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June 12th, 2010 We want to invite you to Farmchella

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BREAKING NEWS ON THE SOUTH CENTRAL FARM!

On the eve of the groundbreaking for our donated land in Buttonwillow,  and the 4th anniversary of losing our South Central Farm, a for-sale sign has gone up at 4st and Alameda!

The asking price - $16 million. So we are once again forced to raise enormous funds! We remain undaunted. We know we can do it. But only with your help and support...

Help us get this lot, still barren from being bulldozed, and regrow the largest urban farm in the country!


Every donation brings us closer to success!

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June 12th, 2010 We want to invite you to Farmchella

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Two Farms One Mission

The Buttonwillow and South Central Farms are intricately linked in our mission to a more holistic and equitable food system. And,  to creating independent and  autonomous communities through sustainable jobs.

 

What made the South Central Farm so meaningful was its ability to build community out of diversity.


Now we are expanding that spirit to the Central valley. We hope more areas will join us as we work to benefit the general community, society,  and environment.


The Farm Project

Over the last seven months, through a web of support and an amazing show of generosity, a myriad of local and national businesses have donated materials and labor in excess of $150,000 to rebuild the existing defunct well and make it viable for farming.


The Well Project has made real the South Central Farmers' dream to farm their own land, organically and sustainably, now and for generations of farmers to come.


Donate to the Well Project

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GRAIN publications back call for action on agriculture to address climate change PDF Print E-mail
Written by Rose Xochitl Luján   
Dec 15, 2009 at 10:59 AM
Source: http://www.grain.org/o/?id=97

***Media Advisory***

GRAIN publications back call for action on agriculture to address climate change

On December 15th, La Via Campesina and a number of other groups will be leading a day of action in Copenhagen to put agriculture front and center in the discussions over climate change. Although the official Convention is sure to disappoint, these groups will be carrying a message of hope. What they want the world to know is that, in their on-going struggle for food sovereignty, there is a way out of the climate crisis.

GRAIN couldn't agree more. Today's global food system needs an overhaul. According to our calculations, the expansion of the industrial food system is the leading cause of climate change. Through its reliance on fossil fuels, massive exports, market concentration, erosion of soils and expansion of plantations, it generates 44-57% of the total global green house gas (GHG) emissions. This industrial food system is also completely incapable of assuring people's food and livelihood needs as the world moves further into climate change. Already it has left a billion people without enough food to eat, and hundreds of millions of more people will go hungry in the coming years if the food system is not reorganized.

The most devastating consequence of this industrial food system, however, is that it is destroying other food systems that can turn climate change around and provide for the world's food needs.

Forget about carbon markets, geo-engineering and all the other false solutions. Here is a real way out of the climate crisis.*

- By using agro-ecological practices to rebuild the organic matter in soils lost from industrial agriculture, total GHG emissions can be reduced by 20-35%
- By decentralizing livestock farming and integrating it with crop production, total GHG emissions can be reduced by 5-9%
- By distributing food mainly through local markets instead of transnational food chains, total GHG emissions can be reduced by 10-12%
- By stopping land clearing and deforestation for plantations, total GHG emissions can be reduced by 15-18%

These straightforward measures would lead to a reduction of 1/2 to 3/4 of current global GHG emissions.

What is required to get there is what farmers and food producers have been defending and calling for for decades:
- decentralisation of production and distribution,

- effective support for agricultural practices based on agro-ecological processes, biodiversity and local knowledge, and

- profound agrarian reform

Politics is the only thing standing in the way of such a transition. The problem is that the corporations that profit from industrial food are setting the policy agenda. It's time to take the fate of the planet and humankind from the hands of big speculators  and put the world's food producers first.

--------

To contact the Via Campesina delegation in Copenhagen, please call:
Isabelle Delforge and Boaventura Monjane: +45 5059 8325

For information on Agriculture Action Day:
http://www.climate-justice-action.org/mobilization/agriculture-action-day/
climate-action (at) aseed.net

*The complete facts and figures are available from the following newly released reports:

Small farmers can cool the planet :A way out of the mayhem caused by the industrial food system, November 2009
by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/o/?id=93
References: http://www.grain.org/go/climatecrisisrefs

Small Scale Sustainable Farmers Are Cooling Down The Earth, November 2009
Via Campesina Views
http://viacampesina.net/downloads/PAPER5/EN/paper5-EN.pdf 

Earth matters - Tackling the climate crisis from the ground up, October 2009
by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=643

The international food system and the climate crisis, October 2009
by GRAIN
http://www.grain.org/seedling/?id=642
Last Updated ( Dec 15, 2009 at 11:02 AM )
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