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Local Food for Sustainable Communities
1. URBAN FooD SySTEMS
F o c u s
LoCAL FooD FoR
SUSTAINABLE
CoMMUNITIES
Many people are waking up to the wisdom of growing food within
and around cities and towns, a movement that is leading to the
creation of more sustainable communities. Rachel Sullivan reports.
Bringing food production much pesticides and fertilisers and monoculture Making city space work
closer to home makes sense. As our specialisation. Recently, however, growth But can food forests, green roofs, backyard
population becomes more urbanised, slowed due to a combination of changing veggie patches and community gardens
the environmental and financial impacts climate, existing crop varieties reaching their realistically feed the tens of millions
of transporting produce to our suburbs maximum yield potentials and progressive predicted to live in the cities of the near
have risen. Meanwhile, traditional soil depletion. Waste products â water, future?
agricultural belts are facing the challenges manure and vegetable waste â that were Yes, says Kirsten Larsen, an expert
of water shortages, climate extremes and once composted and returned to the soil in sustainable food systems and Eco-
declining land productivity, while once- as an integral part of a closed production Innovation Policy Research Manager at
productive land on the urban fringe is system, became a by-product liability. Melbourne Universityâs Victorian Eco-
being increasingly developed for housing Agriculture is also now responsible for Innovation Lab (VEIL).
and other infrastructure. This all coincides 20 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions âFirst we need to change our
with concerns about the health and (GHGs) globally.1 Carbon dioxide is understanding of cities and start to see them
environmental impacts of large-scale produced from making fertilisers and as productive, not consumptive spaces.
commercial agriculture. from running farm machinery, processing âWhile weâre not going to see fields of
Until the Second World War, when plants and delivery trucks. Methane is wheat or large-scale animal production
advances were made in synthesising produced mostly by gut fermentation in the heart of the city, there is a great
fertiliser, most people grew at least some of processes in cattle, and chemical processes opportunity for the production of fresh,
their own food. They kept a few hens, had taking place in farmed soils release nitrous perishable foodstuffs â especially fruit
fruit trees and large veggie patches. Scraps oxide. Carbon is also indirectly released and vegetables â to expand, thanks to
were fed to the chickens, or composted and into the atmosphere from soil as a result the concentration of water and nutrient
mixed with animal manure then returned of chemical applications, land clearing and resources in urban areas.
to the soil. Backyard food production was conversion of savannah or pasture land âAt the moment 47 per cent of waste
labour-intensive but highly productive, to arable land, and from overgrazing and going to landfill is organic; 21 per cent
and supplemented by produce from subsequent soil erosion. is food waste. Much of that could be
market gardens and smallholdings on Against this backdrop of concern composted or turned into mulch and
the urban fringe. about foodâs environmental and health returned to the soil to reduce reliance on
After the war, advances in machinery impacts, and more recently its future fertilisers that are derived from fossil fuels.
and synthetic fertilisers pushed production availability, people in urban areas have been âSimilarly, harvesting stormwater
away from towns and cities into more rediscovering the pleasures of âslow foodâ, and wastewater from cities and making
marginal farmland. For the next 40 years, growing and picking their own produce, it available for crops after appropriate
broadacre productivity in developed and purchasing freshly harvested fruit and treatment will help close agricultural
countries skyrocketed thanks to artificial vegetables from suburban farmersâ markets. production loops.â
Larsen believes that âfood-sensitive
1 http://www.climateandfarming.org/pdfs/FactSheets/IV.1GHGs.pdf urban designâ can contribute to
18 EcOS 152 | DEcâjAn | 2010
2. the packing line at Brisbane-based Food Oliver Fosterâs next generation representation of Professor Dickson Despommierâs vertical
Connect, which is successfully matching local farming idea proposes converting existing buildings into controlled growing spaces that
food producers to local buyers via a simple support urban life. Oliver Foster
delivery program. Food Connect
put into broadacre agriculture needs to be keeping and vegetable production. Similar
put into urban production systems. to hydroponics, plants grow on rafts, with
Further, we would need to look their roots dangling in water enriched by
at utilising different spaces, such as fish waste. The water is then filtered and
basements and rooftop gardens. Larsen recycled back into the fish tank.
says Melbourne, for example, has a great Geoff Wilson, President of the Urban
deal of rooftop space that could be used Agriculture NetworkâWestern Pacific, says
for food production, if certain engineering the technique allows relatively small areas
challenges could be overcome. to be highly productive. âWith fish food the
Rooftop gardens are appearing in Japan only input, aquaponics has the potential
and the USA, notably Chicago and New to be one of the worldâs major food
York. In New Yorkâs Brooklyn district, an production systems.â
Looking down on Wilberforce, NSW, a organic farm has been established on the Another new idea is vertical farming,
typical growing satellite community with 550-square-metre roof of a defunct bagel a concept that originated with Professor
decisions to make about how to best use its factory (see www.rooftopfarms.org). The Dickson Despommier from Columbia
productive surrounding land. Ian Sinclair gardeners behind the project say they Universityâs Department of Health
are âcommitted to a sustainable business
resilient, sustainable communities by model that supplies fresh, locally grown
diversifying food sources, making use of organic food and spreads food education
local resources, reducing transport and throughout New Yorkâ. Day-of-harvest
refrigeration needs, and spreading risk deliveries are made by bicycle or locals can
across different distribution channels. All pick their own. It has been so successful
of this contributes to positive community that organisers are planning to expand into
dynamics, not to mention greater food other vacant land.
security. In Cuba, for instance, community New skill sets will be required to
gardens set up on disused land to grow vegetables and fruit on walls and in
compensate for reduced imports following aquaponics systems. Aquaponics, currently
the Soviet collapse now produce half the being trialled by Melbourne community
leafy vegetables consumed on the island. farming group CERES Community Kirsten Larsenâs home garden typifies the
To make urban agriculture viable again, Environment Park, is an ancient Aztec increasing popularity of GyO â Grow your
Larsen says the same level of investment farming technique that combines fish- Own â produce. Kirsten Larsen
152 | DEcâjAn | 2010 www.ecosmagazine.com EcOS 19
3. URBAN FooD SySTEMS
F o c u s
Sciences. Custom-built skyscrapers and materials at their true ecological value communities, education could help boost
would bring large-scale food production in a carbon trading framework would also production significantly.
into the place where most of the food is make alternatives, like high-rise farming, Through the Stephanie Alexander
consumed. Food could be produced year more economically viable. Kitchen Garden Program schoolchildren
round in a climate-controlled, parasite-free are learning about food production
environment, seeing the end of harvests Community learning benefits and healthy eating from an early age.
lost to droughts and storms. Features such Back on the ground, permaculture food Supported by federal government funding,
as water and nutrient recycling, biogas- forests such as Brisbaneâs Northey Street the program involves 91 schools Australia-
powered cogeneration, geothermal heating City Farm (www.northeystreetcityfarm. wide, with more being added each year.
and cooling, and rooftop PV technology org.au) not only provide an edible land- Children from Years 3â6 spend 45 minutes
would minimise the environmental scape with more than 1500 exotic and a week tending an organic vegetable garden
footprint of such skyscrapers. native fruit trees, bush tucker plants, they help create, then an additional hour-
Proponents also believe that using
soilless growing media could be up to
30 times more productive than traditional âWe need to plan for food, and identify where good land lies, where
broadacre cultivation.
In an article published in Scientific
there are good soils and not too much fragmentation, then zone
American, Despommier posited that that land as primary production only, with a caveat placed on it,â
vertical farms could help combat the effects Ian Sinclair says.
of climate change, allowing transport-
related GHGs to be cut dramatically and
carbon sequestering forests to be planted shrubs and groundcovers growing on and-a-half learning to cook and prepare
on former farmland. the 4 hectare farm site, they also provide meals from the food they harvest.
But while there has been considerable a focal point for the community, and an While inner-urban food production
interest in vertical farms, with prototypes education in permaculture, horticulture is critical to future food security and
on the drawing board, at the moment and sustainable living. advocated by The CSIRO Home Energy
they are prohibitively expensive: to be Kirsten Larsen believes this educational Saving Handbook as an important part of
viable, each farm would need to feed component is critical to the success sustainable living, Ian Sinclair, Principal
around 50 000 people, be about 30 storeys of urban farms. âThere has been an Consultant at Edge Land Planning, believes
high, and cost hundreds of millions of increasing distance between production the urban fringes will continue to play
US dollars to build. This could make and consumption of food and many a major role in a decentralised urban
skyscraper-farmed crops more expensive people now donât have the skills to feed agriculture mix.
than those grown by traditional methods. themselves,â she says. Even in successful âHowever, land use conflicts need to be
Australian architect Oliver Foster believes community gardens, which have often been managed at the regulatory level,â he says.
that retrofitting existing structures may be a set up as part of social welfare initiatives âAt the moment, a lot of perishable food
more cost-effective solution. Pricing energy in multicultural or disadvantaged production occurs on the urban fringe
in cities. Greater Sydney, for example,
produces 15 per cent of the stateâs total
vegetables, but when looking at the
perishable or fresh component, the Sydney
region produces 90 per cent of Asian
vegetables consumed in the state, and 80
per cent of its mushrooms.
âBut as the population has grown,
development has steadily encroached onto
rich productive farmland. High rates and
complaints from neighbours, who like
sweeping rural vistas but object to the
sounds and smells of farming, are driving
farmers off the land.â
Offsetting food supply shortage
Indeed, there is growing concern that
the development-driven spread of urban
infrastructure is permanently âpaving overâ
the highly valuable and most productive
soils near cities â a natural asset that often
attracted settlement in the first place.
Beyond these areas, land is more marginal
Members of Brisbaneâs Northey Street City Farm harvesting honey. they produce great local or degraded. Observers, including
food, share skills and connect to their wider community. Northey Street City Farm renowned conservationist David Suzuki2
20 EcOS 152 | DEcâjAn | 2010
4. projects involving higher urban density to
Slow food take the pressure off land.
âIn the future we will be able to feed
ourselves from urban food production
models, but we also need to make policy
decisions and need to provide incentives to
retain rural land now.â
Professor Julian Cribb, author of the
forthcoming book The Coming Famine,3
says that year-round availability of food
has contributed to a massive population
explosion that, by 2050, will give rise to a
dozen cities of 30 to 40 million inhabitants. Geoff Buckley from Food Connect poses with
Unless things change radically, his research staff and a fresh delivery of home-grown
reveals, none will produce enough food, tamarillos. Food Connect
leaving them almost entirely dependent on
outside food sources. âWe source our produce from 80
âWhen supplies fail, as they almost growers who live within a couple of hours
inevitably will for some reason, the of Brisbane,â says Robert Pekin, who goes
ensuing catastrophe will appall humanity,â by the charming title of CiEiO of Food
says Cribb. Among the reasons for such Connect. âFarmers send their produce to a
supply failure, he cites the fact that most homestead on the outskirts of Brisbane. It
agriculture depends on fossil fuel for is then packaged into 11 different types of
the Slow Food movement advocates a
return to locally and sustainably grown transport, processing equipment and other boxes and dropped off at various locations
and prepared produce. Food Connect equipment; with thousands of new cars on around the city â family homes, schools
the road each day in China and India, by and community centres â and subscribers
The Slow Food movement (www. 2050 there wonât be any fossil fuel available collect their box from there, hopefully
slowfood.com) began in Italy in 1989 for food production, according to Cribb. getting the chance to talk to like-minded
in opposition to the fast food lifestyle Phosphates and nitrates for fertilisers others in the process.
sweeping the world. It currently has will also run out. Most of the nutrients âThe organic content of the boxes varies
100 000 members in 132 countries, taken from soils in the form of produce â sometimes it is as high as 100 per cent,
many of whom are active in forming consumed by urban populations during but we opt for locally grown produce over
and sustaining seed banks that preserve the past 50 years have been flushed out organically certified,â he adds. âThat said,
âheirloomâ crop varieties; preserving to sea. Increasing water shortages will no chemicals are sprayed directly onto the
and promoting local and traditional continue to affect production, and climatic fruit and vegetables prior to consumption
food products, and developing an âArk extremes resulting in droughts, floods and and all of our farmers, some of whom also
of Tasteâ for each ecoregion; educating bushfires will have catastrophic effects. supply eggs and dairy products, meet strict
citizens about the drawbacks of The consequences of an unreliable food ethical and animal husbandry standards.â
commercial agribusiness and factory supply would be dire, says Cribb, who Pekin comments that this model has
farms; helping to preserve family farms; argues that since the 1990s, two-thirds of multiple benefits: it encourages farmers to
and encouraging ethical buying in local all conflicts in the world have been caused grow a more diverse range of foods, which
marketplaces. by shortages of land, food or water. is good for the environment, and ensures
âBringing food production back into they are fairly compensated for their
the cities where it is consumed, and produce. They donât need to transport their
and state government planners, say city intelligently recycling nutrients back into produce as far, which saves time, energy
planners need to do more forward-looking agriculture or horticulture, is essential if we and money, all of which they are able to put
assessments to safeguard these areas. are to stave off disaster,â concludes Cribb. back into growing high quality crops.
âWe need to plan for food, and identify The formula has proved so popular that
where good land lies, where there are good Connecting the dots Food Connect is about to launch in Sydney,
soils and not too much fragmentation, then Brisbane-based Food Connect has created Melbourne and Adelaide, with other cities
zone that land as primary production only, an innovative community-based food and regional towns such as Bellingen and
with a caveat placed on it,â Ian Sinclair says. distribution model that brings together Coffs Harbour expected to follow suit.
He points out that if we want local food small producers â including people who
systems, farmers also need to be provided grow excess veggies in their home gardens, More information:
with an incentive to stay. community gardeners, school farmers Victorian Eco-Innovation Lab (VEIL),
âRate rebates are one such incentive. and even âgleanersâ (people who collect http://www.ecoinnovationlab.com
Another could be market-based, where fruit growing on street trees) â with Australian City Farms and
development credits are ascribed to 1600 subscribers who want to purchase Community Gardens Network,
farmland and could be redeemable for seasonal, locally grown produce. www.communitygarden.org.au
Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program,
2 Read more at www.davidsuzuki.org/Economy/Sustainability/alr_report www.kitchengardenfoundation.org.au
3 The Coming Famine by Julian Cribb will be published in 2010.
152 | DEcâjAn | 2010 www.ecosmagazine.com EcOS 21