developing food resilience suzette jackson, director | innate ecology

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DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

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Page 1: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson,

Director | Innate Ecology

Page 2: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

“Ever since we stepped into the precarious

shelter of domestication, we humans have

struggled to create food systems that could

sustain us – all of us- without unravelling the

delicate ecological fabric that ensures future

harvests.” Rebuilding the Foodshed, by Philip Ackerman-Leist

Page 3: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Source: 100Resilient Cities, The Rockerfeller Foundation, 2015

Page 4: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

GLOBAL FOOD ISSUES

Page 5: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

World population increased to 7.2 billion people mid - 2013, up from 2.5 billion in 1950. Global population is projected to grow to 9.6 billion by 2050, an increase of 7.1 billion

people in only 100 years (based on medium-variant).

Source: Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affair of the United Nations Secretariat (2013). World Population Prospects: The 2012 Revision New York: United Nations.

World Population

Page 6: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

The global urban population has grown from 14 per cent in 1900 to 60 per cent in 2012,

with Australia urban populations at 89 per cent (DESA 2013), located mainly on the eastern

coastline.

Image: http://africanarguments.org

Page 7: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Hunger, malnutrition and obesity are defining issues of the 21st century.

In the face of high world population growth coupled with the urbanization of the

human species, peri-urban and rural areas are under pressure to supply food,

water and energy.

Page 8: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Globally 70% of freshwater is used for agriculturefreshwater use for industrial activities 22%

freshwater use for domestic activities 8%

Page 9: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Food is lost or wasted along the entire value chain

Page 10: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

World Resources Institute 2013

Page 11: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Deforestation & Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Agriculture was responsible for roughly 80 percent of tropical

deforestation between 2000 and 2010. (Kissenger, G. M. et al. 2012)

Land-use change can be a proxy for biodiversity loss, since habitat loss is

the world’s most significant cause of biodiversity loss (Millennium

Ecosystem Assessment 2005). Land use change contributed 11 percent of

global greenhouse gas emissions. (Searchinger, T. C. et al. 2013)

Meat consumption per capita has increased significantly over the last

century. Lamb, beef, Cheese and pork have the worst environment al

impacts and generate the most greenhouse has emissions. (EWG, 2011)

Page 12: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Climate change 2015: growing risks, critical choices, Climate Council August 2015

Page 13: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Climate impacts on regional Australia

Climate affects virtually every aspect of food production and farm profitability.

It also has significant impacts on food affordability, accessibility, quality and safety, factors

that collectively affect food security.

The risks posed by climate change for Australia’s food production systems and our food

security are complex and inter-connected and include: _ risks posed by ongoing degradation of Australia’s natural resource base; _ direct risks of changes in temperature, rainfall and other climatic impacts on agricultural

production; _ direct impacts of extreme events on food supply, safety and distribution; _ economic risks posed by energy costs and policies, including those designed to reduce

greenhouse gas emissions; and _ changes to Australia’s competitiveness due to climatic changes in other countries.

Climate change 2015: growing risks, critical choices, Climate Council August 2015

Page 14: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Industrialized Farming Practices

Soil is being lost 10 to 40 times faster than it is being replenished, which poses

a threat to long-term human food security. (Pirrentel 2006)

Furthermore, in many places, soil’s capacity to retain nutrients, retain moisture,

and maintain a healthy pH is declining. (Reytar et al. 2014)

Chemical pesticides have detrimental effects on human health, wildlife, water

quality, and other environmental factors depending on the toxicity of the

constituent chemicals and the application conditions. (Reytar et al. 2014)

Annually, about 10 million hectares of cropland are abandoned because of soil erosion and related loss of productivity. (Faeth & Crosson 1994)

Page 15: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Source: The Independent, UK, June 2015

Impact of chemical residue in foods on human health?

Glyphosate (active ingredient in Roundup) has

been linked to Celiac and other gut related

disease.

Recent studies into non- communicable diseases

indicate links to chemicals such as

organophosphate pesticide (OP) in food

production, packaging and plastics.

UC Davis MIND Institute project is looking at the

correlations between impaired development such

as autism and ADHD with agricultural pesticides.

Study by the Environmental Working Group

(EWG) in 2015 found that consumers ingested

pesticides with every day conventionally grown

produce with 2/3 of produce samples tested

containing pesticide residue.

Page 16: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

ECOSYSTEM SERVICES

Page 17: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Sustainable community, precinct and city frameworks have focused on creating

incremental adjustments to existing systems through local initiatives such as

storm water harvesting, green infrastructure and community gardens.

There is however a growing belief that urban planning and infrastructure must

focus on a different approach, a system that restores and regenerates ecosystem

services within the urban, peri-urban and rural ecology.

Source: Kellert, Heerwagen & Mador 2008; McLennan 2011; Reed, 2007 Image: Innovative Ecosystems

Page 18: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

One P

lanet

Livin

g

Page 19: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

In 2005, the Millennium

Ecosystem Assessment

(MEA) released the most

extensive study of the

links between human

health and the world’s

ecosystems.

The MEA, a consortium of

hundreds of scientists

from over 70 nations,

organizes ‘ecosystem

services’ into four broad

categories.

Page 20: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Human Well-Being

Direct drivers of ecosystem change Natural Biological Land Use Change

Ecosystem Services Provisioning services Regulating Services Cultural services Supporting services

Indirect drivers of ecosystem change Economic Social Cultural

Agricultural systems Adequate livelihoods Sufficient nutritious food,

fibre Secure resource access Supporting services Cultural aspects 

Urban systems Clean air and water supply Habitat Climate resilience Social cohesion Personal safety 

Source: Adapted from Sandhu & Wratten (2013)

DependenceImpacts

Ecosystem Services, Agricultural & Urban Systems

Page 21: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Ecosystem Services & Agriculture

Ecosystem services to and from agricultural ecosystems including linkages between human well-being and benefits obtained from ecosystem services that are provided by agriculture.

Source: Thiaw et al 2011

Page 22: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Regenerative Land Management Practices

Page 23: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

FOOD SYSTEMS

Page 24: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Production Harvest /Packaging

Distribution Access / Sales Outlet

ConsumptionProcessing / Manufacturing

Sorting Cleaning

AggregationStoring

AgentsWholesalers

MarketsFarm Gate

RetailersRestaurants/

cafesHealth & Care

SchoolsCaterers

Page 25: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

The food system is considered a complex adaptive

system with non-linear relationships between

cause and effect; the presence of feedback loops

which can regulate or amplify trends; the potential

for alternate system states that are maintained by

different regimes; and the ability to process

information and respond to it. Source: Simon 1962; Allen and Starr 1982; Gell-Mann 1992; Norberg and Cumming 2008

Page 26: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Food System Tiers

Source: Centre for Integrated Agricultural Systems, University of Wisconsin Madison

Page 27: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Centralized Markets

Over the last century many local government markets have

been sold or evolved into corporate structured markets. Today

there are:- 6 central wholesale markets located in Brisbane, Sydney,

Adelaide, Melbourne, Perth & Newcastle - 3 privately owned wholesale markets in Canberra, Darwin

and Hobart

Page 28: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Local Food

The book, The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating, published in 2007,

references a 100-mile radius of food production to consumption, as an area “large

enough to reach beyond a big city and small enough to feel truly local”. The book

arose form a local experiment by a Vancouver based couple to eat only food grow

or raised or produced from within a 100mile radius.

In 1993 a Swedish study calculated the distance travelled by the ingredients of a

typical Swedish breakfast equal the circumference of the Earth. (Gunther 1993)

A Melbourne study in 2007 revealed that food items like oranges, sausages, tea,

baked beans with overseas ingredients have seen more of the world than most

people. The report estimated the total distance travelled by 29 of our most

common food items is 70,803 km. (Gaballa and Abraham 2007)

Page 29: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Regional Food Distribution Centres / Hubs

Page 30: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

macro hub

micro

hub

micro

hub

farmers markets

macro hub

micro

hub

micro

hubfarmers markets

Inter-region Markets hub to hub on behalf of farmers

Source: Jackson. S, 2015

Intra-Region Distribution

Page 31: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

FOOD STRATEGIES

Page 32: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

FAO Food for the Cities Program

WHO Healthy Cities Program

RUAF Foundation, a leading centre of expertise in the field of (intra- and peri-) Urban Agriculture and City Region Food Strategies

Milan Protocol – an international agreement aimed at improving sustainability in the food chain

UK Sustainable Food Cities Network

UN Global Compact Cities Programme, Circles of Sustainability

Global Food Developments

Page 33: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Food Strategies

Page 34: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology
Page 35: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Emerging Role of Food Hubs

Source: Building Successful Food Hubs. 2012, Family Farmer

_ Build strong local and regional food systems_ Provide efficient local and regional value

chain linkages at reduced scale & cost

compared to leading state industry players_ Provide opportunities for small to mid-sized

producers to reach wholesale markets _ Food hubs can serve as aggregator,

processor, and distributor but not all food

hubs perform every role_ Food hubs offer products and services to

customers positioned both upstream and

downstream in the value chain

Page 36: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Source: Fisher et al. 2013

Defining Characteristics of a Regional Food Hub

Page 37: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Australian Food Hub Studies & Food Strategies

Other Food Hub

Feasibility Studies

Sunshine Coast,

QLD

Wangaratta, Vic

Wyndham, Vic

Page 38: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Local Food Economy

Diverse local food

production & distribution

Urban & rural production

Value add food products

Hospitality

Food tourism & events

Connected stakeholders

Local Investment

Community inclusion

Food access

Adaptive to change

Localized Food

System

Production

Aggregation

Processing

Manufacturing

Wholesale

Retail

Consumption

Social- Health, Nutritious food available- Access to fresh food – for all- Diverse & cultural foods- Connected community

Environmental- Sustainable farm practices to

support soil health, water system, habitat & climate

Economic- Farm business viability- Local (short ) distribution chain incl.

retail, commercial, education and health

- Value add local services supported, i.e. specialty meats, preserves, juicing, cheeses

Sustainability

Page 39: DEVELOPING FOOD RESILIENCE Suzette Jackson, Director | Innate Ecology

Suzette Jackson

[email protected]

www.InnateEcology.com

Regional food systems are intrinsically

linked to the sustainbility and resilience

of urban centers.

They contribute to social, cultural,

ecological and economic health.