The UK food market is beset by a whole range of
problems. Britain only produces 50 per cent of the food it consumes, while the
rest is imported. At the same time, ending the production of biofuel would free
up land to feed 3.5 million people locally. Eight large companies control 90
per cent of UK food supplies.
And yet, there are positive examples elsewhere, which
demonstrate how food production and consumption could be organized differently.
Alan Simpson pointed to the food-land
belt in Liège/Belgium, which has the goal of producing 50 per cent of
regional food supplies within five years. In Amance,
France, 5500 solar panels are placed across the farm above the grain
production. Renewable energy and local food production go hand-in-hand.
Floating gardens safe crops from flooding in Bangladesh (BBC
11 September 2020), while initiatives such as Regather in Sheffield, the Brighton Food Partnership, urban
agriculture in Barcelona/Spain or rooftop greenhouse farms in
Montreal/Canada emphasize the production of food directly in cities. The
latter is able to fill 20000 food trolleys per week. Other alternatives include
the slow
food movement or sharing of food cultures as in Italy.
In short, the way forward is to share knowledge about how we can adapt food production to climate change while reclaiming it from large corporations.
In subsequent discussions, the focus was on what could
be done about growing food locally. Participants pointed to the largely unused
green space of the University of Nottingham. Provided we can move away from
this idyllic notion of British parkland spaces, there is a lot of local food
production possible. Students may not be on campus all year round in large
numbers, but cooperation with local allotment holders and food growing
initiatives could ensure that enough people are at hand during the main growing
season over the summer. Such cooperation does not only provide food production
but can actually strengthen the integration of students including many
international students into local communities. Considering that there are
currently long waiting lists for allotments in Nottinghamshire, there will be
plenty volunteers to step in, when students are away.
The role of education too was identified as crucial
for an alternative future. Too many people do not know where our food is
actually coming from. This can include new information systems about what is
produced where locally, allowing for a better redistribution of food in times
of harvest surpluses.
The University of Nottingham has a lot of
opportunities for co-creating space between students and the wider public. To
put it into practice requires the necessary political will by its
administration!
Andreas Bieler
22 November 2022
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