Animal, Vegetable, or E. O. Wilson

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Buoyed by the equal parts of derision and support I received for writing in “I am So Tired Of Malthus” about how humans are better fed than at any time in history, I am foolishly but bravely venturing once again into the question of how we feed ourselves.

In a book excerpt in the February 2002 Scientific American entitled “The Bottleneck”, the noted ant entomologist Professor Edward O. Wilson put forward the familiar Malthusian argument that humans are about to run out of food. He said that we are currently getting wedged into a “bottleneck” of population versus resources. He warned of the dangers of “exponential growth” in population, and he averred that we will be squeezed mightily before the population levels off.

His solution? In part his solution was that everyone should become a vegivore.

Wilson: “If everyone agreed to become vegetarian, the present 1.4 billion hectares of arable land would support about 10 billion people.

Figure 1. Vegans are not aliens from the star Vega. They are humans who are strict vegivores, as the food chart above shows. They are known for their barbaric habit of boiling and eating the unborn fetuses of rice and wheat. And don’t get me started on what they do to the poor baby carrots, with their so-called … but I digress …

Is this correct? Would we have a net gain in carrying capacity if all the human carnetarians agreed to become vegivores?

Wilson gets his figure of 10 billion people by taking the total amount of the grain that is being fed to animals, and then figuring how many people that grain would feed. In 1999, about 655 billion tons of grain were fed to animals. That’s a lot of grain. At the world average of about 150 kg of grain per person per year, he’s right, that’s an increase of 4 billion more people who would have enough grain. There were 6 billion on the planet in the year 2000, so that makes a total of about 10 billion people.

So up to there, he is correct. But wait. Although he stops the calculation at that point, there’s a few things he is leaving out of the calculation.

First, that’s just grain, which is not enough to keep a person alive. The extra 4 billion people would need additional nuts, seafood, fruits, vegetables, cotton, root crops, and all the other varieties of food and fiber. So the increase would have to be less than 4 billion people.

Second, people have a number of misunderstandings about where animals fit in on the farm. They believe that animals eat lots and lots of food that could be eaten by humans. Their claim is that if we just ate what the animals eat, we could eliminate the inefficiency, and feed many more people than we are feeding now. In other words, their claim is that having animals on the farms reduces the amount of food coming from the farm.

This is what Wilson is repeating here (although he has gone further than others by claiming that this would increase the carrying capacity of the earth by 2/3 again as much as the current population).

I grew up on a ranch where we had both animals (cattle, pigs, chickens) and field crops (hay, alfalfa). I can assure you that anyone who thinks animals reduce available food on the farm is what in my youth we would call a “city slicker”. Farmers around the planet keep animals for meat and milk. What, are farmers all stupid around the planet and only E. O. Wilson and his fellow vegetactivists are smart? Farmers would not keep animals if it were not a net gain.

While in some industrialized countries the cattle get up to 15% of their lifetime nutrition from grain, the vast majority of animals on farms worldwide live on a variety of things that will not or cannot be eaten by humans. Pigs eat garbage, hens eat bugs and grass and kitchen scraps, goats eat leaves, and cows have four stomachs, so they can turn cellulose, which humans cannot eat, into nutritious milk and meat.

If we got rid of all of our chickens worldwide, would we have more food available for humans? Not unless you like bugs and kitchen scraps better than you like eggs. Chickens are the poor woman’s Rumplestiltskin, spinning insects and weeds and melon rinds into golden eggs and tasty meat … I’ll let E. O. Wilson tell her she’s ruining the planet, not me.

If we call the goats down off the steep hillsides where they are grazing around the world, will we be able to put vegetable farms up there? Not unless you can farm sideways without water.

Cattle in the US eat thousands and thousands of tons of cottonseed meal annually, turning it into meat and milk. Would you prefer to eat the cottonseed meal yourself? Sorry, you can’t, it’s mostly cellulose.

The presence of livestock in a mixed farming economy does not decrease the amount of food that a farm can produce. That is a city slicker’s professorial fantasy. Animals increase the amount of food the farm can produce, otherwise farmers wouldn’t have them. Millions of tons of agricultural and processing leftovers, which would otherwise be wasted, are fed to animals. The animals in turn produce milk and eggs and meat, and then go on to enrich the soil through their urine and manure, just like they were perfected to do on the plains of Africa so long ago … what an amazing planet.

Which is why farmers everywhere around the world keep animals — farmers are not dumb, and they haven’t had the benefit of a college education, so they haven’t forgotten that goats eat leaves, pigs eat garbage, cows eat cellulose, and chickens eat bugs. They know the value of chicken manure and pig manure.

With that introduction, let’s see how we might best estimate the change if everyone became vegetarian. We can do it by looking at the land involved. Here’s the numbers: according to the FAO, out of all the land cultivated by humans, about a quarter of the land is used to grow food for animal consumption. This can be further broken down by the type of animal feed grown:

Figure 2. Area of arable land used for human crops, and for animal crops. Image is Van Gogh, “Ploughed Fields”.

Now if we all became vegivores tomorrow, and we converted all that quarter of the cultivated land to growing food and fiber for human use, what is the possible increase in the number of humans?

Looking at the chart, you would think that humans could increase by about a third of the current number. The land used for animals is about a third of the land used for humans. That would be about two billion more people, not the increase of four billion claimed by Wilson. However, the number cannot even be that large, because we have only looked at one side of the equation. We also have to consider the losses involved. By becoming vegivores, we have freed up the 23% of our cropland used to produce animal food, but we have lost the food coming from the animals. Now how much do we have to give back just to maintain the status quo, to make up for our dietary and other losses? These losses include:

•  We would have to replace the loss of the dietary protein provided by the 200 million tons of meat we eat each year, along with 275 million tons of milk, 7 million tons of butter and 47 million tons of eggs. Vegetarians say, “You don’t need animals, you can get enough protein from a vegetarian diet”, which is certainly true.

However, to do it, you need to eat more grains to get this protein, and in a twist of fate, to replace the total amount of meat protein in our diet with protein from grains would require about 50% more grain than we are currently feeding to animals. This is because animals eat many things other than grain, and we need to replace all that lost other-source protein with grain-source protein as well.

So immediately we have to devote about 18% of the total land to replacing lost protein for the existing world population. Subtracting this 18% from our original 23% of freed up land leaves us with only a 5% possible gain. Remember, this is all just to keep the world even, to maintain the world food status quo. We’re not talking at this point of feeding anyone extra. We’re just maintaining the current nutritional supplies of protein for the current population.

• We would also need to replace the amount of fat provided by the aforementioned animal products. While too much fat is a bad thing, dietary fat is an essential necessity of human nutrition.

The weight of dietary fat provided by animals is about a third of the weight of protein provided by animals. In addition, it takes much less land to produce vegetable replacements for the animal fat than for the animal protein. This is because there are vegetable products (oils) which are pure fat, while vegetable products are generally low in protein.

In the event, in order grow the oils to replace animal fat in our diet, we’d have to plant about 3% more  of our arable land to sunflowers or the equivalent. Deducting that from our 5% gain in available land, we are down to a 2% gain.

• Next, the land worldwide would be less productive because in many areas, animal manure and urine is the only fertilizer. We could easily lose more than a couple of percent that way, especially in developing nations. And once we do so, we are at zero gain, meaning we couldn’t add one single person to the world by voluntarily becoming vegivores. But there are several further losses yet.

• There is also a giant hidden loss of food in the change to vegevorianism, as tens of millions of tons of agricultural waste would have to be disposed of, instead of being converted by animals into millions of tons of human food. In many cases (e.g. oilseed residue meal) these wastes are not directly consumable by humans.

• In addition to losing the food animals make from waste, without animals to eat the waste we add the resulting problem of disposal of the agricultural waste, which is expensive in terms of time, energy, and money.

• We’d have to do without leather, hide, hair, horn, wool, and feathers. Especially in the developing world, these products are often extremely important to the health, warmth, clothing, and well-being of the local people, and there often are no local substitutes. This would be a huge cost of foregoing animals. In places where jackets are made of local sheepskins to keep out the frozen wind, explaining to some poor shepherd why he should go vegivore and trade his sheep for soybeans could be a tough sell …

• Finally, about half the land currently used for growing animal food is being used to grow grasses for animals. In practice, this land will mainly be the poorest and steepest of each country’s croplands (or else it would be planted to a field crop), and thus is not likely to be suitable for growing much more than grasses.

All up?

You’d lose by not having animals in the world’s farmyards. I don’t think you’d even come near breaking even — and neither do the farmers all around the world. They know what the numbers have just shown — we can support more people in a planet, a region, a country, or a farm if animals are part of our agricultural and dietary mix.

[UPDATE] Twelve years after I wrote this, science is finally catching up with what every kid on a cattle ranch knows … see “Going Vegan Isn’t the Most Sustainable Option for Humanity“.


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Lew Skannen
September 12, 2010 10:43 am

This is why I love WUWT. Every article is pure quantitative analysis and logic. After reading an article like this I have always learnt something of value.
So different from the ‘handwaving’ arguments which seem to predominate in some other places…

Eugene McDermott
September 12, 2010 10:44 am

Dr Mr. Eschenbach,
Thank you for an excellent article. My one quibble would be that the paragraph on the benefits of animal manure could be expanded. Waste from bovine ruminants is superb fertilizer and I suggest its use is not limited to marginal soils. In fact the export of cow and sheep maunure to us “city slickers” is the basis for most urban gardens.
The loss of cheap excellent fertilizer would be a disaster for grain yields throughout the unindustrialized world and for small and medium farmers in the developed world. One solution could be the purchase of artificial chemical fertilizers if the farmer could afford it. These are energy intensive to fabricate and increased oil consumption appears to be at odds with Vegan sensibilities. In any event even on factory farms it is my understanding that chemical nitrogen is used as a supplement to, and not a complete substitution for, manure.
The other alternative is to use human waste. While this is possible human feces contain many pathogens dangerous to people that are absent from animal manures, with the possible exception of pig manure. Think punji sticks. The act of turning the grain fields of the world into latrines filled with human feces appears problematic from a health perspective.
I am sure those more knowlegable than I could make a whole article out of this one subject alone.

Oliver Ramsay
September 12, 2010 11:22 am

Willis said:
“Your comment makes me realize that I have not been clear. When I say farmers, I mean the world average farmer. However, there is a common misconception. The world average farmer is not a guy with a tractor and a truck, or a guy with a mule.
It is a woman with a wooden digging hoe and a sack full of plants and too many kids. She has a few chickens, or maybe she has a pig. Why does she keep livestock? Because she has kids. She knows that her kids need the protein from the chickens and the pigs. She knows that the kids will never get that protein by eating what the chickens and the pigs eat. That’s what I mean by farmers are smart.”
Willis, I suspect yours is the misconception.
I haven’t any peer-reviewed lit. to link to but I’ll betcha there’s a lot more agriculture done in the world with machinery and draft animals than with pointy sticks. I’ll bet your average pointy stick farmer has no clue about protein and amino acids, nor vitaminB-12. Diets of mealie and tapioca are well-known in Africa and there are some pigs, but not many compared to the technologically more advanced China and the hog-averse Indian sub-continent. Supposedly, protein content of cassava is comparable to eggs, btw.
It’s a bit of a platitude to say that “farmers are smart”, especially when the implication is that the most primitive are the smartest.

Justa Joe
September 12, 2010 11:28 am

“Our brains are uniquely unprepared to deal with long-term crises” – GM
Thank God that the world has GM to get everything squared away for us long term. Anyway I get a kick out of watching old movies from the 60’s & 70’s. One theme that comes up occasionally in early 70’s & late 60’s films are hippies living on commumes coming up with plans to save humanity from inevitable extinction by cultivating fungi or some such. The hippies are also developing solar energy, which is just around the corner, as the world will be depleted of conventional fuels by the year 2000. Meanwhile the world keeps on turning.

Kum Dollison
September 12, 2010 11:47 am

The FAO stated that there are 1.3 Billion Acres that we could plant on, Tomorrow.
In the U.S., alone, we used to row-crop 400 Million Acres. That’s now down to 250 Million Acres. We Pay farmers NOT to plant on a little over 30 Million Acres. There are 150 Million acres of Fertile soil lying fallow in Brazil’s Cerrado, alone. The rest of Brazil could probably kick in another 300 Million Acres.
Russia has 120 Million Acres of Excellent Black Land lying fallow. No one knows how much more across the rest of the largest country on earth.
Africa. My Goodness. The Republic of Congo, alone as much as Brazil.
These places don’t grow much for several reasons. Most important, probably, is that grains are so cheap on the world market (thanks to us) that they can’t compete. 1.7 Billion of the undernourished in the world are “subsistence” farmers. They’re in trouble because they don’t have a “cash” crop, they’re too poor to buy fertilizer, and equipment, and they are governed horribly.
Corn is still bouncing around between $0.06 and $0.08/lb by the way.

jlc
September 12, 2010 11:58 am

I would suggest that EO Wilson spend a winter in Mongolia – a land of carnivores that would be unhabitable without meat. All they would have left to consume would be the vodka.

Dagfinn
September 12, 2010 12:02 pm

Oliver Ramsay says:

I haven’t any peer-reviewed lit. to link to but I’ll betcha there’s a lot more agriculture done in the world with machinery and draft animals than with pointy sticks.

Well, the agricultural production of Willis’ “average” farmer is just possibly close to the median but probably far below the mean. Meaning that there may be many of these farmers, but even if they’re a majority their contribution to the total production is less because there are many others producing more per farmer. Or, in other words, producing in a less labor-intensive way. And since we’re trying to look at the global statistics here, that’s significant.

tty
September 12, 2010 12:11 pm

“Vegans avoid fish. Vegetarians who eat fish should have no problems at all. That’s what i do as well, most of the time, plus some eggs. Not out of principle but it’s just what i like best.”
Are you aware that from strictly scientific point of view cows are fish? No, I’m not crazy, the whole class Tetrapoda (mammals, birds, crocodiles, lizards, frogs, salamanders) is just one single branch in the fish family tree (though they are admittedly rather different from the other fishes).

jlc
September 12, 2010 12:14 pm

I’m reminded of the words of the Texan cattleman who is quote as saying:
“Vegetables ain’t food. Vegetables is what food eats”.

Tenuc
September 12, 2010 12:24 pm

For our Vegan friends – 7g of Marmite gives you 100% RDA vitamin B12.
Please don’t overdose, as it has a very high salt content…(.4g Na/7g serving)
My own view on this issue is that Vegans, Veggies et al, have every right to follow their own feelings on the matter of diet – as for me, there’s nothing I like better than a nice juicy, running with blood, Scotch rump steak!!!
Any attempt to try and stop me enjoying my preferred food will be met with the strongest resistance.

Wayne Richards
September 12, 2010 12:35 pm

We could eliminate a lot of vegan nonsense by eating them first.

Loodt Pretorius
September 12, 2010 12:41 pm

Willis,
Thank you for a very interesting article. I am glad I did not grow-up on a farm, too much goo and stinking stuff to tread in!
It is also worth mentioning that the Economist ran an article earlier this year about rice boutiques in Japan. Asides they mentioned that just like in the EU, farmers in Japan are paid not to produce too much of that darned stuff! About one third of Japan’s rice fields are lying fallow!
I like vegetarians, they keep meat prices affordable.
Excuse me, after reading your article and comments, I need to go and fry a staek, whilst I still can!

Doug
September 12, 2010 12:44 pm

If we got rid of all of our chickens worldwide, would we have more food available for humans? Not unless you like bugs and kitchen scraps better than you like eggs. Chickens are the poor woman’s Rumplestiltskin, spinning insects and weeds and melon rinds into golden eggs and tasty meat … I’ll let E. O. Wilson tell her she’s ruining the planet, not me.
=====================================================
Ha Willis – I love this. BTW the N.Z. agricultural economy is based on grass. 4m people virtually live off the animal’s back –and they eat grass!
Cheers
Doug

Dr. Dave
September 12, 2010 12:46 pm

It’s been over 30 years since I took biochemistry but as I recall you can find ALL essential amino acids in non-meat sources. There are a few (or at least 2) amino acids which have not been deemed “essential” that are found only in meat. These amino acids are believed to play a role in immunoregulation. Just south of where I grew up there is a large population of Seventh Day Adventists, many of whom are strict vegans. I remember all of them seemed to be skinny and have very pasty complexions.
The human diet is largely determined by what tastes good, what’s available and finally by cultural mores and folkways. China exports a lot of dog food and more specifically dog treats. My dogs love “chicken jerky” and most of this is a product of China. This seems bizarre to me. We import dog treats from a country that eats dogs and has enough chicken left over to manufacture dog treats for export.
I was recently schooled about Vegemite on the excellent Aussie website liberygibbert.com. Down in OZ most of the population absolutely loves Vegemite (yeast paste). I’m told that unless you grew up eating this stuff you will find the “flavour” disgusting. This may be the case as I have yet to find a jar of the stuff in any local grocery (I agreed not to deride Vegemite until I had at least tried it). The English have their Marmite and in OZ they have their Vegemite. Here in the USA we have no appetite for either.
Humans eat meat because it tastes so good. Have a nice meal of slowly smoked ribs, brisket or pork tenderloin. How about a slice of prime rib or grilled beef tenderloin. Perhaps a grilled swordfish filet or shrimp or lobster or…Alaskan King Crab legs in drawn butter. You get the idea. This stuff tastes great! Our bodies “know” this is good for us. I absolutely love asparagus, beets and brussels sprouts, but given the choice between my favorite veggies OR a finely cooked filet mignon the meat will win every time.
Willis understates the problem of grams of essential protein. Sure…you can get there with soy beans and yeast but the necessary volume is huge relative to 6 oz of beef. Vitamin B12 is also a valid issue. A deficiency results in megaloblastic anemia. You don’t need much B12 to survive and the human body stores a lot of it. Clinical deficiency states usually only occur with strict meatless diets or conditions which affect the ability to absorb B12 from the gut (i.e. diminished intrinsic factor).
Perhaps we eat too much meat in our modern diets. Any excess protein is simply converted to calories. We consumed far fewer grams of protein in our diets 100 years ago. Then again…100 years ago our average life expectancy was only about 50 years. Surely an improved protein diet contributed to this (along with greater access to potable water, modern sanitation, greater access to energy and modern medicine).

September 12, 2010 12:50 pm

Nice post, Willis.
[Without farm animals] “tens of millions of tons of agricultural waste would have to be disposed of…”
I’m assuming it (most anyway) could be composted and then used in fields or am I completely mistaken? I’m not suggesting this is feasible, nitrogen fixed from the air makes more economical sense.

Michael Wassil
September 12, 2010 1:14 pm

[snip]

Andrew W
September 12, 2010 1:22 pm

I’ll say it again, simpler this time: most of the livestock rearing on the planet does not happen on what is categorized as arable land, so E.O. Wilson is right that taking the grain fed to cattle and making it available to humans would allow a lot more people to be fed. From what I’ve found, it looks like about 80% of livestock rearing (most grass farming) wouldn’t be affected by such a change. So he’s wrong about us all needing to become vegetarians for the planet to support 10 billion people.
On balance I’d say he’s much closer to the mark than Willis.

Michael Wassil
September 12, 2010 1:25 pm

[snip -sorry that will be one that will spawn all sorts of bad taste comments]

Dr. Dave
September 12, 2010 1:26 pm

My old pal bubbagyro is absolutely right on the ethanol issue. Not even considering the rest of the world just look at the impact it has in the USA. Corn ethanol would not exist were it not for government subsidy. This alone should be a deal breaker. Any industry or technology that requires taxpayer subsidy to exist is by definition a non-viable technology or industry in a free market society. So what happens when corn is converted to ethanol? First off, more energy is consumed producing a gallon of ethanol than the energy you derive from it. This is just hard, physical reality. It bites. It’s even worse when you consider the amount of water used to produce each gallon of ethanol. Then the economics kick in. Because of government subsidy it is more profitable for the farmer to sell his corn for ethanol production than as feed grain. This drives up the price of feed grain which subsequently drives up the cost of meat from animals maintained on said feed grain. So the consumer is screwed three times. First we suffer from the taxes required to pay the subsidy. Ten we pay higher prices for meat. Finally we are forced to use gasoline diluted with ethanol to get fewer miles per gallon of fuel.
Who benefits? The corn farmer. Corn ethanol is a purely political enterprise. Without forced taxpayer subsidy it would die a natural death.

James Bull
September 12, 2010 1:41 pm

I like my dead animal meals to much to go veggie!
A charity I support gives animals and farming training to people to help them grow food for themselves and to sell. They use a great range of different methods to improve the lives of many and the land where they live. See sendacow.org.uk for more information.

September 12, 2010 1:41 pm

Mike D. (20910-09-12-1026)…(deleted)…
Agree. Some animal has to occupy the top predator position. It might as well be Homo sapiens. E.O. Wilson errs, here. He also errs in the (implied) assumption that adoption by humans of a vegetarian diet will address overpopulation. Wilson correctly observes that human population growth cannot continue indefinitely.
1) The government of a locality is the largest dealer in interpersonal violence in that locality (definition).
2) Value is determined by supply and demand. Therefore, a world in which human life is precious is a world in which human life is scarce.
3) The Earth’s human population cannot grow without limit.
4) The Earth’s human population will stop growing when (a) the death rate rises to meet the birth rate or (b) the birth rate falls to meet the death rate.
5) The Earth’s human population will stop growing as a result of either (a) deliberate human agency or (b) other.
6) Deliberate human agency is either (a) democratically determined or (b) other.
7) All human behavioral traits are heritable.
8) Voluntary programs for population control selectively breed non-compliant individuals.
9) Humans who will reproduce at high density have a selective advantage over humans who require lots of open space.
10) Human misery is like heat: in the absence of insulators (barriers to immigration), it flows until it is uniformly distributed.
11) The Earth’s maximum possible instantaneous human population is greater than its maximum possible sustainable human population. Absent a reduction the human birth rate or a gradual increase in the death rate, expect a sharp increase in death the rate and a sharp drop in the human population from its maximum value.
12) The Earth’s maximum possible sustainable human population leaves little room for wilderness or biodiversity. Absent a reduction the human birth rate or an increase in the death rate, expect a sharp reduction in biodivesity.

September 12, 2010 1:54 pm

I have presented the above argument at libertarian sites (Samizdata, Bizzy), Christian sites (Baldilocks, The Common Room), __Prospect__ magazine (in response to a Fred Pearce essay on Malthus), a Feminist/Socialist site (Reclusive Leftist) and Breitbart’s Big Journalism. Although I attempt a civil discussion the other side, except for Christians and the Brits at __Prospect__, does not and I get insulted, banned or censored, or all of the above.
Without ad hominem, where do you disagree?

DirkH
September 12, 2010 2:01 pm

tty says:
September 12, 2010 at 12:11 pm
“Are you aware that from strictly scientific point of view cows are fish? ”
As i said, i have no principle reasons to avoid meat. I had a very nice piece of bœuf in France two weeks ago, medium. It just happens that i rarely run across a good piece of meat; i don’t want to do too much Döner.

Gail Combs
September 12, 2010 2:08 pm

bubbagyro says:
September 12, 2010 at 10:30 am
Kum Dollison says:
September 12, 2010 at 9:36 am
A little knowledge can be dangerous…
It is only cheap by contrast. A little knowledge can be dangerous.
__________________________
Kum also missed the fact that after NAFTA Mexico lost 75% of its farmers (or more) and therefore can no longer produce the corn it needs to feed its people.
Here is the information again:
2002 Effect of policies on farmers in USA and Mexico: 33,000 small farmers in the US have gone out of business— more than six times the pre-NAFTA rate.
In Mexico, the price farmers receive for corn has plummeted 45 percent At least 1.5 million farmers have left their land. 900,000 people leave Mexico’s land every year, a U.N. program says. According to a study by Jose Romero and Alicia Puyana carried out for the federal government of Mexico, between 1992 and 2002, the number of agricultural households fell an astounding 75% – from 2.3 million to 575, 000 http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/ftaa/topten.html
Notice the typical large corporation tactics.
#1 Move in to the area with very low prices and undercut the prices of the independent small business people.
#2 Small business bankrupt.
#3 After all or most of the competition is gone jack the prices up – usually to 1.5 to 2 times the previous rate.
#4 Move on to “new territory”
In 2008 when there were food riots all over the world, Monsanto and Cargill (grain trater) posted record breaking earnings.
“A look at the figures for 2007, when the world food crisis began, shows that corporations such as Monsanto and Cargill, which control the cereals market, saw their profits increase by 45 and 60 per cent, respectively; the leading chemical fertilizer companies such as Mosaic Corporation, a subsidiary of Cargill, doubled their profits in a single year” [9].
“The World Bank says that 100 million more people are facing severe hunger. Yet some of the world’s richest food companies are making record profits. Monsanto last month reported that its net income for the three months up to the end of February this year had more than doubled over the same period in 2007, from $543m (£275m) to $1.12bn. Its profits increased from $1.44bn to $2.22bn…. The Food and Agriculture Organisation reports that 37 developing countries are in urgent need of food. And food riots are breaking out across the globe from Bangladesh to Burkina Faso, from China to Cameroon, and from Uzbekistan to the United Arab Emirates. Benedict Southworth, director of the World Development Movement, called the escalating earnings and profits “immoral” late last week. He said that the benefits of the food price increases were being kept by the big companies, and were not finding their way down to farmers in dhe developing world.” Multinationals make billions in profit out of growing global food crisis” In fact, “Monsanto … has gotten farmers to accept seed prices twice the level of a decade ago” [8].”
http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Monsanto_and_the_World_Food_Crisis

DirkH
September 12, 2010 2:13 pm

Malcolm Kirkpatrick says:
September 12, 2010 at 1:41 pm
“[…]10) Human misery is like heat: in the absence of insulators (barriers to immigration), it flows until it is uniformly distributed.[…]”
Man, you should see a doctor.

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