<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/26/business/worldbusiness/26food.html?_r=1&em&ex=1209355200&en=24c7b0554935fcaa&ei=5087%0A&oref=slogin>

THE FOOD CHAIN

Environmental Cost of Shipping Groceries Around the World

By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

Published: April 26, 2008

Cod caught off Norway is shipped to China to be turned into filets, 
then shipped back to Norway for sale. Argentine lemons fill 
supermarket shelves on the Citrus Coast of Spain, as local lemons rot 
on the ground. Half of Europe's peas are grown and packaged in Kenya.

In the United States, FreshDirect proclaims kiwi season has expanded 
to "All year!" now that Italy has become the world's leading supplier 
of New Zealand's national fruit, taking over in the Southern 
Hemisphere's winter.

Food has moved around the world since Europeans brought tea from 
China, but never at the speed or in the amounts it has over the last 
few years. Consumers in not only the richest nations but, 
increasingly, the developing world expect food whenever they crave 
it, with no concession to season or geography.

Increasingly efficient global transport networks make it practical to 
bring food before it spoils from distant places where labor costs are 
lower. And the penetration of mega-markets in nations from China to 
Mexico with supply and distribution chains that gird the globe - like 
Wal-Mart, Carrefour and Tesco - has accelerated the trend.

But the movable feast comes at a cost: pollution - especially carbon 
dioxide, the main global warming gas - from transporting the food.

Under longstanding trade agreements, fuel for international freight 
carried by sea and air is not taxed. Now, many economists, 
environmental advocates and politicians say it is time to make 
shippers and shoppers pay for the pollution, through taxes or other 
measures.

"We're shifting goods around the world in a way that looks really 
bizarre," said Paul Watkiss, an Oxford University economist who wrote 
a recent European Union report on food imports.

He noted that Britain, for example, imports - and exports - 15,000 
tons of waffles a year, and similarly exchanges 20 tons of bottled 
water with Australia. More important, Mr. Watkiss said, "we are not 
paying the environmental cost of all that travel."

Europe is poised to change that. This year the European Commission in 
Brussels announced that all freight-carrying flights into and out of 
the European Union would be included in the trading bloc's 
emissions-trading program by 2012, meaning permits will have to be 
purchased for the pollution they generate.

The commission is negotiating with the global shipping organization, 
the International Maritime Organization, over various alternatives to 
reduce greenhouse gases. If there is no solution by year's end, sea 
freight will also be included in Europe's emissions-trading program, 
said Barbara Helferrich, a spokeswoman for the European Commission's 
Environment Directorate. "We're really ready to have everyone reduce 
- or pay in some way," she said.

The European Union, the world's leading food importer, has increased 
imports 20 percent in the last five years. The value of fresh fruit 
and vegetables imported by the United States, in second place, nearly 
doubled from 2000 to 2006.

Under a little-known international treaty called the Convention on 
International Civil Aviation, signed in Chicago in 1944 to help the 
fledgling airline industry, fuel for international travel and 
transport of goods, including food, is exempt from taxes, unlike 
trucks, cars and buses. There is also no tax on fuel used by ocean 
freighters.

Proponents say ending these breaks could help ensure that producers 
and consumers pay the environmental cost of increasingly 
well-traveled food.

The food and transport industries say the issue is more complicated. 
The debate has put some companies on the defensive, including Tesco, 
Britain's largest supermarket chain, known as a vocal promoter of 
green initiatives.

Some of those companies say that they are working to limit greenhouse 
gases produced by their businesses but that the question is how to do 
it. They oppose regulation and new taxes and, partly in an effort to 
head them off, are advocating consumer education instead.

Tesco, for instance, is introducing a labeling system that will let 
consumers assess a product's carbon footprint.

Some foods that travel long distances may actually have an 
environmental advantage over local products, like flowers grown in 
the tropics instead of in energy-hungry European greenhouses.

"This may be as radical for environmental consuming as putting a 
calorie count on the side of packages to help people who want to lose 
weight," a spokesman for Tesco, Trevor Datson, said.

Better transportation networks have sharply reduced the time required 
to ship food abroad. For instance, improved roads in Africa have 
helped cut the time it takes for goods to go from farms on that 
continent to stores in Europe to 4 days, compared with 10 days not 
too many years ago.

And with far cheaper labor costs in African nations, Morocco and 
Egypt have displaced Spain in just a few seasons as important 
suppliers of tomatoes and salad greens to central Europe.

"If there's an opportunity for cheaper production in terms of 
logistics or supply it will be taken," said Ed Moorehouse, a 
consultant to the food industry in London, adding that some of these 
shifts also create valuable jobs in the developing world.

The economics are compelling. For example, Norwegian cod costs a 
manufacturer $1.36 a pound to process in Europe, but only 23 cents a 
pound in Asia.

The ability to transport food cheaply has given rise to new and 
booming businesses.

"In the past few years there have been new plantations all over the 
center of Italy," said Antonio Baglioni, export manager of Apofruit, 
one of Italy's largest kiwi exporters.

Kiwis from Sanifrutta, another Italian exporter, travel by sea in 
refrigerated containers: 18 days to the United States, 28 to South 
Africa and more than a month to reach New Zealand.

Some studies have calculated that as little as 3 percent of emissions 
from the food sector are caused by transportation. But Mr. Watkiss, 
the Oxford economist, said the percentage was growing rapidly. 
Moreover, imported foods generate more emissions than generally 
acknowledged because they require layers of packaging and, in the 
case of perishable food, refrigeration.

Britain, with its short growing season and powerful supermarket 
chains, imports 95 percent of its fruit and more than half of its 
vegetables. Food accounts for 25 percent of truck shipments in 
Britain, according to the British environmental agency, DEFRA.

Mr. Datson of Tesco acknowledged that there were environmental 
consequences to the increased distances food travels, but he said his 
company was merely responding to consumer appetites. "The offer and 
range has been growing because our customers want things like snap 
peas year round," Mr. Datson said. "We don't see our job as consumer 
choice editing."

Global supermarket chains like Tesco and Carrefour, spreading 
throughout Eastern Europe and Asia, cater to a market for convenience 
foods, like washed lettuce and cut vegetables. They also help expand 
the reach of global brands.

Pringles potato chips, for example, are now sold in more than 180 
countries, though they are manufactured in only a handful of places, 
said Kay Puryear, a spokeswoman for Procter & Gamble, which makes 
Pringles.

Proponents of taxing transportation fuel say it would end such 
distortions by changing the economic calculus.

"Food is traveling because transport has become so cheap in a world 
of globalization," said Frederic Hauge, head of Norway's 
environmental group Bellona. "If it was just a matter of processing 
fish cheaper in China, I'd be happy with it traveling there. The 
problem is pollution."

The European Union has led the world in proposals to incorporate 
environmental costs into the price consumers pay for food.

Switzerland, which does not belong to the E.U., already taxes trucks 
that cross its borders.

In addition to bringing airlines under its emission-trading program, 
Brussels is also considering a freight charge specifically tied to 
the environmental toll from food shipping to shift the current 
calculus that "transporting freight is cheaper than producing goods 
locally," the commission said.

The problem is measuring the emissions. The fact that food travels 
farther does not necessarily mean more energy is used. Some studies 
have shown that shipping fresh apples, onions and lamb from New 
Zealand might produce lower emissions than producing the goods in 
Europe, where - for example - storing apples for months would require 
refrigeration.

But those studies were done in New Zealand, and the food travel 
debate is inevitably intertwined with economic interests.

Last month, Tony Burke, the Australian minister for agriculture, 
fisheries and forestry, said that carbon footprinting and labeling 
food miles - the distance food has traveled - was "nothing more than 
protectionism."

Shippers have vigorously fought the idea of levying a transportation 
fuel tax, noting that if some countries repealed those provisions of 
the Chicago Convention, it would wreak havoc with global trade, 
creating an uneven patchwork of fuel taxes.

It would also give countries that kept the exemption a huge trade advantage.

Some European retailers hope voluntary green measures like Tesco's 
labeling - set to begin later this year - will slow the momentum for 
new taxes and regulations.

The company will begin testing the labeling system, starting with 
products like orange juice and laundry detergent.

Customers may be surprised by what they discover.

Box Fresh Organics, a popular British brand, advertises that 85 
percent of its vegetables come from the British Midlands. But in 
winter, in its standard basket, only the potatoes and carrots are 
from Britain. The grapes are South African, the fennel is from Spain 
and the squash is Italian.

Today's retailers could not survive if they failed to offer such 
variety, Mr. Moorehouse, the British food consultant, said.

"Unfortunately," he said, "we've educated our customers to expect 
cheap food, that they can go to the market to get whatever they want, 
whenever they want it. All year. 24/7."

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