Thursday, June 12, 2008

Excellent Piece on how the Ignorant Media can hurt Agriculture

Terence Corcoran, editor of the Financial Post, writes that it started out as another killer tomato story — one Texas man dead from salmonella poisoning,

146 others suffering in 16 states — but now it’s turning into the killer of the tomato industry story. How did that happen?

 

The usual. It begins with a food poisoning, gets picked up by brain-dead media, story flies out of control for 48 hours, regulators swing into extreme self-preservation mode, risk-ignorant consumers 2,000 kilometres away get confused and panicky, and the food in question — a billion dollar industry — gets blown away.

 

The bare bones junk science sequence of this week’s tomato scare story couldn’t be more illustrative of our absurd inability to cope with what are really local and relatively minor commonplace events that involve risk that is minimal to non-existent. Food scare stories are also commonplace, and occur even though food risks are generally easily controlled, preventable and avoidable.

This latest runaway food panic is almost a parody of unlikely cause-and- effect. Man eats food in Mexican restaurant, gets food poisoning from tomato- based pico de gallo, shuts down continental tomato markets. If everyone who ever got food poisoning in a Mexican restaurant triggered a related industry crisis — I think I got mine from a guacamole dish — half the food industry would have been closed a decade ago.

 

Enhancing the media-led distortion is the fact that the original story is wrong:

The man allegedly killed by tomato salmonella after eating at a Houston, Texas, restaurant — 67-year-old Raul Rivera — actually did not die from the tomato he ate. Kathy Barton, a Houston health official, said Mr. Rivera’s official cause of death is cancer. The Texas health department reports it has no deaths from salmonella poisoning.

 

Mr. Rivera did pick up salmonella at the restaurant, as did other members of his family. But only he had to go to hospital. He died last Wednesday, about two weeks after eating the contaminated tomatoes.

 

As far as we know, the restaurant is still operating — even though the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta says that the vast majority of tomato- based salmonella poisonings occur in restaurants. Not that tomatoes are necessarily free of contamination when they arrive at the local deli, taco joint or fast-food outlet. Tomatoes can become tainted during growing, handling and processing —i.e., before they reach restaurants. But the CDC says restaurant handling practices are a likely cause of cross-contamination that exacerbates the risks.

 

Aside from Mr. Rivera, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration says that it has upward of 145 other reported cases of salmonella poisoning since mid-April, although only 23 required hospitalization. Since 1990, there have been about a dozen such small, localized outbreaks of salmonella involving 1,990 people.

That implies thousands more people infected who did not report to authorities.

So far, no deaths have been linked to the events.

 

So we are clearly not talking about a plague sweeping the United States. In fact, given the explosion in the volume of tomato consumption, the incidence of harm is trivial. Not that precautions (washing, cleaning, handling) or research into tomato-borne salmonella isn’t needed, but it is clear that the risks from tomato eating are nothing consumers should worry about.

But the usual extreme reaction to the non-death of Mr. Rivera, fueled by media-induced panic, is leading to the usual non-sensical results. Time to grow your own tomatoes, said one story. Buy only local produce, said another, playing off the buy-local fad.

 

Americans consume five billion pounds of tomatoes each year, produced by and imported from just about every state, province and major food-producing country. Per capita consumption has soared from 12 pounds to more than 20 pounds over the last 40 years, the growth driven by the changing cultural mix.

The rise of Latino populations in the South and West is a major source of rising demand for tomatoes.

 

Out of five billion pounds produced by thousands of growers and processed through maybe millions of restaurants, at worst only a few pounds in decades have produced real consumer harm. Even the CDC in Atlanta said in a report that the rise in the incidence of tomato-based salmonella may be due to the combined fact that there are more tomatoes on the market and that the reporting systems have been improved. “The average size of reported outbreaks (of food-borne infections) during 1998-2002 was smaller than the average size of outbreaks during 1993-1997, indicating that a substantial portion of the increase in reported outbreaks might be caused by smaller outbreaks that were not reported in previous years.”

 

The combination of increased reporting systems and the massive growth in the industry turned a minor salmonella problem into an industry crisis. The media has a great habit of creating a panic, and then reporting on the existence of the panic.

 

The U.S. tomato industry, a spectacular success story in terms of output and product popularity, is being hammered by familiar villains — a sloppy media, regulators who enhance the sense of confusion and junk science — our almost willfull ignorance of risk.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

Biofuels Not to Blame for World Food Crisis

Biofuels Not to Blame for World Food Crisisby Toni Nuernberg, Ethanol Promotion and Information Apr. 23, 2008The United States is the world's largest donor of food aid. Hunger is indeed a world-wide calamity, and it is distressing to think that rising food prices have impacted the budgets of humanitarian organizations around the globe. While Americans are feeling the pinch in the checkout lane, developing nations are seeing years of progress in the battle against poverty and hunger fall by the wayside. This is not an issue to be taken lightly, as evident by the Bush administration's release of an additional $200 million in food aid. Americans have never turned a blind eye to humanitarian crises around the world, whether it involves friend or foe. And we will continue to respond, for the factors behind rising food prices and shortages can never be completely eradicated. We live in a global economy where an extensive assortment of interrelated factors drives supply and demand and ultimately the price of food. Drought, population growth, growing protein demand in developing countries, war, transportation costs, crop acreage shifts and many other factors affect food prices and supplies. These same issues also contribute to the need for more arable acres. Tropical forests have been cleared for hundreds of years due to population growth in developing countries that need to feed themselves. Despite these well documented factors behind the increase in food prices, it is irresponsible for many in the media to blame the biofuels industry for such a complex issue. I can unequivocally state that ethanol does not take food from the mouths of starving people. Ethanol production uses field corn-most of which is fed to livestock with only a small percentage going into cereals and snacks. In fact, only the starch portion of the corn kernel is used to produce ethanol. The vitamins, minerals, proteins and fiber are converted to other products including sweeteners, corn oil and high-value livestock feed-feed which helps livestock producers add to the overall food supply. Grain-based ethanol is fueling research into advancing technologies that will improve production of celluosic ethanol from feedstocks such as switchgrass, crop waste and other renewable biomass. In the U.S., rising energy costs are directly related to our food bills, as growers fuel tractors and machinery and truckers transport foodstuffs to market. And the impact of fuel prices on food costs underscores the need for energy independence in the United States. The United States spends roughly one billion dollars a day on imported oil. A fraction of these funds would more than make up for the shortfall in the World Food Program. Ethanol is just one element in our drive to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. It should not be a convenient scapegoat for global issues beyond our control.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

The Poinsettia


Poinsetia 2
Originally uploaded by vatren

This little plant has special meaning to me. One year I grew around 100,000 of them for Kmart.

What an experience...


Courtesy of wikipedia:

"Euphorbia pulcherrima, commonly named Poinsettias, is a species of flowering plant indigenous to Mexico, and native to the Pacific coast of the United States. The shrub occurs in some parts of central and southern Mexico, and a few localities in Guatemala.[1] The cut flowers and cultivars are often known as Poinsettias. These are named after Joel Roberts Poinsett, the first United States Ambassador to Mexico, who introduced the plant in the in 1825."

Flickr

This is a test post from flickr, a fancy photo sharing thing.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Strawberry Field in South Carolina

I took the following picture last week in South Carolina. The picture does not show it but the berries were damaged by hail.

The following picture is a HDR picture combing different exposure levels.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

First Agricultural picture


This was one of my first pictures with my DSLR, not the best but the first.


Florida is ranked second nationally in the production of ornamental plants, which includes cut flowers, flowering potted plants, hanging baskets, potted foliage plants, cut foliage (cultivated greens, florists' greens), bedding and garden plants, and woody ornamentals.




The ornamental industrial in Florida generated sales of approximately 10.32 Billion dollars in 2006.