Agriculture


“Massacres and paramilitary land seizures behind the biofuel revolution”

Armed groups in Colombia are driving peasants off their land to make way for plantations of palm oil, a biofuel that is being promoted as an environmentally friendly source of energy.

Surging demand for “green” fuel has prompted rightwing paramilitaries to seize swaths of territory, according to activists and farmers. Thousands of families are believed to have fled a campaign of killing and intimidation, swelling Colombia’s population of 3 million displaced people and adding to one of the world’s worst refugee crises after Darfur and Congo.

… A government investigation reportedly found irregularities in 80% of palm oil land titles in some areas.

… The paramilitary groups, first formed in the 80s by businessmen, landowners and drug lords to fend off guerrillas, became a powerful illegal army which stole land, sold drugs and massacred civilians. Under a peace deal with the government they have officially disbanded but many observers say remnants remain active.

… Coca production in Colombia has surged despite US-funded eradication efforts, according to an estimate that casts fresh doubt on Washington’s “war on drugs”. Satellite imagery collated by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy survey suggests that cultivation of coca, the raw ingredient of cocaine, jumped 8% last year to 156,000 hectares.

[Guardian]



Geoff Jones observes:

The stability of agricultural economies is a myth that is intertwined with the power of government (to which agriculture gave rise). Agriculture is really a catalyst for destabilizing growth. Compare the degree of sociopolitical and economic stability of the several thousand years since the advent of agriculture to the hundreds of thousands of years previous to it when our genus depended on foraging. Humans were able to adapt with resilience and grace through times of cataclismic climate change, and indeed spread and prosper. Prosperity was not excessive however, and not accompanied by major events of famine, disease, economic and ecological collapse, warfare, and tyrrany that have been enjoyed with regularity by agriculturalists.

Source: email 12/29/2004 12:46 PM