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Related: About this forumCould US Trade Threaten Sustainable Agriculture in Cuba?
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/37189-could-us-trade-threaten-sustainable-agriculture-in-cubaThe recent thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations, however, could drastically shift the political and economic conditions that spawned and have helped to sustain this unique system of agriculture in Cuba. According to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, a bilateral agricultural accord signed during President Obamas trip to Cuba last month will allow the 22 industry-funded Research and Promotion Programs and 18 Marketing Order organizations to conduct authorized research and information exchange activities with Cuba (emphasis added). These exchanges will be largely unidirectional, with these U.S. entities providing nutritional research and guidance, while U.S. based market, consumer, nutrition and environmental research findings will be delivered to Cuban government and industry officials in order to help meet Cuba's need for healthy, safe, nutritious food. Unsurprisingly, there is no mention of agroecology or organic agriculture in this USDA press release, which expresses little interest in bringing Cuban innovations to the U.S., where certified organic crops comprise just 0.7 percent of total cropland.
Most worrying of all, however, are the explicit provisions for U.S. agricultural firms to play a central role in these activities (the USDA defines marketing orders as initiated by industry). Revealingly, President Obama was joined on his trip by representatives from the U.S. agricultural industry hoping to persuade Congress to open up a market worth about $2 billion annually. USDA projections show poultry, wheat, corn, rice and dairy as among the most profitable agricultural commodities in Cuba. Although U.S. firms have been allowed to export agricultural products to Cuba since 2001, Cuban importers still face financial restrictions that are often prohibitive, as they are not allowed to take out loans through U.S. banks.
The stated objective of the accord is to help U.S. agricultural interests better understand the Cuban market, while also providing the Cuban people with science-based information as they grow their own agriculture sector. But questions must be raised as to whether the promotion of U.S. agricultural practices in Cuba will only serve to help U.S. agribusinesses infiltrate the Cuban market, posing two distinct risks to the countrys agroecological and organic farms. One concern is that the promotion of U.S. agricultural methods under the new bilateral accord could entice more farmers to increase their use of imported fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides, especially if and when these become more widely available in Cuba, and to specialize in monocultures in order to maximize revenue. The networks that currently exist to facilitate the exchange of knowledge and expertise between small farmers could in turn be weakened, putting the entire Cuban agroecology movement at risk.
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Could US Trade Threaten Sustainable Agriculture in Cuba? (Original Post)
eridani
Jun 2016
OP
Nay
(12,051 posts)1. What a silly question! Of course it will! The agroecology movement will be utterly
destroyed within ten years. US agricultural interests have wrecked local farming wherever it went because it is interested only in selling its products, not in sustainable farming. We don't even have to ask this question.
roody
(10,849 posts)2. As if Cuba has not been studying science.
Judi Lynn
(160,415 posts)3. They need to stop seeing Cuba as a place which can help increase profits for US business.
That's as low as it gets.
These people deserve respect. Respect them.