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Judi Lynn

(160,451 posts)
Sat Mar 26, 2016, 07:44 PM Mar 2016

Cuba’s Sustainable Agriculture at Risk After U.S.-Cuba Relations Thaw

Cuba’s Sustainable Agriculture at Risk After U.S.-Cuba Relations Thaw

How Cuba's farming could become overly industrialized.
By Miguel Altieri
March 25, 2016

President Obama’s trip to Cuba this week accelerated the warming of U.S.-Cuban relations. Many people in both countries believe that normalizing relations will spur investment that can help Cuba develop its economy and improve life for its citizens. But in agriculture, U.S. investment could cause harm instead.

For the past 35 years I have studied agroecology in most countries in Central and South America. Agroecology is an approach to farming that developed in the late 1970s in Latin America as a reaction against the top-down, technology-intensive and environmentally destructive strategy that characterizes modern industrial agriculture. It encourages local production by small-scale farmers, using sustainable strategies and combining Western knowledge with traditional expertise.

Cuba took this approach out of necessity when its economic partner, the Soviet bloc, dissolved in the early 1990s. As a result, Cuban farming has become a leading example of ecological agriculture. But if relations with U.S. agribusiness companies are not managed carefully, Cuba could revert to an industrial approach that relies on mechanization, transgenic crops and agrochemicals, rolling back the revolutionary gains that its campesinos have achieved.

The shift to peasant agroecology

For several decades after Cuba’s 1959 revolution, socialist bloc countries accounted for nearly all of its foreign trade.
The government devoted 30 percent of agricultural land to sugarcane for export, while importing 57 percent of Cuba’s food supply. Farmers relied on tractors, massive amounts of pesticide and fertilizer inputs, all supplied by Soviet bloc countries. By the 1980s agricultural pests were increasing, soil quality was degrading and yields of some key crops like rice had begun to decline.

. . .

Today Cuba has 383,000 urban farms, covering 50,000 hectares of otherwise unused land and producing more than 1.5 million tons of vegetables. The most productive urban farms yield up to 20 kg of food per square meter, the highest rate in the world, using no synthetic chemicals. Urban farms supply 50 to 70 percent or more of all the fresh vegetables consumed in cities such as Havana and Villa Clara.

More:
https://newrepublic.com/article/132055/cubas-sustainable-agriculture-risk-us-cuba-relations-thaw

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Cuba’s Sustainable Agriculture at Risk After U.S.-Cuba Relations Thaw (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2016 OP
i'm really glad we might be friends again Viva_La_Revolution Mar 2016 #1
That's my concern. n/t Wilms Mar 2016 #2
That's really amazing Hydra Mar 2016 #3
Cuba is the only nation to achieve the WWF sustainability goal. Mika Mar 2016 #4

Hydra

(14,459 posts)
3. That's really amazing
Sat Mar 26, 2016, 09:10 PM
Mar 2016

If climate change wasn't a thing, it sounds like they could have reached a point of total self-sustainability. We really should have been trying for the same.

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