*By* *Jill Richardson <http://www.alternet.org/authors/9738/>*

<http://www.alternet.org/story/147256/life_after_oil%3A_cuba_can_teach_us_how_to_live_without_our_dirty_fossil_fuel_addiction?page=entire#disqus_thread>
Life After Oil: Cuba Can Teach Us How to Live Without Our Dirty Fossil Fuel
Addiction
 The crisis in the Gulf is only the most recent reminder that we have to
begin imagining a post-carbon future.

*
[Certain text portions in the original articles are either removed or
highlighted by larger fonts- Venu]**

*
http://www.alternet.org/story/147256/life_after_oil%3A_cuba_can_teach_us_how_to_live_without_our_dirty_fossil_fuel_addiction?page=entire

"..Cuba, a nation with nearly 100 percent literacy and a highly educated
population, simply didn't have enough oil to transport students to and from
the island's major universities. And, perhaps most fundamentally, Cubans had
simultaneously lost food and the inputs needed to grow their own food using
industrialized agriculture. With only an average of 60 percent of their
caloric needs met, Cubans began to starve.

The country needed to restructure in order to survive...But, keeping in mind
that we can and should be selective in what we replicate, Cuba does provide
a model for running a modern society on little oil. Nowhere is this truer
than in agriculture. Cuba is perhaps the only country on earth with a
national policy promoting food sovereignty via agroecology (that is, being
able to feed their own population by growing food organically and
ecologically).

The first phase of transitioning to agroecology involves input substitution.
Farmers apply compost, manure or worm casting in place of nitrogen
fertilizer and use organic pesticides in place of chemical ones. Cuban
scientists worked to identify native beneficial insects, fungi and bacteria
that prey on local pests. The island has hundreds of stations that produce
these beneficials and provide them at a low cost to Cuban farmers. Whereas a
chemical pesticide kills all bugs, good and bad, beneficial organisms only
prey on the pests, leaving the rest of the ecosystem intact.

When agroecology advances beyond mere input substitution, farmers begin
mimicking nature in order to create healthy agroecosystems that increase
food production while preventing many pest infestations in the first place.
Simple techniques like crop rotation, mulching, planting cover crops and
intercropping (planting more than one species of crop together) can work
wonders to increase yield while decreasing pest damage. For example, Cubans
have found they can nearly double yields by intercropping tomatoes with corn
and cassava or by intercropping cucumbers and radishes.

A common model in Cuba is the "organipónico," an often urban farm made up of
long, narrow raised beds filled with a mix of soil and composted manure or
another organic material. Often, the beds are intercropped, growing lettuce
within a border of radishes or cucumbers beneath a shade canopy of pole
beans. At the edges of each bed, Cubans grow sorghum, corn, chives, basil,
or marigolds as barriers to pests. The setup of these organipónicos and
other Cuban agroecological farms is so simple that it can be hard to imagine
that the Cubans are practicing cutting edge science -- but they are!

The laws of nature are the same all around the world, but actually
transitioning to ecological agriculture requires many social and economic
factors that just plain aren't present in the U.S. -- and are in Cuba.
Because the Cuban government wishes to promote local food production, it
helps farmers gain access to land, often for no cost. For example, the state
provides small parcels of land to individuals who commit to farming it via
usufruct (an arrangement under which the state allows the workers to use the
land for free but retains ownership of the land).

When the Special Period started, the state was the largest holder of
agricultural land in Cuba. State farms were chemical-intensive and highly
mechanized but they were also inefficient compared to privately owned farms
in Cuba. Recognizing the power of the profit incentive, the state broke up
many of its state farms and gave the land to the workers under usufruct and
formed worker cooperatives. The cooperatives must sell a certain quota of
produce to the state, but they may sell any excess production on the free
market, for a profit. Many cooperative farms fulfill their state quotas by
providing fresh produce to nearby daycare centers, schools or nursing homes.
They sell the rest of their produce at farmstands or farmers markets,
providing profits that allow farmers to generate incomes far higher than the
salary of the average Cuban.

There's a world of difference between Cuban communism and American
capitalism, but that does not mean we can't learn from Cuba to ease
ourselves off of oil in an organized fashion (instead of waiting until it's
too late and starving while we re-learn how to feed ourselves without fossil
fuels)...Ironically, many of the experts who influenced Cuban agriculture
are from America..

With these and other experts, the United States can take the necessary steps
now to wean our agricultural system off of oil and to encourage agricultural
methods that sequester carbon into the soil. As we do so, we should make
sure that farmers are not the victims of any policies put in place; the
hardworking men and women who feed our nation should not be punished for a
misguided national push toward industrial agriculture that began before many
of them were even born. Our regulatory system already provides a number of
sticks (like the Clean Water Act) and carrots (like conservation programs,
which pay farmers for eco-friendly practices) that can be expanded, funded
and built upon to encourage agroecology. We should also shift our research
priorities from technologies that benefit only industrial farming to ones
that apply to agroecology (for example, identifying beneficial species,
developing varieties of seeds that resist disease and discovering which
combination of crops increases yield when planted together).

Also, like Cuba, the U.S. should get serious about urban and suburban
agriculture. It makes all the sense in the world to grow food near our
population centers, reducing the need to ship and store our food. Today, 70
percent of Havana's produce is grown within the city and other Cuban cities
actually produce higher percentages of their own produce. It's not
outrageous to imagine Americans doing the same, as we produced 40 percent of
our produce in Victory Gardens during World War II. We should allow urban
food production by legalizing backyard chickens and front yard gardens (both
of which are often banned in cities) and by establishing more community
gardens so that urban gardeners without yards have nearby plots to
cultivate. And we should protect agricultural land near cities from
developers wishing to turn farm fields into subdivisions.

Cuba teaches us that we can feed ourselves locally and sustainably with far
less oil than we use now, but we'll suffer terribly if we wait until the oil
is gone to make our transition. Our diets will look different (with more
vegetables and less meat), but we'll also be healthier. We'll spend a larger
percent of our discretionary income on food and we'll need more farmers than
we have now. That's not necessarily a bad thing, either. If farming is a
highly valued and well paid job (as it is in Cuba), increasing the number of
Americans who farm from 2 percent to 10 percent could do wonders for our
economy. And, most of all, we won't starve. Local, sustainable agriculture
is not just a hippie pipe dream. It's possible, and we can do it.

-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



http://venukm.blogspot.com

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