The National Sustainable Food Summit was put on in Melbourne 5/6 April by 3 Pillars Network – on their website they say they ‘will be the leading knowledge network for sustainable business in Australia.’
When I saw the event advertised, I knew immediately that I wanted to go. Unfortunately, my $1500 research funding allowance over the duration of candidature from my School at the University of Melbourne was exhausted last year, and I used up my one funding opportunity for an overseas conference and research on last year’s trip to Finland and Italy, so I had to come up with the registration fee myself, which was not insignificant at $655 (the student price) for two days. Given that no papers were printed (for sustainability reasons – not even the program), I honestly cannot imagine why it cost so much except that it must have been a tidy profit-making enterprise for 3 Pillars. The catering was mostly sustainable, ethical food – free range meats, organic milk and the like, but I still think the price was very high, and sadly meant a lot of people who would have had a lot to contribute (such as small, ethical producers?!) weren’t able to attend.
But on to the event! Because it was organised by a private organisation rather than government or higher education, I was unsure what to expect, and even more unsure what the outcomes would be. A Summit implies gathering the best minds to apply to a problem with a view to informing policy, regulation and community leadership. I’m not entirely clear how 3 Pillars intends to pursue the former two, but it’s obvious that they and many attendees are in fact community leaders, and that this event brought a diverse group together to talk about climate change, food security and a sustainable food future.
I’ll leave it to you to ask questions about the sponsors – I was just relieved neither of Australia’s grocery duopoly were on the list, and the diverse representation from across Australia’s food production, distribution, retail and consumption spectrum was important, in my view.
The key messages I took away were simple: we need good policy and regulation to support sustainable food production and recognise the important role farmers play as custodians of our natural resources, the free market has caused private interests to corrupt aspects of the food system for personal gain that is not in the public interest, and we need to dramatically increase the public’s knowledge and respect for food from paddock to plate.
I’ve quite simply typed up my notes as I took them throughout the Summit (I also tweeted a lot of this on the hashtag #SFS). They are not exhaustive, and I do hope I’ve recorded what I heard accurately. Any corrections would be welcome. The full presentations are up on the 3 Pillars Network Event Blog.
Professor Robin Batterham – ‘What does food security mean and why is it important to Australia?’
- Population 	is projected to grow from 6 billion currently to 9 billion by 2050
- A 	greater proportion of the world, due to increasing affluence, will 	(want to) consume more meat and dairy.
- Increases 	in aquaculture.
- Markets 	are fully globalised
- France 	is subsidising farmers because they’re part of the environment and 	need preserving – a precious heritage and future?
- Points 	from The 	Coming Famine by Julian Cribb
- A 		price on emissions and rising energy costs will lead to more 		expensive fertilisers
- Peak 		phosphorus is upon us (Cribb argues we passed it in 1989)
- 70% 		of ‘blue water’ is already withdrawn from the system
- More 		soil degradation and erosion
- Productivity 		gains have lessened/plateaued
- Food 		prices track fuel/energy prices
- Food 		riots track grain prices
 
- Australia 	produces enough food for 60 million people
- Although 	Australia produces less than 3% of global wheat supply, we are the 	4th largest wheat exporter
- More 	droughts and floods (climate change)
- Increasing 	price volatility due to global connectivity
- Increased 	reliance on imports
- The 	UK throws out 3 billion cartons of uneaten yoghurt per annum (use by 	dates are very bad policy/regulation)
- Australian 	expertise in low input agriculture can help us:
- develop 		a carbon neutral food sector
- develop 		innovative resource management
 
- Land 	planning focus must improve 
- should 		decrease taxes on peri-urban land still being used for food 		production
 
Dr Amanda Lee, Queensland Health
- Adults 	eat:
- 20% 		too much red meat (yet young women eat too little)
- 40% 		too much starch
- 30% 		too many refined grains
 
- If 	35% of the population is overweight or obese, has the free market 	failed us?
Robert Pekin, Food Connect
- A 	reflection – while driving, you see manicured lawns and gardens. 	On the train, you see backyards, get a perspective of where and how 	much home food production is happening (not much in many areas?)
- Fresh 	produce consumption increases when people sign up with a Community 	Supported Agriculture (CSA) box drop system
- In 	a CSA, 55% of the retail dollar goes back to the farmer compared 	with normal average of 15%
- We 	need to shift our focus from purely production to issues around 	distribution and consumption
Jock Laurie, National Farmers Federation
- Don’t 	blame farmers for lack of access and over-processing of food – 	that’s bad policy and business
- Bad 	policy and supermarket wars in the face of increasing costs of 	production are pinching farmers
Julian Cribb, author of The Coming Famine
- Farmers 	must double production (by the 2060s) with:
- half 		the water
- less 		land
- no 		fossil fuels (eventually)
- scarce 		and costly fertilisers
- less 		technology
- more 		climate instability
 
- Food 	stress leads to conflict, government failures, ‘refugee tsunamis’ 	and inflation
- Solutions:
- Develop 		a new eco-agriculture
- Urgently 		develop renewable energy sources for agriculture
- Increase 		research and development
- Fair 		incomes for farmers
- Recycle 		urban sewerage for fertilisers
- Bio-cultures 		and algae farms
- New 		diet: 23,000 edible plants
- Rehydrate, 		revegetate, re-carbonise
- Teach 		respect for food
 
Kirsten Larsen, Victorian Eco-Innovation Lab (VEIL) 
‘Future Scenarios for Food? Victorian Food Supply Scenarios’
You really have to have a look at the full report to appreciate what an excellent bit of research this is from VEIL. I can’t do justice to the scenarios they propose here!
- Adjustment 	scenario – net food availability decreases
- Control 	scenario – food stability
- DIY 	scenario – mixed results
Michael McCallum, Global Foresight Network
- Transactional 	thinking and effort won’t get us there
- People 	have short-term agendas
- We 	need transformational thinking
- Understand 		why (the shapers)
- Deconstruct 		assumptions
- Focus 		on where we need to go beyond now (transcendence – transformation 		is required)
- Reconstruct 		meaning and new systems
- Design 		integration pathways
- Drive 		a change agenda at speed (urgent)
 
- Fundamentals 	of the new curve:
- resilience 		– adaptability – sustainability – future focused
 
Consumption break out session
‘Obesity and climate change are two huge market failures’ (UK)
- In 	January 2007 (Australia) 78% of people were concerned about the 	environment
- Now 	it’s 60%
- Concern 	rarely translates into action
- A 	higher tendency towards green consumption generally leads to 	decreased consumption
- There 	is no consistent market segment that exhibits more sustainable 	behaviour – higher levels of knowledge correlates to less 	behaviour change?
Local food economies break out session
- When 	the population rapidly increased and food availability decreased in 	Cuba, people moved to cities – so the government invested in rural 	areas to draw people back out.
- Overly 	strict food safety is a barrier to local food production and 	distribution, including things like food swaps (pig days, etc)
Dr John Williams, Wentworth Group of Concerned Scientists
- Must 	increase production while decreasing impact on the environment.
- Must 	make farming mimic natural ecosystems – they must generally be 	closed systems
- Pricing 	food for sustainability:
- Reward 		the provision of ecosystem services (by farmers)
- Need 		investment in the economic valuation of ecosystem services
- Reward 		farmers for sustaining the land as a matter of public good
- Cost 		of food doesn’t include the cost of maintaining natural resource 		base
- Need 		government to create/adjust policy that creates incentives for 		sustainable practice and costs to the environment being 		internalised
- Need 		market and trade policies that remove perverse subsidies
- Regulatory 		framework to ensure food production does not lead to damage to 		natural resources and environment
- Need 		an Australian Standard for sustainable agriculture for local and 		imported goods
 
Dr Tim Flannery, Chief Commissioner of the Climate Commission
- To 	address issues of an increasing population you need to address 	education and women’s rights in the developing world – alleviate 	poverty and you address population issues
Michael McCallum, Global Foresight Network
- Beyond 	an economic lens
- Pressures 	in current systems deliver poor returns
- Opportunities:
- producing 		with constraints
- food 		cycles not waste
- focus 		on optimising high nutrition
 
- Reconnect 	people with food
- Accelerate 	knowledge and dialogue to deliver a new system
Richard Hames, Asian Foresight Institute
- We 	became ‘consumers’ in the 1920s – an audience member suggested we 	should be ‘food citizens’ rather than the more passive ‘consumers’
- Australia21 	is setting up a Sustainable Food Lab
- Beyond 	today’s worldview:
- Production 		– increase biodiversity, sustainable practices, conserve 		ecosystems, local and organic investment
- Environment 		– resilient design, protecting diversity, valuing ecosystems, 		stewardship, adaptability
- Consumption 		– not more, but healthier, national food reserve, greater equity, 		education and information
 
‘60% of the world’s investments at the moment go to weapons’
- Our 	opportunities:
- Move 		swiftly to a steady state, low carbon economy using existing 		technologies
- focus 		new investment on climate change adaptation
- Conserve 		biodiversity and increasing nutritional diversity
- Build 		resilience into the supply-demand cycle
- Increase 		investment in sustainable rural farmers
- Less 		the power and profit motives of Food, Inc (entire supply chain of 		big agro-industry through to retailers)
- Embed 		sustainable practices – biomimicry, permaculture
- Move 		from profit motive as a social priority to other forms of value
- Legislate 		unintended consequences out of the system
 
Waste break out session
- Sustainability 	Victoria survey
- 40% 		of household waste is food
- Households 		report they throw out $2000 worth of food per annum
- That’s 		8L/week per household of food waste
- 700,000 		tonnes, or 7% of waste in Victoria
- Identified 		four broad groups of people: Zealots, Planners, Triers and Wasters 		in order of minimal to maximum food waste. Education programs 		should target Triers.
 
- Katy 	Barfield, Second Bite
- 7.5 		million tonnes of food wasted per annum in Australia 
- ‘leakages’ 			and surplus food
- pre-harvest
- harvested 			– inefficiency/quality rejection
- post-harvest
- retail
- edible
 
- 1.2 		million people in Australia are regularly at risk of not having 		enough food
- We 		need to value food waste
- economic 			value – food donors save on landfill, possible tax savings; real 			$$ value to community programs
- social 			value
- environmental 			value
- health 			value
 
 
Don’t just ask ‘how do we produce more?’ but also ‘how do we effectively redistribute food throughout the system?’
Michael Velders, ARUB
One person’s urine provides enough NPK to fertilise 400-500 square metres of agricultural land
Ideas
- there 	should be a total ban on organic waste to landfill
- hospitality 	must separate all waste – compost and re-saleable/useable 
- triple 	bottom line reporting
- ‘humanure’ 	should be accepted – ban on any sewerage into the sea
Michael Raupach, PMSEIC Expert Working Group on Energy-Water-Carbon (EWC)
PMSEIC – 2010 – ‘Challenges at Energy-Water-Carbon Intersections’
- Connectivity 	challenge – trade, media, education, information
- Resilience 	(from Resilience Alliance)
- can 		recover from disturbances and shocks
- can 		adapt by learning
- can 		undergo transformation when necessary
- resilience 		is a product of evolution
 
- Finite 	planet and connectivity challenges require new foci:
- integrative 		thinking
- holistic 		education (eg food knowledge)
- holistic 		innovation
 
- Recommendations 	from the PMSEIC Report
- Consistent 		principles for the use of finite resources:
- ensure 			markets transmit full, linked, long-term costs to society
- require 			resource accounting to be comprehensive and consistent
- make 			markets work with non-market strategies
 
- Develop 		and implement smart network methods
- Build 		EWC resilience in landscapes
- joint 			food, fibre, water production
- innovative 			new technology (eg algal systems)
- viable 			farms and rural communities
- increase 			resource efficiencies and yields
 
- Build 		EWC resilience in cities and towns
- increase 			energy and water efficiency
- recycle 			water with energy cogeneration 
- improve 			microclimates
- change 			behaviours to reduce demand
- stop 			sprawl with good planning, incentives
- increase 			urban food production
 
- Develop 		integrative perspectives
- enhance 			incentives for integrative research
- implement 			a new core research effort
- ensure 			stable and ongoing delivery of essential information
- a 			new education paradigm (Earthcare?) – preschool to adulthood, food 			awareness
 
 
Brad, CSIRO
- The 	public welcomes supply chain transparency, but then tackling 	environmental issues head on such as by pricing pollution, etc, is a 	very hard sell
- Different 	forms of reporting available – not everything needs to be on the 	label
- Perhaps 	on the label should include – carbon, water and land?
There’s a lot of information here, and many conversations to have about it all. I’ll pick up some of the threads in future posts. Thanks to 3 Pillars Network for putting on a very stimulating and informative Summit!
If you’re interested in Sustainable, Organic, Local, and Ethical (SOLE) food, you should check out Fight Back Fridays at Food Renegade. 🙂
