5.B Cuba Vs UK Flashcards
1
Q
Cuba - background
A
- 1960s - highly industrialised relied on former USSR for fuel, fertilisers and pesticides
- 1991 - USSR collapsed = decline of 50% oil and 85% external trade
- calorie intake fell from 3012 - 2325 1989-1993 and rose to 3277 in 2011
- 90% self-sufficient in fruit and veg but still large imports of meat and dairy
- 2008 - spent $2.2B on imports
2
Q
Cuba - challenges
A
- monoculture = soil degradation (sugar plantations)
- increased severe weather (hurricanes and tornadoes)
- lack of mechanisation
- shortage of foreign exchange needed to buy imported food
- inefficient state-owned farms - tomato crop 2012 rotted as trucks failed to collect on time
- insufficient food shops
- existence of ‘black market’
3
Q
Cuba - methods to increase food security
A
- urban agriculture
- changes in land tenure
- new crops
- support for farmers
4
Q
Cuba - urban agriculture
A
- small urban farms (organoponics) - small scale co-operatives producing fruit and veg
eg - Viveca Alamar organoponics - owned by locals = food to loads and not state owned
- supports permaculture - food production in a closed loop that’s sustainable
5
Q
Cuba - changes in land tenure
A
- state owned to locals small scale co-operatives
- 10,000 acres of rent free land leased from state
- 15% of land arable privately owned - no reliance on government distribution
- 6Mha of flat land - 1/2 cultivated
6
Q
Cuba - New Crops
A
- drought resistant crops - avocado, orange and guava
- wind resistant and rain in hurricane seasons - sweet potato, squash
- GM crops - GM corn planted across 14 provinces
7
Q
Cuba - support for farmers
A
- government raised guaranteed prices
- assistances from PALMA - providing irrigation systems and rents equipment to drill bore holes
- specialism in research and tracking in agro-ecology
8
Q
UK food security issues
A
- lack of healthy eating
- need for resilience
- profitable competitive food system
- unsustainability increasing
9
Q
UK background
A
- 2009 - UK gov published a consultation doc ‘food 2030’ = issues of food security
- imports of 40% = x3 more than exports = need to produce 2/3rd more or eat 40% less
- importing cheaper than home sourced: lamb from Wales is more expensive than meat from New Zealand
10
Q
UK - improvements for producers
A
- grow more food per hectare sustainably with less energy and water use
- GM crops, increasing crop varieties, livestock breeds and food innovation
- farming on natural ecosystems = inputs protected and enhanced
- improve, develop and maintain infrastructure to reduce pinch points
11
Q
UK - improvements for consumer
A
- decrease food waste
- amend dietary issues
- increase availability of organic produce
- cut supply chain - source food locally and regionally
- small independent food - farmers markets
- eat seasonally
12
Q
UK - reducing food waste
A
- recycling composts
- removing stigma of sell by dates
- food waste to food banks
- flexible food prices - ‘last chance’ reduced’ section
13
Q
UK - dietary issues
A
- increase fish intake
- develop aquaculture industries = combining fish farming and hydroponics, growing lettuce in water
- increased information on nutritional content of food - sugar, salt and fat