity of the reasons
advanced for preferring local food, the movement seems to encompass a strong
desire to retreat from the globalised, internationally traded food supply
system,” Keogh says.
One
often-claimed attribute of local food systems that is not supported by
available research is the claim that local food systems are better for the
environment.
“A
UK consumer opting for the
local UK dairy product would
unwittingly be selecting a product that has double the energy and environmental
footprint of the competing New Zealand
product, despite the New
Zealand product having been transported
almost 18,000 kilometres,” Keogh says.
A comparison for lamb production, he says,
shows the New Zealand lamb shipped to the UK had an emission “footprint” of 688
kilograms of CO2-e per tonne of lamb compared to the UK product with an
emission footprint of 2,850 kg of CO2-e.
Keogh says a further aspect of the local food movement that is seemingly
at odds with many perceptions is the implications of a ‘local food’ model for
the potential of global agriculture to provide sufficient food for a larger
future population.
“It
is also easy to overlook the fact that the benefits of specialisation (growing
specific crops in areas where they are agronomically best suited and
transporting them to distant markets), modern science and scale economies mean
that the world is now consistently able to produce a surplus of food, which can
be safely and efficiently delivered to any location on earth in a relatively
short period of time,” he says.
A
recent estimate says for the United States to maintain current output levels
for 40 major food crops and vegetables under a locavore-like production system
would require an additional 24.3 million hectares of cropland, 2.45 million tonnes
more fertiliser, and 22.7 million kg more chemicals.
“The
result would be a profound increase in the carbon and energy footprint of the U.S. food
system, and the destruction of significant natural habitat due to land use
change,” Keogh says.