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Agriculture :

Eating Oil
Food supply in a changing climate.

Andy Jones

from Resurgence issue 216
January / February 2003


EVERY TIME WE eat, we are all essentially 'eating oil'. Virtually all 
of the processes in the modern food system are dependent upon this 
finite resource. Moreover, at a time when we should be making massive 
cuts in emissions of greenhouse gases in order to reduce the threat 
posed by climate change, food supply chains are becoming more 
transport-intensive. This results in increasing emissions to the 
point at which the food system is a significant contributor to global 
warming.

One indicator of the unsustainability of the contemporary food system 
is the ratio of energy outputs - the energy content of a food product 
(calories) - to the energy inputs. The latter is all the energy 
consumed in producing, processing, packaging and distributing that 
product. The energy ratio (energy out/energy in) in agriculture has 
decreased from being close to 100 for traditional pre-industrial 
societies to less than 1 for most of the food products supplied to 
consumers in industrialised countries, as energy inputs, mainly in 
the form of fossil fuels, have gradually increased.

In modern high input fruit and vegetable cultivation, the output/ 
input ratio is between 2 and 0.1 (i.e. one calorie of food energy 
output requires up to ten calories of energy input). For intensive 
beef production the ratio is between 0.1 and 0.03, and may reach 
extreme values of 0.002 for winter greenhouse vegetables. All of 
these ratios refer to the energy consumed up to the farm gate and 
exclude processing, packaging and distribution.

However, transport energy consumption is also significant, and if 
included in these ratios would mean that the ratio would decrease 
further. For example, when iceberg lettuce is imported to the uk from 
the usa by plane, 127 calories of energy (aviation fuel) are needed 
to transport 1 calorie of lettuce across the Atlantic. If the energy 
consumed during lettuce cultivation, packaging, refrigeration, 
distribution in the UK and shopping by car were included, the energy 
needed would be even higher. Similarly, ninety-seven calories of 
transport energy are needed to import one calorie of asparagus by 
plane from Chile, and sixty-six units of energy are consumed when 
flying one unit of carrot energy from South Africa.

The energy inefficiency of the food system can be highlighted by 
'unravelling' supply chains for everyday food products. For example, 
researchers at the Swedish Institute for Food and Biotechnology have 
analysed the processes involved in the manufacture of a bottle of 
tomato ketchup. The study considered the production of inputs to 
agriculture, tomato cultivation and conversion to tomato paste in 
Italy, the processing and packaging of the paste and other 
ingredients into tomato ketchup in Sweden, and the retail and storage 
of the final product. All this involved more than fifty-two transport 
and process stages.

The aseptic bags used to package the tomato paste were produced in 
the Netherlands and transported to Italy to be filled, placed in 
steel barrels, then moved to Sweden. The five-layered red bottles 
were either produced in the uk or Sweden with materials from Japan, 
Italy, Belgium, the usa and Denmark. The screw-cap of the bottle and 
the plug were produced in Denmark and transported to Sweden. 
Cardboard boxes which were used to distribute the final product, and 
labels, glue and ink were not included in this analysis.

Other transport stages associated with the production and supply of 
fertilisers, pesticides, processing equipment, sugar, vinegar, spices 
and salt and farm machinery were also excluded. Many of these are 
probably imported and involve long-distance international 
transportation. Finally, the product is likely to be purchased during 
a shopping trip taken by car.

Trade-related transportation has been estimated to account for one 
eighth of world oil consumption and is expected to increase by 70% 
between 1992 and 2004, from 29 to 49 trillion tonne-kilometres. If 
this occurs, the carbon dioxide emissions resulting from 
international trade will increase from approximately 1.45 billion 
tonnes in 1992 to 2.45 billion tonnes in 2004. Transport associated 
with the food system is a significant part of this story. One study 
has estimated that uk imports of food products and animal feed 
involved transportation by sea, air and road amounting to over 83 
billion tonne-kilometres. This required 1.6 billion litres of fuel 
and, based on a conservative figure of 50 grammes of carbon dioxide 
per tonne-kilometre, resulted in 4.1 million tonnes of carbon dioxide 
emissions.

Food miles within the uk are also increasing, and almost all 
foodstuffs are moved around the country by truck rather than by 
other, less environmentally damaging modes, such as rail or barge. 
The amount of food moved around the uk increased by 16% between 1978 
and 1999, and the distance this food travelled rose by 50%. It has 
been estimated that the co2 emissions attributable to producing, 
processing, packaging and distributing the food consumed by a family 
of four are about eight tonnes a year.

It is not that this transportation is critical or necessary. In many 
cases countries import and export similar quantities of the same food 
products. For example, in 1997 126 million litres of liquid milk were 
imported into the uk and at the same time 270 million litres of milk 
were exported from the UK.

Is organic any different? The organic system is more energy-efficient 
to the farm gate. One of the benefits of organic production is that 
energy consumption and, therefore, fossil fuel consumption and 
greenhouse gas emissions, are less than that in conventional systems. 
The improved energy efficiency in organic systems is largely due to 
lower (or zero) fertiliser and pesticide inputs. In the case of milk 
production it has been found that organic systems are almost five 
times more energy-efficient on a per-animal basis and three and a 
half times more energy-efficient in terms of unit output (the energy 
required to produce a litre of milk).

So far, so good, but once past the farm gate things begin to go 
wrong. Britain imports over three-quarters of its organic produce, 
and despite consumer demand, only two per cent of its land is 
organically farmed. As the market has grown it has been met by 
imports.

THE CONTEMPORARY FOOD system is inherently unsustainable. Indicators 
of social, environmental and economic performance, such as food 
security, greenhouse-gas emissions, food miles, lower farm incomes 
and biodiversity loss highlight this fact.

This process could be reversed by re-establishing local and regional 
food supply and substituting 'near for far' in production and 
distribution systems. This would reduce both the demand for and the 
environmental burdens associated with transportation. The proximity 
principle is a straightforward concept in which products are sourced 
as near as possible to the consumer. When applied to food supply, 
local food systems in the form of home-delivery box schemes, farmers' 
markets and shops selling local produce would replace imported and 
centrally distributed foodstuffs.

Taking uk food supply and trade at present, there is great potential 
to apply the proximity principle. Apart from products such as 
bananas, coffee and tea, many of the foodstuffs that are imported at 
present could be produced in Britain. Many meat products, cereals, 
dairy products and cooking oils are, or could be, available here 
throughout the year. So could fruit and vegetables. The land 
currently used to produce food that is exported could be used to 
increase uk food self-sufficiency.

There is growing evidence of the potential of local food systems to 
reduce the transport-related environmental impacts associated with 
food supply. In the case of organic produce, a survey of retailers 
compared local and global sourcing of produce marketed in different 
outlets between June and August 2001. Products were chosen that were 
available in the uk during these months but are at present imported 
by the multiple retailers. These included spring onions imported by 
plane from Mexico, potatoes imported by road from Sicily, and onions 
imported by ship from New Zealand. It was found that local sourcing 
through a farmers' market, for example, would reduce the 
greenhouse-gas emissions associated with distribution by a factor of 
650 in the case of a farmers' market and more for box schemes and 
farm-shop sales.

The value of UK food, feed and drink imports in 1999 was over ‚P7 
billion. A reduction in food imports would not only be of benefit to 
the UK economy as a whole but could also be a major driver in rural 
regeneration as farm incomes would increase substantially.

There are essentially three mechanisms through which the food system 
could relocalise. These are:

a) Voluntary approaches by farmers, the food industry and consumers:
Although many retailers now have a local sourcing policy and targets 
for the percentage of food products sourced within the locality or 
region, the targets that have been set are low. Asda, for example, 
aims to source two per cent of food products locally. Even when 
supermarkets promote produce as being local or regional, the food 
will probably have been transported a considerable distance as a 
result of using regional distribution centres and centralised 
processing. The economies of scale and centralised distribution 
systems of the multiple retailers are not easily suited to dealing 
with small-scale producers and direct deliveries to stores by local 
farmers and processors. More can be done, especially if the economic 
framework changes and there is more pressure from consumers. However, 
many concerned consumers do not have the information with which they 
could make an informed choice. Information could be improved through 
some form of label that indicated the distance accumulated and the 
transport-related environmental impact. Colour coding could also be 
applied. The organic certifier Bio-Swiss already distinguishes 
between imported and national produce on its labels.

Farm assurance schemes and organic certification bodies could 
introduce the proximity principle into certification. The options for 
reducing post-farm-gate transport by providing incentives through 
reduced certification costs should now be considered.

Many restaurants, hotels and public houses now source ingredients 
locally. This is often seen as a direct way to support local farmers 
and also indicates the freshness and seasonality of the food on the 
menu. The National Trust now has a policy of supplying its 
restaurants with local food. This is a welcome move that could become 
more widespread.

b) Increases in environmental taxes:
Another way to reduce the damaging effects of food miles is to 
increase the costs of transportation so that the environmental damage 
(such as air pollution and greenhouse-gas emissions) is accounted 
for. In Switzerland, a Heavy Vehicle Fee (HVF) was introduced in 
January 2001. The HVF charges heavy goods vehicles (over 3.5 tonnes) 
based on their gross weight, kilometres driven and emissions.

In 1994, in the UK, The Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution 
recommended that fuel duty be increased every year so as to double 
the price of fuel, relative to the prices of other goods, by 2005, 
which would require a 9% annual increase in fuel duty. Successive UK 
governments adopted increases in fuel duty until the fuel protests in 
2000, following which the fuel duty escalator was dropped.

It is assumed that increases in the costs of road transport will 
encourage a shift to more environmentally benign modes of transport 
such as rail freight, and public transport and home delivery in the 
case of shopping trips that are currently made by car. In theory, if 
transport costs continue to increase there will be a point at which 
existing distribution systems become uneconomic and alternative 
distribution systems that are more localised become a viable 
alternative. The most obvious gap in the economic framework is the 
failure to tax aviation fuel.

At present most of these taxation measures are seen as being 
politically unacceptable. Yet the introduction of some kind of fiscal 
or taxation policy is likely to be required if sustainable food 
supply is to become a reality. However, local food schemes will need 
to be developed at the same time, or preferably beforehand, in order 
to provide an attractive and viable alternative to 
transport-intensive food supply chains.

c) Policy and fiscal support for local foods:
Developing a sustainable food system should be a key policy objective 
for central government, local government and regional development 
agencies. For instance, the initiative recently announced to provide 
"one piece of fruit per schoolchild" offers an ideal opportunity for 
the government to show its commitment to the development of a local 
food system. Ambitious targets could be set to meet this increased 
demand in fresh fruit locally.

Funds available at local, regional, national and European level 
should be directed to support the development of sustainable local 
and regional food-distribution systems. Specifically, there should be 
an increase in siphoning off cap (Common Agricultural Policy) 
production subsidies into support for sustainable farming and 
regional food economies. Regional Development Agencies could also 
play an important role in developing regional food systems through 
grant allocation, technical support and marketing advice. All 
regional development plans should include local food economy targets.

Direct support for the expansion of local food systems could come in 
the form of targets set for the procurement of local food by schools, 
hospitals and publicly-run catering facilities. The targets could be 
modest to begin with, which would allow local food producers to adapt 
to the new circumstances. Another mechanism that could be used is 
inducement through the tax system, so that the rates paid by 
businesses such as hotels, restaurants and caterers would be reduced 
if a certain percentage of their food were supplied locally or 
regionally. The introduction of practical and classroom-based 
education about food, farming and sustainable development in the 
National Curriculum would also help to raise awareness and 
understanding.

A FOOD SYSTEM is not sustainable if it relies almost completely on 
one finite energy source - namely fossil fuel - that causes enormous 
levels of pollution during its production, distribution and use. 
Although food supplies in wealthy countries such as the UK appear to 
be secure, and choice, in terms of thousands of food products being 
available at supermarkets, seems limitless, this is an illusion.

The vulnerability of our food system to sudden changes was 
demonstrated during the fuel protests in 2000. A sharp increase in 
the price of oil or a disruption in oil supplies would present a far 
more serious threat to food security. Food production and 
distribution, as they are organised today, would not be able to 
function. Considering the situation in the Middle East, where most 
oil originates and reserves lie, governments cannot continue to 
ignore the dangers associated with our addiction to crude oil. To 
live in a sustainable and secure world this dependency must end.

The food system is now a significant contributor to climate change. 
Reducing the carbon dioxide emissions from food production, 
processing and distribution by minimising the distance between 
producer and consumer should be a critical part of any strategy to 
mitigate global warming.

The priority must be the development of local and regional food 
systems, preferably organically based, in which a large percentage of 
demand is met within the locality or region. This approach, combined 
with fair trade, will ensure secure food supplies, minimise fossil 
fuel consumption and reduce the vulnerability associated with a 
dependency on food exports and imports. Policies must now be 
implemented to achieve this goal even if previous agreements have to 
be rewritten. o

Extracts from a report, Eating Oil: Food Supply in a Changing 
Climate, priced ‚P2 from Elm Farm Research Centre on 01488 658298. 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Andy Jones worked at Sustain in 2001 as project officer on the Food 
and Fuel project. He is now based at the Stockholm Environment 
Institute at the University of York.


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