Friday, August 15, 2008

12 Conventional Pinch Hitters: When You Cannot Find Organic

Dr. Mercola's newsletter mentioned the results of a study by "the Environmental Working Group," a nonprofit organization, which "advocates for policies that protect global and individual health, produces the Shoppers' Guide to Pesticides in Produce."

Aggregating almost 43,000 pesticide tests, according the good Doctor, these studies showed that of "the 43 different fruit and vegetable categories in the Guide to Pesticides, the following twelve foods had the lowest pesticide load when conventionally grown."

If you feel compelled to choose conventionally grown produce, consume:
  • Broccoli
  • Eggplant
  • Cabbage
  • Banana
  • Kiwi
  • Asparagus
  • Sweet peas (frozen)
  • Mango
  • Pineapple
  • Sweet corn (frozen)
  • Avocado
  • Onion
Check out the Mercola Website and the following sources he mentions:

Thursday, May 08, 2008

This Bridge Called My Garden: Personal Growth & Social Change

Lately so many media and new books touch on the intersection that inspires me most--that is producing and eating food mindfully, this week the NYT features zen gardening in Marin and an urban garden project in Brooklyn.

Do we see the connection between these two projects? How can we be the bridge?

Monday, May 05, 2008

Guess What. . . Access to Fresh Food Improves Health

Today's NYT reports that many communities lack for supermarkets. The graphic they constructed with a mapping of the demographics of obesity onto the distribution of fresh food purveyors makes our point even more strongly that we should continue to interrogate how limited or no access to healthy food, in affluent countries such as ours, relates to the confluence of global factors that produce the current food crisis.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Big Seed. . .Global Footprint

Vanity Fair has a great story about Monsanto, if you haven't already heard the scoop on the Roundup stance against farmers and need a little more horror to spur your critical shopping. But now that so many companies are looking at the bigger picture, how do we measure the success of progressive sustainability?

On that latter note, here's an interesting story from Fast Company (see also Socialist Capitalist awards) about how various companies, who have endeavored to be socially and environmentally responsible for years, experience the process of measuring their own global footprints nowadays when deeper questions and expectations are being raised about manufacture, transportation, etc.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Whose Riot & Who's Wrong in Global Food Conflicts?

Democracy now seems to being doing a especially good job of shedding light on the various intersecting conditions that are producing food conflict right now by interviewing experts.


Below find links to three of their recent interviews. (Site has lots of related links, one can download interviews as video, Mp3, etc., and there is an opportunity to donate to their efforts!)

April 24, 2008

DN! Summary: As people around the world continue to protest the soaring prices of basic food items, the World Food Program has described the crisis as a silent tsunami.The head of the Food and Agriculture Organization blamed the current global food crisis on “inappropriate” policy decisions over the past two decades. Nowhere is this more clear than in Haiti, where hungry people are rioting in the streets because they cannot afford to buy rice. Haiti imports most of its rice from the United States, which in turn remains heavily subsidized. We speak with human rights lawyer, Bill Quigley.

"Stuffed and Starved: As Food Riots Break Out Across the Globe, Raj Patel Details “The Hidden Battle for the World Food System.”

Patelbkweb
Part I (April 08, 2008) and Part II (April 16, 2008)
interrogates subject of food riots in this interview with book author.

DN! summary: "Global food prices have risen dramatically, adding a new level of danger to the crisis of world hunger. In Africa, food riots have swept across the continent, with recent protests in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Mauritania and Senegal. In most of West Africa, the price of food has risen by 50 percent—in Sierra Leone, 300 percent. In the United States there has been a 41 percent surge in prices for wheat, corn, rice and other cereals over the past six months. We speak with Raj Patel, author of Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System."

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Do Truly Green & Sustainable Businesses Exist?

"the world's largest retailer is using a network approach to decrease its environmental footprint—and increase its profitability."

Several items coincided in the inbox and thus caught my attention. An article from SSIR regarding the putative Greening of WalMart arrived in their e-newsletter and before I could huff and puff and cynically delete, I noted another story to remind me of the power this particular retailing giant has to influence whole industries (c.f. End of Hormones in Milk)." So I read about the practice of using networks to "green" the bottomline and found it intriguing. I'm also intensely curious about the hyper-institutionalization of sustainability discourse in business these days, haven't had time to check it out, but the Sustainable Brands Conference sounds like a good place to start investigating.