Search | Statistics | User Listing Forums | Language
You are logged in as a guest. ( logon | register )

Protein deficit in EU agriculture
Jump to page : 1
Now viewing page 1 [25 messages per page]
View previous thread :: View next thread
   Food Group -> Food Group General DiscussionMessage format
 
Anne Thomas
Posted 2011-01-19 20:04 (#521)
Subject: Protein deficit in EU agriculture


Extreme Veteran

Posts: 319
100100100
A worrying report suggests that we are relying extremely heavily on imported protein such as Soy beans in the EU. This is often grown in areas cleared of rainforest.
We need to persuade our farmers to grow more of these crops for themselves as the price of oil goes up otherwise we will be stuck. We also need to eat less animal and more plant protein.

See this FOE campaign for more information.
https://mail.google.com/mail/?hl=en&shva=1#inbox/12d9fa7853dd9af7

This is the last section of a rather long EU report.
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
The EU Protein crop deficit
A recent study published by the European Commission* on the protein crop sector reveals a
remarkable decrease in protein crop production in the European Union in the past ten years.
The main dried pulses excluding soybeans decreased by 30%, and soybean production by
12%. This trend increases an already existing alarming dependence of the Union on the
imports of protein crops, which are mainly used for animal feed and carries major risks
especially for the EU livestock sector, as price volatility on international markets has
substantially increased. *(LMC international report).
Overall EU protein crop production currently only occupies 3% of the Union's arable land
(excluding fruit and vegetables). In spite of public support for the sector since 1978,
production of dried pulses, which temporarily increased during the 1980s, has again decreased
to roughly one million ha in 2008. More than 40 million tonnes of crop proteins, mainly soy
beans and corn gluten feed are imported annually, representing 80% of the EU's crop protein
consumption. In terms of land use abroad for crop protein imports into the EU, this represents
ten per cent of the EU's arable land, or 20 million ha.
Historical reasons for the deficit and its consequences
The deficit in protein crop production goes back to previously established international trade
agreements (the General Tariff and Trade Agreement (GATT) and the Blair House
Agreement), which allowed the EU to protect its cereal production and in return allowed dutyfree
imports of oilseed and protein crops into the EU. Protein crop production was therefore at
a severe competitive disadvantage and fell sharply accordingly. Farmers and local processing
business therefore lost interest in protein crops and also lost practical knowledge of
cultivating and adding value to them. Breeders stopped developing disease resistant and
highly performing varieties. European research in this field has also substantially declined
reflecting the low demand in seeds and technical support. The EU is phasing out support for
protein crops and drying facilities for lucerne/alfalfa and other leguminous fodders. The most
worrying fact is that throughout Europe, practical experience in protein crop production as
part of extended crop rotation is being lost, including on-farm selection, storage, processing
and on-farm use as animal feed. Finally, also traders in oil and protein crops are now fully
focussed on protein crop imports and show little interest in domestic production.
Reducing the EU's protein deficit - an important element of CAP reform
The European Commission and member states have pointed at advantages of a more balanced
supply and consumption of domestic protein crops as part of an integrated strategy responding
to new challenges like climate change, agricultural biodiversity loss, depletion of soils, and
pollution of groundwater and price volatility for agricultural products on the world market.
The extended use of protein crops in crop rotation offers major agro-environmental and
climate mitigation advantages. Regarding climate change, leguminous varieties such as field
peas, broad and field beans, lupins, lentils, chicken peas, but also lucerne/alfalfa and clover
can substantially reduce green house gas emissions through assimilation and fixation of
nitrogen in the soil and thus reduce of the use of nitrogen fertiliser by up to 100kg N per ha
and month. With a higher percentage of protein crops in crop rotation, soil fertility and
structure, nutrient storage as well as health of following crops is improved. Permanent grassclover
mixtures for animal feed, mixtures of cereals and proteins cover soils better and so
PR\837708EN.doc 9/10 PE450.760v02-00
EN
reduce nutrient run-off into groundwater and rivers, as well as offering better conditions for
bees and other pollinating insects. Extended crop rotation reduces the need for crop protection
intervention and can contribute to the conservation of diversity in wild and cultivated species
and varieties.
Protein crops and enlarged crop rotation - reduced production costs and increased
environmental advantages
The extended use of leguminous crops in crop rotation substantially reduces the need to apply
nitrogen fertiliser which contributes not only to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in its
production but also overall production costs for farmers. With a global trend towards rising
crude oil prices, costs for agricultural inputs including fuels are also increasing continuously.
Crop rotation including protein crops can reduce fuel consumption in soil treatment, as the
content of humus and soil moisture is better preserved and requires less tilling. A recent study
published by the European Parliament (PE 438.591) and a study of the French Commission on
sustainable development of the French Government (Dec 2009 no 15) estimates a reduction of
costs for fertiliser use in France of up to 100 Mio € per annum. In short, the following
advantages of protein crop production within extended crop rotation have been identified in
the mentioned studies:
Increase of nitrogen fixation, creation of a balanced C/N ratio in the soil and improvement of
humus content, reduction of pesticides treatments and use of herbicides as a consequence of
reduced plant disease and herb invasion; improved soil structure.
Quality of protein crop production and compound feeding stuff
The efficiency of using protein crops in animal feed production strongly depends on the
content of essential amino acids in the various crops and the composition of compound
feedstuffs. Soybeans are currently considered to deliver the highest integrated content of these
acids with a very good balance of nutrients especially for pork and poultry production.
Therefore today the soy content of compound feedstuffs is around 50% for egg and poultry
production is based on soy beans. In the production of pork meat and beef the soy content of
compound feeds fluctuates around 28% and 21% respectively.
Possibilities for substituting imported soybeans and other non-domestically produced animal
feed products strongly depend upon new incentives for farmers to grow these crops and on
adequate infrastructure for processing into animal feed. The European Commission should
therefore look into possibilities to overcome the current low level of research, seed selection
and marketing, knowledge of production, storage and use of these crops for on-farm feed
production.
Specific support, research, extension services and training
In order to offer farmers new incentives to grow and use protein crops along with cereals and
oil seeds and their by-products, the reform of the CAP should include horizontal measures
which do not offer a specific crop premium but which encourage farming practices
responding to the new challenges and at the same time overcoming the protein deficit of the
Union. Article 68 of regulation 73/2009 has been used by a number of member states for
specific support for protein crop production as a contribution to agro-environmental practices.
However this option should become EU-wide practice to respond to the new challenges. The
Commission should consider a top-up payment with compulsory rotation of at least four
different crops including at least one protein crop, as well as increased support for non-arable
permanent grassland areas including specific grass-leguminous fodder mixtures. These
PE450.760v02-00 10/10 PR\837708EN.doc
XT
measures would not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but also contribute to a higher
level of plant and animal health. The Commission should also consider specific support of
investments in regional, local or on-farm facilities for storage, cleaning, and on-farm
processing of protein crops as part of rural development programmes. It is also important to
carry out a study on current deficits in research and seed production, including the needs of
improved extension services and to consider a decentralised approach to research programmes
which takes into account farmers' local knowledge and sustainable farming systems. The
Commission might also consider to re-establish an agricultural research unit in the General
Directorate for agriculture and rural development.
Towards a better balance between and animal protein and crop protein production
A very high percentage of protein crops is currently produced for animal feed, while the
human consumption of grain legumes has continuously decreased in the EU. Regarding the
commitments of the EU to actively contribute to global food security and to actively combat
climate change, future agriculture and rural development policy should work towards not only
a more balanced animal protein and crop protein production so as to reduce green house gases
and run off of nutrients into watersheds, but should also motivate consumers, public
procurement authorities and catering services to chose a more balanced, environmentally
friendly and diverse choice of food in their diet.
At the same time the Commission should take legislative initiatives to reduce food waste
throughout the food chain, including slaughter offal and swill the use or disposal of which is
still not adequately regulated. The Commission should firmly apply the precautionary
principle in this field, but should also take legislative initiatives to reduce food waste and to
improve the overall balance of animal and crop production in view of the new challenges
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Agric
Posted 2011-01-20 01:42 (#523 - in reply to #521)
Subject: Re: Protein deficit in EU agriculture



Veteran

Posts: 214
100100
Yes, true. I have some more specific observations...

Growing protein (mainly legume, almost none in this part of the world) and grain (mainly barley and wheat in this part of the world) crops to feed animals is pretty unsustainable, let alone importing large quantities of soybeans which are a very major element in animal feeds.

It's fundamentally immoral - from both human and animal perspectives - to produce protein and grain crops to intensively rear animals for food the way industrial agriculture does. We should stop it!

Animals are useful ways of producing food from marginal land that isn't good enough to produce vegetable / grain crops, their diet should be supplemented by waste / substandard food where available, not by crops produced on prime agricultural land. If these are insufficient to produce the amount of meat we desire then we will just have to eat less meat (and we should). I say that as an omnivore and independent of any moral argument about whether we should eat flesh at all. Yes we should eat more legumes directly...

BUT! I and others have tried to grow protein crops up here and it's damn hard. Broad beans and field beans (a coarser type of broad bean) are the only reliable outdoor crops I've found in this climate. I have grown canneloni and yin yang beans (both dwarf french types) very successfully in a polytunnel here but not outdoors, though it might be possible if done right in a good summer. Climbing Borlotto beans are very viable outdoors in the Thames Valley but much less so here. Soybeans were abject failures even in a polytunnel here and outdoors down south.

So, dried broad beans are about the only winter source of vegetarian protein we can grow here on a significant scale (please correct me if I'm wrong) without protection like polytunnels or in a very few, very small and favourable spots. I think that animals are an appropriate source of protein in this climate, but only if they are fed appropriately and treated honourably.
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Anne Thomas
Posted 2011-01-20 05:18 (#524 - in reply to #521)
Subject: Re: Protein deficit in EU agriculture


Extreme Veteran

Posts: 319
100100100
Our broad beans did really well last year and we went from a family in which only 1/5 liked them to all liking them. Picked and eaten fresh from the garden they are very different from those served up for school dinners etc. We also managed to get a small second crop by chopping the plants off about 15cm from the ground after we had harvested the first. We've saved some seed for this year. Peas also did quite well and again are easy to save for the next year. Our soy beans were hopeless. One survived but did not crop. We are also omnivores but tend to have a local chicken about once a fortnight and use it in different ways for several meals then have a vegetarian week, maybe with some venison for one meal. We stopped having beef during the BSE crisis about 20 years ago and have never gone back to it. It seems the most carbon intensive of shop bought meat. If you know that it is fed on grass that might be different but its hard to get data.
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Anne Thomas
Posted 2011-01-21 17:18 (#527 - in reply to #521)
Subject: Re: Protein deficit in EU agriculture


Extreme Veteran

Posts: 319
100100100
Sunflowers also seem to do OK up here if you start them inside early enough. Saves importing bird food and can be nice in muesli, though a bit fiddly to shell.
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Anne Thomas
Posted 2011-03-04 08:07 (#571 - in reply to #521)
Subject: Re: Protein deficit in EU agriculture


Extreme Veteran

Posts: 319
100100100
This is the reply I received from the MEP on the matter. Bit of a fudge me thinks.
Dear Ms Thomas,

Thank you for contacting Struan Stevenson MEP concerning the draft
report on the EU protein deficit.

I agree with you in wanting to see greater production of animal feed in
the UK. Protein crops are currently under-represented in the UK, and
throughout Europe, despite the advantages for sustainability in
agriculture.

The major cause for this is the difficulty in overcoming erratic crop
performance which leads to the crop being uncompetitive. While yield
potential of pulse crops is high, average yields have been about half of
the best achieved, and in broad terms the best UK yields fall short of
current yield potential by about 25%.

By contrast, most soybean feed now comes from the Midwest of the United
States or South America, simply because these areas have the climatic
and soil conditions best adapted to producing soy. The natural advantage
these areas enjoy means that European soy is increasingly uncompetitive
on the world market. Instead, European land is used for producing crops
where we have a natural advantage, such as wheat. As food security
becomes a growing concern around the world, it is sensible for crops to
be grown in the areas of the world where they can enjoy the highest
yields.

While some soy production in South America has taken place on deforested
land, much of it has not. Brazil alone has more agricultural land not in
production than the USA has in production, suggesting that Brazil could
significantly increase agricultural production without encroaching on
the rainforests. Protection of the rainforests is vitally important and
in addition to some agricultural practices (mainly to make room for
cattle ranches) deforestation in Brazil has a number of other causes,
including inadequate law enforcement and poor governance issues, all of
which must be tackled.

Ultimately soy can be grown in Brazil in areas far from rainforests, and
as long as we can clearly identify where production has taken place, I
am not opposed to the EU importing animal feed sourced from Brazil.

With these competing factors in mind, it is clear that if we are to
reduce our dependence on imports, we must improve the economic viability
of growing protein crops in the EU, using GM and all the other tools
available to us, so that our farmers are not made to endure further
costs from legislation that dictates against the market. Local food and
feed is important but a sensible balance between imports and domestic
production must be found.

As this report has such a balance we have supported it.

Thank you again for your email and please do not hesitate to contact us
again should you have further queries.

Yours Sincerely,


Catriona Meehan

Office of Struan Stevenson MEP
President of the Iraq Delegation
Senior Vice-President of the Fisheries Committee

European Parliament
Brussels
Tel.: +32 2 2833544
Fax.: +32 2 2849710
email: struan.stevenson@europarl.europa.eu
www.struanstevenson.com
www.youtube.com/StruanStevenson

-----Original Message-----
From: Anne Thomas [mailto:anne.katherine.thomas@googlemail.com]
Sent: 03 March 2011 08:46
To: STEVENSON Struan
Subject: [SPAM SUSPECTED] Please vote for home-grown proteins

Dear Scotland Members of the European Parliament,

I am very concerned about the impacts of factory farming in the UK and
Europe.

Factory farming of livestock requires huge quantities of imported animal
feed. Most of this is soy grown on massive plantations in South America.
These plantations are destroying forests and wildlife and are a major
contributor to global climate change.

Worse still, most imported soy is genetically modified, requiring
increased pesticide use. These pesticides are poisoning people and the
environment in South America.

I want our meat and dairy to be produced differently.

Instead of importing animal feed from South America, I want to see
alternatives to soy grown in Europe.

Growing more protein crops like peas and beans could have many economic
and environmental benefits - both for farmers and consumers. Peas and
broad beans grow well in Scotland and are nitrogen fixers so used as
part of a crop rotation reduce the need for nitrogen fertilisers which
are based on oil and therefore both contribute to climate change and are
becoming increasingly expensive. Several studies have shown protein
crops improve soil quality and tackle climate change while reducing use
of fertilizers and costs for farmers.

I am aware you now have a major opportunity to back these benefits in a
report being discussed in the European Parliament this month: "Draft
report on the EU protein deficit: What solution for a long-standing
problem?"

I urge you to reject the inclusions of GM in this report and instead
support its proposals on reducing Europe's dependence on soy imports and
developing home grown proteins for animal feed.

Please ensure these proposals are taken forward in the reform of the
Common Agricultural Policy.


You can contact me by email (preferably - to save resources) or at the
following address:

Yours sincerely,
Anne Thomas
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Anne Thomas
Posted 2011-03-04 08:56 (#572 - in reply to #521)
Subject: Re: Protein deficit in EU agriculture


Extreme Veteran

Posts: 319
100100100
Dear Struan Stevenson,

Thank you for your reply. I am glad you support the report, but in suggesting it is all right to rely on imports of soy because land can be more productive elsewhere I do not think you have taken the long view of global food security into account.

The farmland in South America that is not in production has very often been leached of its nutrients due to intensive agriculture which is why there has been the pressure to encroach on areas of rainforest. Use of GM and intensive fertiliser and pesticide use may increase yeilds in the short term but often at the expense of long term soil fertility and run off affecting waterways. Climate change is likely to make the areas you mentioned a lot drier and yields will therefore fall. The Midwest of America is already using all the water it can. See 'When rivers run dry' by Fred Pearce. http://www.bookbrowse.com/reviews/index.cfm?book_number=1827

Importing food stuffs from around the world may be cheap today because of poverty wages in the developing world and cheap oil. It will not continue to be so. Oil supplies are peaking. The current Arab unrest has sent prices spiralling and that very quickly has effect on food prices when so much food is imported. You must be aware of this from your Iraq portfolio.
See Jeremy Leggett's article http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/cif-green/2011/feb/10/peak-oi...

Given our current food system often uses up to 10 calories of oil for every calorie of food there is a need for urgent change because of the twin threats of Climate Change and Peak Oil. Your letter suggests mainly business as usual with a gradual change if the economic circumstances are right. I think we need to be much bolder.
See the 'A farm for the future' video. http://www.viddler.com/explore/PermaScience/videos/4/

Regards

Anne Thomas
Top of the page Bottom of the page
Jump to page : 1
Now viewing page 1 [25 messages per page]
Jump to forum :
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread

We are part of the rapidly expanding worldwide Transition Towns movement. The Black Isle is a peninsula of about 100 sq miles ENE of Inverness in Scotland, UK.


(Delete all cookies set by this site)

Running MegaBBS ASP Forum Software | © 2002-2024 PD9 Software