Dear Mr. President-Elect,
It may surprise you to learn that among
the issues that will occupy much of your time in the coming
years is one you barely mentioned during the campaign: food.
Food policy is not something American presidents have had to
give much thought to, at least since the Nixon
administration — the last time high
food prices
presented a serious political peril. Since then, federal
policies to promote maximum production of the commodity
crops (corn, soybeans, wheat and rice) from which most of
our supermarket foods are derived have succeeded
impressively in keeping prices low and food more or less off
the national political agenda. But with a suddenness that
has taken us all by surprise, the era of cheap and abundant
food appears to be drawing to a close. What this means is
that you, like so many other leaders through history, will
find yourself confronting the fact — so easy to overlook
these past few years — that the health of a nation’s food
system is a critical issue of national security. Food is
about to demand your attention.
Complicating matters is the fact that the
price and abundance of food are not the only problems we
face; if they were, you could simply follow Nixon’s example,
appoint a latter-day Earl Butz as your secretary of
agriculture and instruct him or her to do whatever it takes
to boost production. But there are reasons to think that the
old approach won’t work this time around; for one thing, it
depends on cheap energy that we can no longer count on. For
another, expanding production of industrial agriculture
today would require you to sacrifice important values on
which you did campaign. Which brings me to the deeper reason
you will need not simply to address food prices but to make
the reform of the entire food system one of the highest
priorities of your administration: unless you do, you will
not be able to make significant progress on the health care
crisis, energy independence or
climate change.
Unlike food, these are issues you
did campaign on — but as you try to address them
you will quickly discover that the way we currently grow,
process and eat food in America goes to the heart of all
three problems and will have to change if we hope to solve
them. Let me explain.
After cars, the food system uses more
fossil fuel than any other sector of the economy — 19
percent. And while the experts disagree about the exact
amount, the way we feed ourselves contributes more
greenhouse gases to the atmosphere than anything else we do
— as much as 37 percent, according to one study. Whenever
farmers clear land for crops and till the soil, large
quantities of carbon are released into the air. But the
20th-century industrialization of agriculture has increased
the amount of greenhouse gases emitted by the food system by
an order of magnitude; chemical fertilizers (made from
natural gas), pesticides (made from petroleum), farm
machinery, modern food processing and packaging and
transportation have together transformed a system that in
1940 produced 2.3 calories of food energy for every calorie
of fossil-fuel energy it used into one that now takes 10
calories of fossil-fuel energy to produce a single calorie
of modern supermarket food. Put another way, when we eat
from the industrial-food system, we are eating oil and
spewing greenhouse gases. This state of affairs appears all
the more absurd when you recall that every calorie we eat is
ultimately the product of photosynthesis — a process based
on making food energy from sunshine. There is hope and
possibility in that simple fact.
In addition to the problems of climate
change and America’s oil addiction, you have spoken at
length on the campaign trail of the health care crisis.
Spending on health care has risen from 5 percent of national
income in 1960 to 16 percent today, putting a significant
drag on the economy. The goal of ensuring the health of all
Americans depends on getting those costs under control.
There are several reasons health care has gotten so
expensive, but one of the biggest, and perhaps most
tractable, is the cost to the system of preventable chronic
diseases. Four of the top 10 killers in America today are
chronic diseases linked to diet: heart disease, stroke, Type
2 diabetes and cancer. It is no coincidence that in the
years national spending on health care went from 5 percent
to 16 percent of national income, spending on food has
fallen by a comparable amount — from 18 percent of household
income to less than 10 percent. While the surfeit of cheap
calories that the U.S. food system has produced since the
late 1970s may have taken food prices off the political
agenda, this has come at a steep cost to public health. You
cannot expect to reform the health care system, much less
expand coverage, without confronting the public-health
catastrophe that is the modern American diet.
The impact of the American food system on
the rest of the world will have implications for your
foreign and trade policies as well. In the past several
months more than 30 nations have experienced food riots, and
so far one government has fallen. Should high grain prices
persist and shortages develop, you can expect to see the
pendulum shift decisively away from free trade, at least in
food. Nations that opened their markets to the global flood
of cheap grain (under pressure from previous administrations
as well as the
World Bank
and the I.M.F.) lost so many farmers that they now find
their ability to feed their own populations hinges on
decisions made in Washington (like your predecessor’s
precipitous embrace of
biofuels)
and on Wall Street. They will now rush to rebuild their own
agricultural sectors and then seek to protect them by
erecting trade barriers. Expect to hear the phrases “food
sovereignty” and “food security” on the lips of every
foreign leader you meet. Not only the Doha round, but the
whole cause of free trade in agriculture is probably dead,
the casualty of a cheap food policy that a scant two years
ago seemed like a boon for everyone. It is one of the larger
paradoxes of our time that the very same food policies that
have contributed to overnutrition in the first world are now
contributing to undernutrition in the third. But it turns
out that too much food can be nearly as big a problem as too
little — a lesson we should keep in mind as we set about
designing a new approach to food policy.
Rich or poor, countries struggling with
soaring food prices are being forcibly reminded that food is
a national-security issue. When a nation loses the ability
to substantially feed itself, it is not only at the mercy of
global commodity markets but of other governments as well.
At issue is not only the availability of food, which may be
held hostage by a hostile state, but its safety: as recent
scandals in China demonstrate, we have little control over
the safety of imported foods. The deliberate contamination
of our food presents another national-security threat. At
his valedictory press conference in 2004,
Tommy Thompson,
the secretary of health and human services, offered a
chilling warning, saying, “I, for the life of me, cannot
understand why the terrorists have not attacked our food
supply, because it is so easy to do.”
This, in brief, is the bad news: the food
and agriculture policies you’ve inherited — designed to
maximize production at all costs and relying on cheap energy
to do so — are in shambles, and the need to address the
problems they have caused is acute. The good news is that
the twinned crises in food and energy are creating a
political environment in which real reform of the food
system may actually be possible for the first time in a
generation. The American people are paying more attention to
food today than they have in decades, worrying not only
about its price but about its safety, its provenance and its
healthfulness. There is a gathering sense among the public
that the industrial-food system is broken. Markets for
alternative kinds of food — organic, local, pasture-based,
humane — are thriving as never before. All this suggests
that a political constituency for change is building and not
only on the left: lately, conservative voices have also been
raised in support of reform. Writing of the movement back to
local food
economies, traditional foods (and family meals) and more
sustainable farming, The American Conservative magazine
editorialized last summer that “this is a conservative cause
if ever there was one.”
There are many moving parts to the new
food agenda I’m urging you to adopt, but the core idea could
not be simpler: we need to wean the
American food system off its heavy 20th-century diet of
fossil fuel and put it back on a diet of contemporary
sunshine. True, this is easier said than done —
fossil fuel is deeply implicated in everything about the way
we currently grow food and feed ourselves. To put the food
system back on sunlight will require policies to change how
things work at every link in the food chain: in the farm
field, in the way food is processed and sold and even in the
American kitchen and at the American dinner table. Yet the
sun still shines down on our land every day, and
photosynthesis can still work its wonders wherever it does.
If any part of the modern economy can be freed from its
dependence on oil and successfully resolarized, surely it is
food.
How We Got Here
Before setting out an agenda for reforming
the food system, it’s important to understand how that
system came to be — and also to appreciate what, for all its
many problems, it has accomplished. What our food system
does well is precisely what it was designed to do, which is
to produce cheap calories in great abundance. It is no small
thing for an American to be able to go into a fast-food
restaurant and to buy a double cheeseburger, fries and a
large Coke for a price equal to less than an hour of labor
at the minimum wage — indeed, in the long sweep of history,
this represents a remarkable achievement.
It must be recognized that the current
food system — characterized by monocultures of corn and soy
in the field and cheap calories of fat, sugar and feedlot
meat on the table — is not simply the product of the free
market. Rather, it is the product of a specific set of
government policies that sponsored a shift from solar (and
human) energy on the farm to fossil-fuel energy.
Did you notice when you flew over Iowa
during the campaign how the land was completely bare — black
— from October to April? What you were seeing is the
agricultural landscape created by cheap oil. In years past,
except in the dead of winter, you would have seen in those
fields a checkerboard of different greens: pastures and
hayfields for animals, cover crops, perhaps a block of fruit
trees. Before the application of oil and natural gas to
agriculture, farmers relied on crop diversity (and
photosynthesis) both to replenish their soil and to combat
pests, as well as to feed themselves and their neighbors.
Cheap energy, however, enabled the creation of monocultures,
and monocultures in turn vastly increased the productivity
both of the American land and the American farmer; today the
typical corn-belt farmer is single-handedly feeding 140
people.
This did not occur by happenstance. After
World War II, the government encouraged the conversion of
the munitions industry to fertilizer — ammonium nitrate
being the main ingredient of both bombs and chemical
fertilizer — and the conversion of nerve-gas research to
pesticides. The government also began subsidizing commodity
crops, paying farmers by the bushel for all the corn,
soybeans, wheat and rice they could produce. One secretary
of agriculture after another implored them to plant “fence
row to fence row” and to “get big or get out.”
The chief result, especially after the
Earl Butz years, was a flood of cheap grain that could be
sold for substantially less than it cost farmers to grow
because a government check helped make up the difference. As
this artificially cheap grain worked its way up the food
chain, it drove down the price of all the calories derived
from that grain: the high-fructose corn syrup in the Coke,
the soy oil in which the potatoes were fried, the meat and
cheese in the burger.
Subsidized monocultures of grain also led
directly to monocultures of animals: since factory farms
could buy grain for less than it cost farmers to grow it,
they could now fatten animals more cheaply than farmers
could. So America’s meat and dairy animals migrated from
farm to feedlot, driving down the price of animal protein to
the point where an American can enjoy eating, on average,
190 pounds of meat a year — a half pound every day.
But if taking the animals off farms made a
certain kind of economic sense, it made no ecological sense
whatever: their waste, formerly regarded as a precious
source of fertility on the farm, became a pollutant —
factory farms are now one of America’s biggest sources of
pollution. As Wendell Berry has tartly observed, to take
animals off farms and put them on feedlots is to take an
elegant solution — animals replenishing the fertility that
crops deplete — and neatly divide it into two problems: a
fertility problem on the farm and a pollution problem on the
feedlot. The former problem is remedied with fossil-fuel
fertilizer; the latter is remedied not at all.
What was once a regional food economy is
now national and increasingly global in scope — thanks again
to fossil fuel. Cheap energy — for trucking food as well as
pumping water — is the reason New York City now gets its
produce from California rather than from the “Garden State”
next door, as it did before the advent of Interstate
highways and national trucking networks. More recently,
cheap energy has underwritten a globalized food economy in
which it makes (or rather, made) economic sense to catch
salmon in Alaska, ship it to China to be filleted and then
ship the fillets back to California to be eaten; or one in
which California and Mexico can profitably swap tomatoes
back and forth across the border; or Denmark and the United
States can trade sugar cookies across the Atlantic. About
that particular swap the economist Herman Daly once quipped,
“Exchanging recipes would surely be more efficient.”
Whatever we may have liked about the era
of cheap, oil-based food, it is drawing to a close. Even if
we were willing to continue paying the environmental or
public-health price, we’re not going to have the cheap
energy (or the water) needed to keep the system going, much
less expand production. But as is so often the case, a
crisis provides opportunity for reform, and the current food
crisis presents opportunities that must be seized.
In drafting these proposals, I’ve adhered
to a few simple principles of what a 21st-century food
system needs to do. First, your administration’s food policy
must strive to provide a healthful diet for all our people;
this means focusing on the quality and diversity (and not
merely the quantity) of the calories that American
agriculture produces and American eaters consume. Second,
your policies should aim to improve the resilience, safety
and security of our food supply. Among other things, this
means promoting regional food economies both in America and
around the world. And lastly, your policies need to
reconceive agriculture as part of the solution to
environmental problems like climate change.
These goals are admittedly ambitious, yet
they will not be difficult to align or advance as long as we
keep in mind this One Big Idea: most of the problems our
food system faces today are because of its reliance on
fossil fuels, and to the extent that our policies wring the
oil out of the system and replace it with the energy of the
sun, those policies will simultaneously improve the state of
our health, our environment and our security.
I. Resolarizing
the American Farm
What happens in the field influences every
other link of the food chain on up to our meals — if we grow
monocultures of corn and soy, we will find the products of
processed corn and soy on our plates. Fortunately for your
initiative, the federal government has enormous leverage in
determining exactly what happens on the 830 million acres of
American crop and pasture land.
Today most government farm and food
programs are designed to prop up the old system of
maximizing production from a handful of subsidized commodity
crops grown in monocultures. Even food-assistance programs
like WIC and school lunch focus on maximizing quantity
rather than quality, typically specifying a minimum number
of calories (rather than maximums) and seldom paying more
than lip service to nutritional quality. This focus on
quantity may have made sense in a time of food scarcity, but
today it gives us a school-lunch program that feeds chicken
nuggets and Tater Tots to overweight and diabetic children.
Your challenge is to take control of this
vast federal machinery and use it to drive a transition to a
new solar-food economy, starting on the farm. Right now, the
government actively discourages the farmers it subsidizes
from growing healthful, fresh food: farmers receiving crop
subsidies are prohibited from growing “specialty crops” —
farm-bill speak for fruits and vegetables. (This rule was
the price exacted by California and Florida produce growers
in exchange for going along with subsidies for commodity
crops.) Commodity farmers should instead be encouraged to
grow as many different crops — including animals — as
possible. Why? Because the greater the diversity of crops on
a farm, the less the need for both fertilizers and
pesticides.
The power of cleverly designed
polycultures to produce large amounts of food from little
more than soil, water and sunlight has been proved, not only
by small-scale “alternative” farmers in the United States
but also by large rice-and-fish farmers in China and
giant-scale operations (up to 15,000 acres) in places like
Argentina. There, in a geography roughly comparable to that
of the American farm belt, farmers have traditionally
employed an ingenious eight-year rotation of perennial
pasture and annual crops: after five years grazing cattle on
pasture (and producing the world’s best beef), farmers can
then grow three years of grain without applying
any fossil-fuel
fertilizer. Or, for that matter, many pesticides: the weeds
that afflict pasture can’t survive the years of tillage, and
the weeds of row crops don’t survive the years of grazing,
making herbicides all but unnecessary. There is no reason —
save current policy and custom — that American farmers
couldn’t grow both high-quality grain and grass-fed beef
under such a regime through much of the Midwest. (It should
be noted that today’s sky-high grain prices are causing many
Argentine farmers to abandon their rotation to grow grain
and soybeans exclusively, an environmental disaster in the
making.)
Federal policies could do much to
encourage this sort of diversified sun farming. Begin with
the subsidies: payment levels should reflect the number of
different crops farmers grow or the number of days of the
year their fields are green — that is, taking advantage of
photosynthesis, whether to grow food, replenish the soil or
control erosion. If Midwestern farmers simply planted a
cover crop after the fall harvest, they would significantly
reduce their need for fertilizer, while cutting down on soil
erosion. Why don’t farmers do this routinely? Because in
recent years fossil-fuel-based fertility has been so much
cheaper and easier to use than sun-based fertility.
In addition to rewarding farmers for
planting cover crops, we should make it easier for them to
apply compost to their fields — a practice that improves not
only the fertility of the soil but also its ability to hold
water and therefore withstand drought. (There is mounting
evidence that it also boosts the nutritional quality of the
food grown in it.) The U.S.D.A. estimates that Americans
throw out 14 percent of the food they buy; much more is
wasted by retailers, wholesalers and institutions. A program
to make municipal composting of food and yard waste
mandatory and then distributing the compost free to area
farmers would shrink America’s garbage heap, cut the need
for irrigation and fossil-fuel fertilizers in agriculture
and improve the nutritional quality of the American diet.
Right now, most of the conservation
programs run by the U.S.D.A. are designed on the zero-sum
principle: land is either locked up in “conservation” or it
is farmed intensively. This either-or approach reflects an
outdated belief that modern farming and ranching are
inherently destructive, so that the best thing for the
environment is to leave land untouched. But we now know how
to grow crops and graze animals in systems that will support
biodiversity, soil health, clean water and carbon
sequestration. The Conservation Stewardship Program,
championed by Senator
Tom Harkin
and included in the 2008
Farm Bill,
takes an important step toward rewarding these kinds of
practices, but we need to move this approach from the
periphery of our farm policy to the very center. Longer
term, the government should back ambitious research now
under way (at the Land Institute in Kansas and a handful of
other places) to “perennialize” commodity agriculture: to
breed varieties of wheat, rice and other staple grains that
can be grown like prairie grasses — without having to till
the soil every year. These perennial grains hold the promise
of slashing the fossil fuel now needed to fertilize and till
the soil, while protecting farmland from erosion and
sequestering significant amounts of carbon.
But that is probably a 50-year project.
For today’s agriculture to wean itself from fossil fuel and
make optimal use of sunlight, crop plants and animals must
once again be married on the farm — as in Wendell Berry’s
elegant “solution.” Sunlight nourishes the grasses and
grains, the plants nourish the animals, the animals then
nourish the soil, which in turn nourishes the next season’s
grasses and grains. Animals on pasture can also harvest
their own feed and dispose of their own waste — all without
our help or fossil fuel.
If this system is so sensible, you might
ask, why did it succumb to Confined Animal Feeding
Operations, or CAFOs? In fact there is nothing inherently
efficient or economical about raising vast cities of animals
in confinement. Three struts, each put into place by federal
policy, support the modern CAFO, and the most important of
these — the ability to buy grain for less than it costs to
grow it — has just been kicked away. The second strut is
F.D.A. approval for the routine use of antibiotics in feed,
without which the animals in these places could not survive
their crowded, filthy and miserable existence. And the third
is that the government does not require CAFOs to treat their
wastes as it would require human cities of comparable size
to do. The F.D.A. should ban the routine use of antibiotics
in livestock feed on public-health grounds, now that we have
evidence that the practice is leading to the evolution of
drug-resistant bacterial diseases and to outbreaks of E.
coli and
salmonella
poisoning. CAFOs should also be regulated like the factories
they are, required to clean up their waste like any other
industry or municipality.
It will be argued that moving animals off
feedlots and back onto farms will raise the price of meat.
It probably will — as it should. You will need to make the
case that paying the real cost of meat, and therefore eating
less of it, is a good thing for our health, for the
environment, for our dwindling reserves of fresh water and
for the welfare of the animals. Meat and milk production
represent the food industry’s greatest burden on the
environment; a recent
U.N.
study estimated that the world’s livestock alone account for
18 percent of all greenhouse gases, more than all forms of
transportation combined. (According to one study, a pound of
feedlot beef also takes 5,000 gallons of water to produce.)
And while animals living on farms will still emit their
share of greenhouse gases, grazing them on grass and
returning their waste to the soil will substantially offset
their carbon hoof prints, as will getting ruminant animals
off grain. A bushel of grain takes approximately a half
gallon of oil to produce; grass can be grown with little
more than sunshine.
It will be argued that sun-food
agriculture will generally yield less food than fossil-fuel
agriculture. This is debatable. The key question you must be
prepared to answer is simply this: Can the sort of
sustainable agriculture you’re proposing feed the world?
There are a couple of ways to answer this
question. The simplest and most honest answer is that we
don’t know, because we haven’t tried. But in the same way we
now need to learn how to run an industrial economy without
cheap fossil fuel, we have no choice but to find out whether
sustainable agriculture can produce enough food. The fact
is, during the past century, our agricultural research has
been directed toward the goal of maximizing production with
the help of fossil fuel. There is no reason to think that
bringing the same sort of resources to the development of
more complex, sun-based agricultural systems wouldn’t
produce comparable yields. Today’s organic farmers,
operating for the most part without benefit of public
investment in research, routinely achieve 80 to 100 percent
of conventional yields in grain and, in drought years,
frequently exceed conventional yields. (This is because
organic soils better retain moisture.) Assuming no further
improvement, could the world — with a population expected to
peak at 10 billion — survive on these yields?
First, bear in mind that the average yield
of world agriculture today is substantially lower than that
of modern sustainable farming. According to a recent
University of Michigan
study, merely bringing international yields up to today’s
organic levels could increase the world’s food supply by 50
percent.
The second point to bear in mind is that
yield isn’t everything — and growing high-yield commodities
is not quite the same thing as growing food. Much of what
we’re growing today is not directly eaten as food but
processed into low-quality calories of fat and sugar. As the
world epidemic of diet-related chronic disease has
demonstrated, the sheer quantity of calories that a food
system produces improves health only up to a point, but
after that, quality and diversity are probably more
important. We can expect that a food system that produces
somewhat less food but of a higher quality will produce
healthier populations.
The final point to consider is that 40
percent of the world’s grain output today is fed to animals;
11 percent of the world’s corn and soybean crop is fed to
cars and trucks, in the form of biofuels. Provided the
developed world can cut its consumption of grain-based
animal protein and ethanol, there should be plenty of food
for everyone — however we choose to grow it.
In fact, well-designed polyculture
systems, incorporating not just grains but vegetables and
animals, can produce more food per acre than conventional
monocultures, and food of a much higher nutritional value.
But this kind of farming is complicated and needs many more
hands on the land to make it work. Farming without fossil
fuels — performing complex rotations of plants and animals
and managing pests without petrochemicals — is labor
intensive and takes more skill than merely “driving and
spraying,” which is how corn-belt farmers describe what they
do for a living.
To grow sufficient amounts of food using
sunlight will require more people growing food — millions
more. This suggests that sustainable agriculture will be
easier to implement in the developing world, where large
rural populations remain, than in the West, where they
don’t. But what about here in America, where we have only
about two million farmers left to feed a population of 300
million? And where farmland is being lost to development at
the rate of 2,880 acres a day? Post-oil agriculture will
need a lot more people engaged in food production — as
farmers and probably also as gardeners.
The sun-food agenda must include programs
to train a new generation of farmers and then help put them
on the land. The average American farmer today is 55 years
old; we shouldn’t expect these farmers to embrace the sort
of complex ecological approach to agriculture that is called
for. Our focus should be on teaching ecological farming
systems to students entering land-grant colleges today. For
decades now, it has been federal policy to shrink the number
of farmers in America by promoting capital-intensive
monoculture and consolidation. As a society, we devalued
farming as an occupation and encouraged the best students to
leave the farm for “better” jobs in the city. We emptied
America’s rural counties in order to supply workers to urban
factories. To put it bluntly, we now need to reverse course.
We need more highly skilled small farmers in more places all
across America — not as a matter of nostalgia for the
agrarian past but as a matter of national security. For
nations that lose the ability to substantially feed
themselves will find themselves as gravely compromised in
their international dealings as nations that depend on
foreign sources of oil presently do. But while there are
alternatives to oil, there are no alternatives to food.
National security also argues for
preserving every acre of farmland we can and then making it
available to new farmers. We simply will not be able to
depend on distant sources of food, and therefore need to
preserve every acre of good farmland within a day’s drive of
our cities. In the same way that when we came to recognize
the supreme ecological value of wetlands we erected high
bars to their development, we need to recognize the value of
farmland to our national security and require real-estate
developers to do “food-system impact statements” before
development begins. We should also create tax and zoning
incentives for developers to incorporate farmland (as they
now do “open space”) in their subdivision plans; all those
subdivisions now ringing golf courses could someday have
diversified farms at their center.
The revival of farming in America, which
of course draws on the abiding cultural power of our
agrarian heritage, will pay many political and economic
dividends. It will lead to robust economic renewal in the
countryside. And it will generate tens of millions of new
“green jobs,” which is precisely how we need to begin
thinking of skilled solar farming: as a vital sector of the
21st-century post-fossil-fuel economy.
II.
Reregionalizing the Food System
For your sun-food agenda to succeed, it
will have to do a lot more than alter what happens on the
farm. The government could help seed a thousand new
polyculture farmers in every county in Iowa, but they would
promptly fail if the grain elevator remained the only buyer
in town and corn and beans were the only crops it would
take. Resolarizing the food system means building the
infrastructure for a regional food economy — one that can
support diversified farming and, by shortening the food
chain, reduce the amount of fossil fuel in the American
diet.
A decentralized food system offers a great
many other benefits as well. Food eaten closer to where it
is grown will be fresher and require less processing, making
it more nutritious. Whatever may be lost in efficiency by
localizing food production is gained in resilience: regional
food systems can better withstand all kinds of shocks. When
a single factory is grinding 20 million hamburger patties in
a week or washing 25 million servings of salad, a single
terrorist armed with a canister of toxins can, at a stroke,
poison millions. Such a system is equally susceptible to
accidental contamination: the bigger and more global the
trade in food, the more vulnerable the system is to
catastrophe. The best way to protect our food system against
such threats is obvious: decentralize it.
Today in America there is soaring demand
for local and regional food; farmers’ markets, of which the
U.S.D.A. estimates there are now 4,700, have become one of
the fastest-growing segments of the food market.
Community-supported agriculture is booming as well: there
are now nearly 1,500 community-supported farms, to which
consumers pay an annual fee in exchange for a weekly box of
produce through the season. The local-food movement will
continue to grow with no help from the government,
especially as high fuel prices make distant and
out-of-season food, as well as feedlot meat, more expensive.
Yet there are several steps the government can take to
nurture this market and make local foods more affordable.
Here are a few:
Four-Season
Farmers’ Markets. Provide grants to towns and
cities to build year-round indoor farmers’ markets, on the
model of Pike Place in Seattle or the Reading Terminal
Market in Philadelphia. To supply these markets, the
U.S.D.A. should make grants to rebuild local distribution
networks in order to minimize the amount of energy used to
move produce within local food sheds.
Agricultural
Enterprise Zones. Today the revival of local
food economies is being hobbled by a tangle of regulations
originally designed to check abuses by the very largest food
producers. Farmers should be able to smoke a ham and sell it
to their neighbors without making a huge investment in
federally approved facilities. Food-safety regulations must
be made sensitive to scale and marketplace, so that a small
producer selling direct off the farm or at a farmers’ market
is not regulated as onerously as a multinational food
manufacturer. This is not because local food won’t ever have
food-safety problems — it will — only that its problems will
be less catastrophic and easier to manage because local food
is inherently more traceable and accountable.
Local
Meat-Inspection Corps. Perhaps the single
greatest impediment to the return of livestock to the land
and the revival of local, grass-based meat production is the
disappearance of regional slaughter facilities. The big meat
processors have been buying up local abattoirs only to close
them down as they consolidate, and the U.S.D.A. does little
to support the ones that remain. From the department’s
perspective, it is a better use of shrinking resources to
dispatch its inspectors to a plant slaughtering 400 head an
hour than to a regional abattoir slaughtering a dozen. The
U.S.D.A. should establish a Local Meat-Inspectors Corps to
serve these processors. Expanding on its successful pilot
program on Lopez Island in Puget Sound, the U.S.D.A. should
also introduce a fleet of mobile abattoirs that would go
from farm to farm, processing animals humanely and
inexpensively. Nothing would do more to make regional,
grass-fed meat fully competitive in the market with feedlot
meat.
Establish a
Strategic Grain Reserve. In the same way the
shift to alternative energy depends on keeping oil prices
relatively stable, the sun-food agenda — as well as the food
security of billions of people around the world — will
benefit from government action to prevent huge swings in
commodity prices. A strategic grain reserve, modeled on the
Strategic Petroleum Reserve,
would help achieve this objective and at the same time
provide some cushion for world food stocks, which today
stand at perilously low levels. Governments should buy and
store grain when it is cheap and sell when it is dear,
thereby moderating price swings in both directions and
discouraging speculation.
Regionalize
Federal Food Procurement. In the same way that
federal procurement is often used to advance important
social goals (like promoting minority-owned businesses), we
should require that some minimum percentage of government
food purchases — whether for school-lunch programs, military
bases or federal prisons — go to producers located within
100 miles of institutions buying the food. We should create
incentives for hospitals and universities receiving federal
funds to buy fresh local produce. To channel even a small
portion of institutional food purchasing to local food would
vastly expand regional agriculture and improve the diet of
the millions of people these institutions feed.
Create a Federal
Definition of “Food.” It makes no sense for
government food-assistance dollars, intended to improve the
nutritional health of at-risk Americans, to support the
consumption of products we know to be unhealthful. Yes, some
people will object that for the government to specify what
food stamps can and cannot buy smacks of paternalism. Yet we
already prohibit the purchase of tobacco and alcohol with
food stamps. So why not prohibit something like soda, which
is arguably less nutritious than red wine? Because it is,
nominally, a food, albeit a “junk food.” We need to stop
flattering nutritionally worthless foodlike substances by
calling them “junk food” — and instead make clear that such
products are not in fact food of
any kind. Defining what constitutes real food
worthy of federal support will no doubt be controversial
(you’ll recall
President Reagan’s
ketchup imbroglio), but defining food upward may be more
politically palatable than defining it down, as Reagan
sought to do. One approach would be to rule that, in order
to be regarded as a food by the government, an edible
substance must contain a certain minimum ratio of
micronutrients per calorie of energy. At a stroke, such a
definition would improve the quality of school lunch and
discourage sales of unhealthful products, since typically
only “food” is exempt from local sales tax.
A few other ideas: Food-stamp debit cards
should double in value whenever swiped at a farmers’ markets
— all of which, by the way, need to be equipped with the
Electronic Benefit Transfer card readers that supermarkets
already have. We should expand the WIC program that gives
farmers’-market vouchers to low-income women with children;
such programs help attract farmers’ markets to urban
neighborhoods where access to fresh produce is often
nonexistent. (We should also offer tax incentives to grocery
chains willing to build supermarkets in underserved
neighborhoods.) Federal food assistance for the elderly
should build on a successful program pioneered by the state
of Maine that buys low-income seniors a membership in a
community-supported farm. All these initiatives have the
virtue of advancing two objectives at once: supporting the
health of at-risk Americans and the revival of local food
economies.
III. Rebuilding
America’s Food Culture
In the end, shifting the American diet
from a foundation of imported fossil fuel to local sunshine
will require changes in our daily lives, which by now are
deeply implicated in the economy and culture of fast, cheap
and easy food. Making available more healthful and more
sustainable food does not guarantee it will be eaten, much
less appreciated or enjoyed. We need to use all the tools at
our disposal — not just federal policy and public education
but the president’s bully pulpit and the example of the
first family’s own dinner table — to promote a new culture
of food that can undergird your sun-food agenda.
Changing the food culture must begin with
our children, and it must begin in the schools. Nearly a
half-century ago,
President Kennedy
announced a national initiative to improve the physical
fitness of American children. He did it by elevating the
importance of physical education, pressing states to make it
a requirement in public schools. We need to bring the same
commitment to “edible education” — in
Alice Waters’s
phrase — by making lunch, in all its dimensions, a mandatory
part of the curriculum. On the premise that eating well is a
critically important life skill, we need to teach all
primary-school students the basics of growing and cooking
food and then enjoying it at shared meals.
To change our children’s food culture,
we’ll need to plant gardens in every primary school, build
fully equipped kitchens, train a new generation of lunchroom
ladies (and gentlemen) who can once again cook and teach
cooking to children. We should introduce a School Lunch
Corps program that forgives federal
student loans
to culinary-school graduates in exchange for two years of
service in the public-school lunch program. And we should
immediately increase school-lunch spending per pupil by $1 a
day — the minimum amount food-service experts believe it
will take to underwrite a shift from fast food in the
cafeteria to real food freshly prepared.
But it is not only our children who stand
to benefit from public education about food. Today most
federal messages about food, from nutrition labeling to the
food pyramid, are negotiated with the food industry. The
surgeon general should take over from the Department of
Agriculture the job of communicating with Americans about
their diet. That way we might begin to construct a less
equivocal and more effective public-health message about
nutrition. Indeed, there is no reason that public-health
campaigns about the dangers of obesity and Type 2 diabetes
shouldn’t be as tough and as effective as public-health
campaigns about the dangers of smoking. The
Centers for Disease Control
estimates that one in three American children born in 2000
will develop Type 2 diabetes. The public needs to know and
see precisely what that sentence means: blindness;
amputation; early death. All of which can be avoided by a
change in diet and lifestyle. A public-health crisis of this
magnitude calls for a blunt public-health message, even at
the expense of offending the food industry. Judging by the
success of recent antismoking campaigns, the savings to the
health care system could be substantial.
There are other kinds of information about
food that the government can supply or demand. In general we
should push for as much transparency in the food system as
possible — the other sense in which “sunlight” should be the
watchword of our agenda. The F.D.A. should require that
every packaged-food product include a second calorie count,
indicating how many calories of fossil fuel went into its
production. Oil is one of the most important ingredients in
our food, and people ought to know just how much of it
they’re eating. The government should also throw its support
behind putting a second bar code on all food products that,
when scanned either in the store or at home (or with a
cellphone), brings up on a screen the whole story and
pictures of how that product was produced: in the case of
crops, images of the farm and lists of agrochemicals used in
its production; in the case of meat and dairy, descriptions
of the animals’ diet and drug regimen, as well as live video
feeds of the CAFO where they live and, yes, the
slaughterhouse where they die. The very length and
complexity of the modern food chain breeds a culture of
ignorance and indifference among eaters. Shortening the food
chain is one way to create more conscious consumers, but
deploying technology to pierce the veil is another.
Finally, there is the power of the example
you set in the White House. If what’s needed is a change of
culture in America’s thinking about food, then how America’s
first household organizes its eating will set the national
tone, focusing the light of public attention on the issue
and communicating a simple set of values that can guide
Americans toward sun-based foods and away from eating oil.
The choice of White House chef is always
closely watched, and you would be wise to appoint a figure
who is identified with the food movement and committed to
cooking simply from fresh local ingredients. Besides feeding
you and your family exceptionally well, such a chef would
demonstrate how it is possible even in Washington to eat
locally for much of the year, and that good food needn’t be
fussy or complicated but does depend on good farming. You
should make a point of the fact that every night you’re in
town, you join your family for dinner in the Executive
Residence — at a table. (Surely you remember the Reagans’ TV
trays.) And you should also let it be known that the White
House observes one meatless day a week — a step that, if all
Americans followed suit, would be the equivalent, in carbon
saved, of taking 20 million midsize sedans off the road for
a year. Let the White House chef post daily menus on the
Web, listing the farmers who supplied the food, as well as
recipes.
Since enhancing the prestige of farming as
an occupation is critical to developing the sun-based
regional agriculture we need, the White House should
appoint, in addition to a White House chef, a White House
farmer. This new post would be charged with implementing
what could turn out to be your most symbolically resonant
step in building a new American food culture. And that is
this: tear out five prime south-facing acres of the White
House lawn and plant in their place an organic fruit and
vegetable garden.
When
Eleanor Roosevelt
did something similar in 1943, she helped start a Victory
Garden movement that ended up making a substantial
contribution to feeding the nation in wartime. (Less well
known is the fact that Roosevelt planted this garden over
the objections of the U.S.D.A., which feared home gardening
would hurt the American food industry.) By the end of the
war, more than 20 million home gardens were supplying 40
percent of the produce consumed in America. The president
should throw his support behind a new Victory Garden
movement, this one seeking “victory” over three critical
challenges we face today: high food prices, poor diets and a
sedentary population. Eating from this, the shortest food
chain of all, offers anyone with a patch of land a way to
reduce their fossil-fuel consumption and help fight climate
change. (We should offer grants to cities to build allotment
gardens for people without access to land.) Just as
important, Victory Gardens offer a way to enlist Americans,
in body as well as mind, in the work of feeding themselves
and changing the food system — something more ennobling,
surely, than merely asking them to shop a little
differently.
I don’t need to tell you that ripping out
even a section of the White House lawn will be
controversial: Americans love their lawns, and the South
Lawn is one of the most beautiful in the country. But
imagine all the energy, water and petrochemicals it takes to
make it that way. (Even for the purposes of this memo, the
White House would not disclose its lawn-care regimen.) Yet
as deeply as Americans feel about their lawns, the agrarian
ideal runs deeper still, and making this particular plot of
American land productive, especially if the First Family
gets out there and pulls weeds now and again, will provide
an image even more stirring than that of a pretty lawn: the
image of stewardship of the land, of self-reliance and of
making the most of local sunlight to feed one’s family and
community. The fact that surplus produce from the South Lawn
Victory Garden (and there will be literally tons of it) will
be offered to regional food banks will make its own eloquent
statement.
You’re probably thinking that growing and
eating
organic food
in the White House carries a certain political risk. It is
true you might want to plant iceberg lettuce rather than
arugula, at least to start. (Or simply call arugula by its
proper American name, as generations of Midwesterners have
done: “rocket.”) But it should not be difficult to deflect
the charge of elitism sometimes leveled at the
sustainable-food movement. Reforming the food system is not
inherently a right-or-left issue: for every
Whole Foods
shopper with roots in the counterculture you can find a
family of evangelicals intent on taking control of its
family dinner and diet back from the fast-food industry —
the culinary equivalent of
home schooling.
You should support hunting as a particularly sustainable way
to eat meat — meat grown without any fossil fuels
whatsoever. There is also a strong libertarian component to
the sun-food agenda, which seeks to free small producers
from the burden of government regulation in order to stoke
rural innovation. And what is a higher “family value,” after
all, than making time to sit down every night to a shared
meal?
Our agenda puts the interests of America’s
farmers, families and communities ahead of the fast-food
industry’s. For that industry and its apologists to imply
that it is somehow more “populist” or egalitarian to hand
our food dollars to Burger King or
General Mills
than to support a struggling local farmer is absurd. Yes,
sun food costs more, but the reasons why it does only
undercut the charge of elitism: cheap food is only cheap
because of government handouts and regulatory indulgence
(both of which we will end), not to mention the exploitation
of workers, animals and the environment on which its
putative “economies” depend. Cheap food is food dishonestly
priced — it is in fact unconscionably expensive.
Your sun-food agenda promises to win
support across the aisle. It builds on America’s agrarian
past, but turns it toward a more sustainable, sophisticated
future. It honors the work of American farmers and enlists
them in three of the 21st century’s most urgent errands: to
move into the post-oil era, to improve the health of the
American people and to mitigate climate change. Indeed, it
enlists all of us in this great cause by turning food
consumers into part-time producers, reconnecting the
American people with the American land and demonstrating
that we need not choose between the welfare of our families
and the health of the environment — that eating less oil and
more sunlight will redound to the benefit of both.
Michael Pollan, a contributing writer
for the magazine, is the Knight Professor of Journalism
at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the
author, most recently, of “In Defense of Food: An
Eater’s Manifesto.”
All photos -
Erwan Frotin for The New York Times