Food Miles: Should We Believe the Hype?

Locavores love to talk about the number 1500. It’s cited as a reason to eat seasonally, to eat locally, and to support local farmers and farmers’ markets. It is the supposed number of miles that food travels to get to its consumer. This number has been used in reference to different kinds of food in different parts of the country and has essentially become gospel truth to members of the local food movement. However, the number comes from a single study published in 2001 out of Iowa State University’s Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture. Due to data limitations and a narrow research question, the study uses publicly available terminal market data on the distance 33 types of fruit and vegetables traveled to reach a produce market in Chicago. This data is also limited in that it shows the state in which the produce was grown, but not where in that state. The researchers were required to use the geographical center of the state as a proxy. The argument against using this statistic has been well developed by James McWilliams in his book Just Food (1) (a fantastic read challenging a few of the prominent assumptions made about the food system) and Jane Black in a Slate article (2).

 
So, if 1500 miles isn’t an accurate statistic, how do we determine the true energy cost of our food system? And how do we implement policy to make that food system, on which we are completely dependent, more resilient to volatile energy markets and potentially decreasing fossil fuel supplies? It turns out that transportation of food from production to consumer is a relatively small piece of the energy cost pie (about 14% of the total fossil fuel energy input to the food system, according to a University of Michigan report (3)). A significantly larger chunk of the energy use is in the household for storage and preparation of food (31.7%, ibid.). Production represents 21.4%, processing 16.4%, packaging 6.6%, food retail 3.7%, and commercial food service 6.6% (ibid.). So focusing only on reducing the number of miles our food travels may help reduce the energy and carbon footprint of that food, but there are larger fish to fry, so to speak.
Importantly, food traveling fewer miles is not necessarily more energy efficient. Food traveling by rail, ship, or large tractor-trailer likely requires less energy on a per-unit food basis than food transported by an inefficient farm truck to a market. Additionally, trying to grow tomatoes in the off-season in northern New York would require a huge amount of energy in the form of grow lamps, heated greenhouses, and interior irrigation. However, they can be grown with much fewer energy inputs in areas of the world experiencing their growing season while we are not. Without the globalization of our food system, we could not eat tomatoes in December (or May, or October, for that matter).

 
Additionally, farmers’ markets are not always the havens for locavores that they claim to be. Many markets, including the Syracuse Regional Market, allow “out of state” vendors to set up at the market. These vendors purchase produce produce, sometimes locally but primarily from wholesale markets out of state, and resell it at the markets. They blend in with the local farmers, sometimes owning vans labeled with a farm name (despite the fact that they do not own or work at a farm), and pass off their produce as local. It’s more obvious when they have lemons and kiwi for sale that have obviously not been grown in New York, but sometimes it can be difficult for a consumer to make an informed decision.
My point is not that we should not be making an effort to reduce energy consumption in the food system, or that eating locally isn’t worthwhile. There are many reasons to eat locally, including nutritional benefits derived from fresh, minimally processed foods, the support of local businesses that provide jobs, and the connection to the land and people that feed you. However, as far as policy is concerned, we should be thinking about the larger system. The increase in energy consumption in the processing industry has been large over the past few decades, as Americans have increasingly relied on processed and convenience foods. Encouraging the consumption of minimally processed, minimally packaged food (which is also arguably healthier) by focusing subsidies on fresh produce rather than corn (a prominent ingredient in a wide variety of processed foods) could help reduce this energy sink. Additionally, over 30% of the energy is used in the household for storage and cooking. More efficient appliances, rated through Energy Star and supported by a buyback program (a sort of “cash for clunkers” for refrigerators and stoves), could help reduce this enormous portion of the energy costs of the food system.

 
On a personal level, as noted by the authors of the University of Michigan report, we can reduce our own food energy/carbon footprint by reducing the amount of meat in our diet. Animals are highly inefficient at converting grains to meat, and it is much more energy efficient to consume the grains directly. Organic foods may also reduce the energy costs of production because they are grown without synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, which require large inputs of energy in manufacturing (ibid.). The University of Michigan report also notes that while refrigerators have become substantially more efficient over time, they have also become larger, negating the efficiency gains. Buying smaller amounts of food at more regular intervals and relying less on frozen convenience meals may allow us to reduce our refrigeration needs.
There’s a great deal we can do to reduce our energy demands in the food sector, we just need the proper information to make informed choices. Maybe in the future food will be labeled with a carbon or energy footprint label to allow us to make those decisions fully-informed, but until then we should use the data available and common sense to inform our policy and our personal choices.

 

(1) McWilliams, J.E. 2009. Just Food. New York: Little, Brown, and Company.
(2) Jane Black “What’s in a Number? : How the press got the idea that food travels 1500 miles from farm to plate”
(3) University of Michigan “U.S. Food System”

Civic Engagement and Political Disillusionment

Last Tuesday, I attended a talk hosted by the University Lecture series featuring Eric Liu.  Liu’s talk, which was titled “The True Meaning of Patriotism,” offered a progressive definition of patriotism and citizenship. He argued that since the 1960s the American Left has largely abandoned the concept of patriotism and allowed the Right seized it as part of its ideological lexicon.  Because the notion of patriotism has largely gone uncontested in the public arena, the idea has become impoverished, reduced to a jingoistic affirmation of American military and economic power.

However, Liu asserted that patriotism is a far richer concept than this.  Instead, patriotism, at bottom, is about putting country above self.  It is about public service and civic engagement—or as he put it “showing up” to one’s public obligations of being politically informed and part of the democratic process.

Underpinning Liu’s definition of patriotism is a commitment to the philosophical tradition of civic republicanism. As we all learn in our high school civics classes, the United States is not a democracy but a republic.  However, Republicanism (the classical political theory as opposed to the current political party) stands in contrast not only to Democracy as a form of government, but also Liberalism (classic philosophical liberalism as opposed to the current political ideology).  Where Liberalism is largely about rights and non-interference, Republicanism is rooted in civic obligations and engagement.  According to Republicanism, self-governance requires moral virtue and public spiritedness. Although Liberal and Republican thought can be seen throughout American history, the latter was more prevalent at the Founding than it is today.

Part of what Liu’s talk was about was reinvigorating our Republican tradition.  At one point during his lecture, Liu argued that the notion of “Rugged Individualism,” a very Liberal concept, was a “myth.”  According to Liu, self-governance cannot work if we think of our Nation merely as a conglomeration of egoistic individuals who use government only as a means of advancing and protecting our own interests. Rather, being part of a Republic requires some sacrifice, putting country above self.  It requires sacrificing some time and mental energy to being an effective citizen—keeping informed about social issues and engaging others about them.

There can be no doubt that our politics suffers when it focuses solely on individual rights to the exclusion of the common good.  However, where I was disappointed with Liu’s lecture is that he did not address what he considered to be the major barriers to civic engagement. Instead, Liu echoed Gandhi asserting essentially that the solution to our civic deficit problem was to “be the change you want to see in the world.”  This strikes me as a good first step but insufficient the face of systemic obstacles.

Hyper-partisanship, gerrymandered congressional districts, a broken campaign finance system, and parallel media universes (on the Left: MSNBC and liberal media outlets, and Fox News and conservative talk radio on the Right) all combine to prevent citizens from being engaged in their government.  As a result, to quote Yeats, “The best lack all conviction, while the worst/Are full of passionate intensity.”  Until we can empower the silent majority of reasonable people to enter the political fray—something that is understandably considered to be unsavory and pointless, we are destined to be politically disillusioned.

Recently, PBS’s Frontline ran a powerful documentary about concussions in the NFL.

The full video is available for free from the Frontline website.

Here is a description of the program:

From PBS and Frontline: The National Football League, a multibillion-dollar commercial juggernaut, presides over America’s indisputable national pastime. But the NFL is under assault as thousands of former players and a host of scientists claim the league has covered up how football inflicted long-term brain injuries on many players. In this special investigation, FRONTLINE and prize-winning journalists Steve Fainaru and Mark Fainaru-Wada of ESPN reveal the hidden story of the NFL and brain injuries, drawn from their forthcoming book League of Denial: The NFL, Concussions and the Battle for Truth (Crown Archetype, October 2013). What did the NFL know and when did it know it? What’s the truth about the risks to players? What can be done? The FRONTLINE investigation details how, for years, the league denied and worked to refute scientific evidence that the violent collisions at the heart of the game are linked to an alarming incidence of early onset dementia, catastrophic brain damage, death, and other devastating consequences for some of football’s all-time greats.

“League of Denial: The NFL’s Concussion Crisis”

Should Addicts Be Paid Not To Have Kids?

Should Addicts Be Paid Not To Have Kids?

Several months ago, WNYC’s Radiolab ran a story about Barbara Harris and her daughter Destiny. Barbara Harris is the founder is the founder of a controversial organization, Project Prevention.  Project Prevention pays drugs addicts to be receive vasectomies or tubal ligation.  

Here is a description of the story: 

When Barbara Harris was 37, she started wishing she could have a daughter. It was 1989, and by that time only two of her six sons were still at home. So she filled out all the paperwork, and later that summer got a call about an 8-month-old baby girl. As soon as Barbara met her, she knew that was it — this was her daughter. She named her Destiny Harris. But before she could take her home, the social worker told Barbara that Destiny had tested positive for crack, PCP, and heroin. Her mom was addicted to drugs, and doctors said Destiny was delayed mentally and physically as a result, and always would be.

Producer Pat Walters flew down to North Carolina to meet Barbara and Destiny, who’s now 22 years old. And Barbara tells Pat, a few months after she brought Destiny home, she and her husband got another call. Destiny’s mom had given birth to another boy. They went to the hospital to pick him up, and he was going through withdrawal from heroin. Then Barbara got another call: a little girl. And a year later, another little boy. By 1994 she’d adopted four kids from the same woman. And she was feeling angry — how could this be allowed to happen? She decided to take a stand by trying to get a law passed for longterm birth control. And when that failed, she decided to take matters into her own hands. She founded an organization called Project Prevention, and began paying women with drug addiction to get IUDs, or get sterilized.

Lynn Paltrow, the Executive Director and founder of National Advocates for Pregnant Women, argues that Project Prevention is misguided and harmful, and articulates many of the objections raised by Barbara’s critics.

Marriage Equality in New Jersey Following Court Battle

On Monday, October 21, Chris Christie ended his fight against the state judiciary to prevent the legalization of same-sex marriage in New Jersey; at 12:01a.m. the next day, same-sex couples were permitted to marry.  The drive for marriage equality in New Jersey was by no means an easy one: legislative and judicial initiatives both faced setbacks and opposition at every step.

The legal battle for marriage equality culminated in the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision in Garden State Equality v. Dow, handed down on Friday, October 18.  That case began in 2011 when the Garden State Equality group and a number of same-sex couples filed a lawsuit in Mercer County’s Superior Court.  The presiding judge at first dismissed the case, but then rescheduled it for trial.  On July 3, 2013, plaintiffs filed for summary judgment in the Superior Court of New Jersey; Judge Mary Jacobson granted the plaintiff’s motion on September 27, 2013.

Judge Jacobson’s opinion in part focused on a development that will likely affect all future lawsuits challenging same-sex marriage bans: United States v. Windsor.  In Windsor, the Supreme Court of the United States struck down Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), holding that the federal government’s failure to recognize same-sex marriages legally performed in states violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment.  United States v. Windsor, 133 S.Ct. 2675, 2693 (2013).

In Garden State Equality, Judge Jacobson determined that  New Jersey’s own equal protection provisions must now be re-examined “in light of the changed circumstances brought about by Windsor.”  Garden State Equality v. Dow, 2013 WL 5397372 (N.J.Super.L.), 20.  After a thorough analysis of both parties’ arguments, Judge Jacobson concluded that New Jersey’s denial of marriage licenses to same-sex couples violated the equal protection provisions of the New Jersey constitution.  Id. at 24.

After the Judge Jacobson denied Gov. Christie request for a stay pending  appeal to the state’s appellate courts, he immediately appealed to the New Jersey Supreme Court. This marked Christie’s second attempt to stymie progress towards marriage equality: in 2012, Christie vetoed a bill passed by the New Jersey legislature which would have permitted same-sex marriage.  On October 18, the New Jersey Supreme Court provided the blunt governor with a blunt answer: it would not grant a stay because it would almost certainly affirm Judge Jacobson’s ruling.  The court determined that same-sex couples could apply for marriage licenses immediately, and Gov. Christie decided to end his legal fight.

What is the significance of this legal victory for marriage equality advocates?  First, it shows that Windsor will be used by state judiciaries to invalidate denials of marriage access to same-sex couples.  Second, it shows a very curious path forward for Gov. Chris Christie and the Republican Party as a whole.  Christie will almost certainly run for president in 2016, and what sets him apart from other prospective candidates is his pragmatic rather than ideological approach to issues.

Thus, Christie’s decision to end his legal efforts against same-sex marriage was entirely keeping with his character: it does not betray any change of heart regarding marriage equality, it instead shows that he saw the writing on the wall: the state supreme court would rule against him sooner or later.  By dropping his appeal, Christie has burnished his “moderate” appeal, especially compared to other probable 2016 contenders like Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.  While ending a losing fight might seem logical rather than laudable, Christie nonetheless has positioned himself as a realist devoid of the self-destructive bent towards ideological purity that pervades the Republican Party. While Christie’s political future is not certain, one thing is: as a result of Christie giving up, New Jersey’s same-sex couples are enjoying the benefits of legal marriage earlier than expected.