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Page added on August 9, 2010

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Peak Oil? Yes! Peak Food? I Don’t Think So!

Earlier today, Michael C. Ruppert, former editor and publisher of the newsletter and web site From The Wilderness and currently publisher of the web site collapse.net, put a video clip called “Global and US Food Price Alert” online. I found it on Facebook and it is also on You Tube. Doubtless, it is other places as well, but these are the two places where I accessed it.

This clip, made on August 4th, is a 1:13 teaser to a longer video made available to paid Collapse.net members. You can pay ten dollars per month to be a member to see the whole thing. I am not currently a member so I have not seen the entire video. However I had a strong reaction to the part I did see, in which Ruppert stated that he saw, in a 24-36 hour news cycle, “almost an epidemic of stories from some of the biggest financial publications and news entities in the world” proclaiming that global food prices were about to “soar.” Ruppert said that after reading the stories, he came to the conclusion that “it’s quite possible we have arrived suddenly at Peak Food.”

I issued the following response on Facebook, both on my personal page and on “The End of Money” page that I founded earlier this year to promote discussion of ending monetary systems and working “for a living” as we know them today. I believe that doing those two things is the key to post-industrial prosperity:

“How do you know that the stories were not planted in the corporate media so that people would be scared into accepting the Monsanto “solution” for food crises? So often, corporations/governments create the problem e.g. 9-11, so they can propose their solution e.g. global war on terror and clamp down of dissent. And you know that so much of the media is under corporate control that the fact that so many stories came out at the same time should be a big RED flag.

I believe Peak Oil because oil is a finite resource whose decline has been measured over time. Food is not the same beast that oil is. Production levels are variable; a potato field can yield more a season after a bad harvest, whereas once an oil field is in decline, it won’t produce at higher levels later on. We have ready alternatives for food production: We can go back to the organic production methods we had before WWII. No need to invent anything new.
Yes, there are places in the world that are having bad harvests and food shortages. But the overall problem globally is not production but distribution. e.g. The US takes the official position that there is no human right to food, only an opportunity to buy food.

Here is another example of why we must abolish money-based economics and the sooner the better for humanity and the rest of the planet. Why must we pay to live on the planet we’re born on? Why must we be profitable to someone else, or something else, a corporation, before we can eat?

Don’t swallow this Kool-Aid, Mike. There’s tons of food at my local Whole Foods Market and I don’t expect bare shelves next week. However, I expect that the store will discard much of that food because it was not purchased within the prescribed time. Talk to me about Peak Food when the US and UK stop wasting so much food.”

I have not read the articles that Ruppert has read, so I do not know why they predict world food prices imminently soaring. I am aware that Russia has had a bad harvest and has recently halted grain exports. This and other factors around the world may indeed lead to soaring food prices…for a while. But Peak Food? For the reasons I stated above, the very concept does not make sense.

Unfortunately, the concept of “peak” may have, for lack of a better term, “jumped the shark.” It fits in the context of oil and other finite resources such as uranium. But it makes no sense when one is talking about renewable resources such as crops. And it makes no sense when the problem is less with the supply of natural resources than with the political will to use them wisely and distribute their fruits, literally and figuratively, in an equitable manner.

So if food prices do soar, I will ask if agribusiness is behind it, as it is hell bent on things such as GMOs, chemical additives, seed patents, privatization of water resources, and any other thing it can attempt in order to monopolize the stuff of life for the purpose of profit. After all, big corporations and their government lackeys have done much already to ruin the peace, health and prosperity of billions around the world. Soaring food process would be consistent with past practice.

Atlantic Free Press



4 Comments on "Peak Oil? Yes! Peak Food? I Don’t Think So!"

  1. ug on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 8:55 pm 

    “So if food prices do soar, I will ask if agribusiness is behind it”

    It’s a conspiracy!

    (insert tinfoil hat image)

  2. Wessman on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 11:32 pm 

    k Oil does lead to Peak Food. but the correlation is not 100%, and there is a lag factor. However, without oil, no traktor disel, no pesticides, less well working transportation. The whole reason we went from 2 to 7 billion people is that we used those things to boost food production.

    Add to that how we deplete water, soil and fosfor resources, and then some climate change to that, and you have a recipie for global famine.

  3. Martin Larner on Mon, 9th Aug 2010 11:45 pm 

    I think it’s a bad idea to write an article when you have only seen a fragment of what you’re criticising. I’ve seen the whole thing and it is a good analysis, based also on what was happening in the months before the stories in the press. Prices have been rising for some time – in some case by 70%, and this is discussed in the video.

    He talks about the ‘way money works’ i.e. the corrupt economic paradigm which amplifies the problem, the relationship between food production and fossil fuels and the climate problems of drought etc which are contributing to the problem. Not to mention various political factors and the fact that globalised food distribution makes so many chains of supply reliant on a few producers.

    For some time the world food surplus has been depleting and this impacts on price if there is a crisis of crop loss for whatever reason. I’ve noticed food prices rising very rapidly for the last few years.

    Although I wouldn’t use the term myself, I think ‘Peak Food’ does actually make sense, since this is what must occur when we have reached ‘Peak Soil’ and ‘Peak Water’ – the evidence which for both is growing – the former due to over industrialised agricultural methods dominated by fossil fuel based chemicals and machinery, which has destroyed the fertility of our soil, the latter due to our abuse and overuse of this vital resource.

    When the limits to a resource is reached (in this case representing our ability to grow food), the first thing to occur is a price rise followed by escalating shortages. Although food is part of what could be called the secondary economy (that which is produced from the primary of natural resources), it fundamentally depends on those primary resources for it’s stability and price.

  4. James on Wed, 11th Aug 2010 3:56 am 

    Everyone has the tendency to think very short term. Everywhere I have read about this Peak Food situation, I have read that most stores only have 3-4 days worth of food. So, what happens when the stores can’t replenish themselves? Sooner or later, there will be a Peak Food situation and our stupid technology will not fix this before thousands of people starve. You also might want to be aware of the fact that some people can gt very violent and dangerous when food becomes scarce and how man7y can defend their food supplies?

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