by MrBill » Mon 03 Mar 2008, 10:01:30
I had to edit your above post as it was credited wrongly to dante. Thanks.
dohboi wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')rowing bananas in N. Canada??? Is anyone anywhere advocating this?? If so, please cite. This is way beyond straw man--maybe straw whale?
Well, inappropriate production decisions based on a mispricing and misallocation of resources happens all the time. Rice grown in the US southwest and exported to Asia for example.
The Economist uses the example of raising sheep in NZ, and then shipping the lamb in tightly packed containers versus trying to raise sheep in a northern clime closer to market, but with an unsuitable climate.
This particular example was from a TV documentary I recently saw called
Bananas in the Arctic. It was not about growing bananas in the Arctic, naturally, but about getting them there.
Edmonton, Alberta, to the farthest communities in N. Canada where people do actually live. They need fresh fruit in winter, too. It was a documentary about supply chain management, but also about the economics of shipping fresh food long distances.
You may ride to the local grocery store on your bike if you want. I happen to walk. Luckily, I have have two supermarkets, two bakeries, a butcher and five grocery stores within a 5-minute radius of my apartment. However, others DO drive. And the point being that if they drive to the supermarket on average of twice per week as extra trips in their car then likely they have used more petroleum per ounce of food than those tightly packed containers that make their way from banana plantations across the ocean, unto a railcar for the trip to Edmonton and then another three day truck ride up to those northern communities.
Which by the way are looking for oil & gas and the mines & minerals that enable your soccer mom to get to the supermarket in the first place. The cost those communities pay for fresh fruit in winter includes all those transportation costs. Growing locally outside of artificially heated greenhouses is not an option. Rail is not an option either. Not enough people.
But as far as strawman and straw whale arguments go this is a pretty good one:
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But please don't assume that all urging for more localized economies are complete and utter idiots who want to grow bananas in N. Canada and drive Hummers to Whole Foods to buy them. As you point out, rising energy prices are going to lead to some more localization anyway. It's time to think about that transition more systematically,
and it is way past time to re-think our I-can-have-any-thing-I-want-from-anywhere-anytime economy.
to their face. I think so far as my motto goes I am the first to advocate that