Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,503,922 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

How green is that garden? With Oil Revenue, Venezuela is pushing organic agriculture.


In the heart of the fast-paced city of Caracas, Venezuela, Norali Verenzuela is standing in a garden dressed in jeans and work boots. She is the director of the state-initiated Organoponico Bolivar I, the first urban, organic garden to show its green face in the city.

Presently, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the United Nations, Venezuela imports about 80 percent of the food that it consumes. To Verenzuela, the garden represents a positive step. "People are waking up," she says. "We've been dependent on McDonald's and Wendy's for so long. Now people are learning to eat what we can produce ourselves."

Verenzuela's 1.2-acre plot is part of a plan led by the government of President Hugo Chavez to create "endogenous" or self sufficient, development. "We have been exporters of raw materials and consumers of manufactured goods manufactured goods nplmanufacturas fpl; bienes mpl manufacturados

manufactured goods nplproduits manufacturés 
. One of the first objectives ... is to put a stop to that game," says endogenous strategist Carlos Lanz.

In 2005, the Agriculture Ministry set a target of supplying 20 percent of Venezuela's vegetables through urban gardens. The program also holds workshops to show people how to create their own organoponicos for domestic consumption. At this stage, however, the Organoponico Bolivar I is more of a showcase for the program than a true paradigm shift A dramatic change in methodology or practice. It often refers to a major change in thinking and planning, which ultimately changes the way projects are implemented. For example, accessing applications and data from the Web instead of from local servers is a paradigm shift. See paradigm. . "As a pilot project" Verenzuela admits, the garden "can't be allowed to fail."

Chavez's populist message has made him a hero for many Venezuelans and international leftists. In a nation that is one of the world's largest exporters of oil, BBC BBC
 in full British Broadcasting Corp.

Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927.
 reports that 83 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. Since Chavez took office in 1998, he has funded many social welfare projects by redirecting state oil income. Venezuelan oil has also made Chavez many allies, including Cuba, which has exported its advisors for Chavez' social projects. Still, "It's not a Cuban model," insisted Cojedes Governor Jhonny Yanez to the St. Petersburg Times
For the newspaper in Russia, please see St. Petersburg Times (Russia).


The St. Petersburg Times is a daily newspaper based in St. Petersburg, Florida, that serves the larger Tampa Bay area.
. "It's a Venezuelan model based on an oil economy that can feed itself." The question is: for how long, and at what cost to the environment?

Chavez's energy policies have also brought him just criticism from environmentalists. Though his administration has banned genetically modified genetically modified
Adjective

(of an organism) having DNA which has been altered for the purpose of improvement or correction of defects

genetically modified genetic adj [food etc] →
 seeds and created an indigenous seed bank, Center on Global Prosperity director Alvaro Vargas Llosa argues that anti-capitalist environmentalists should oppose Chavez because his "government owns scores of refineries and cashes in big time on the processing of sulfur-heavy crude." Chavez's oil contracts with Brazil's Petrobras and Chevron Texaco caused environmental journalist Hanna Dahlstrom to warn that "Chavez' big oil projects could ... destroy [the] Amazon."

The gardens that inspired the Organoponico Bolivar I were not initiated by a government, but by desperate Cubans. The collapse of the USSR USSR: see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.  in 1989 cut off over half of Cuba's food supply, as well as the fertilizers, pesticides and fuel needed for industrial farming. Cuban families began growing vegetables domestically, without chemical products, and the idea caught on. Most of Cuba's industrial farms were then converted to low-input, sustainable production. Though Cuban farmers claim that they will never shift their methods back to industrial monoculture mon·o·cul·ture  
n.
1. The cultivation of a single crop on a farm or in a region or country.

2. A single, homogeneous culture without diversity or dissension.
, it remains to be seen if such techniques will continue past the reign of aging leader Fidel Castro.

In Venezuela, however, the organoponicos are clearly a top-down initiative based on Cuba's success. Verenzuela says that the urban gardens have been a hard sell. Ninety two percent of Venezuelans live and work in urban centers, and many Caracans scoffed at Chavez's suggestion that barrio bar·ri·o  
n. pl. bar·ri·os
1. An urban district or quarter in a Spanish-speaking country.

2. A chiefly Spanish-speaking community or neighborhood in a U.S. city.
 residents "raise crops and chickens on their balconies." Verenzuela stressed the fresh and healthy benefits of organic produce, but nearby street vendors say they like the produce because it is cheaper than the grocery store.

Outreach programs are trying to change attitudes. The garden provides tours, and agricultural students at the new Bolivarian University are required to intern there. Drop-in workers from nearby barrios Barrios is a name of Hispanic origin. The name may refer to: Persons
  • Agustín Barrios (1885–1944), Paraguayan guitarist and composer
  • Arturo Barrios (born 1962), Mexican long-distance runner and former world record holder
, such as Caricuao, can also work there for pay and vegetables. "We are showing people that a garden is possible in a city," Verenzuela says.

The garden hasn't been immune to the deep social divide over Chavez' presidency, either. In its first few months, says Verenzuela, the opposition to Chavez stole plants and protested outside. Opposition-owned media reported that the vegetables were unsafe to eat. In November, workers even found clandestinely introduced goats in the garden. Before the goats were able to do much damage, workers caught, killed, barbequed and ate them for lunch.

Outside of the cities, many are wondering when rural agriculture will get attention. Because of the success of the oil industry, Venezuela's agricultural sector has been long neglected and is "the least productive in all of Latin America," writes journalist Jon Lamb in Australia's Green Left Weekly. There is no lack of arable land, but production is only six percent of the gross domestic product (GDP GDP (guanosine diphosphate): see guanine. ). The national farmers' federation, FEDEAGRO, says it is not opposed to the urban program, but is concerned about a lack of support for rural farming. "The government is concentrating all efforts on city farming, and yet the national sector remains as it is," says technical adviser Nelson Calabria.

Another concern skeptics have about urban gardens is pollution. Experts claim that the exhaust-laden air could contaminate con·tam·i·nate
v.
1. To make impure or unclean by contact or mixture.

2. To expose to or permeate with radioactivity.



con·tam·i·nant n.
 plants with carbon monoxide carbon monoxide, chemical compound, CO, a colorless, odorless, tasteless, extremely poisonous gas that is less dense than air under ordinary conditions. It is very slightly soluble in water and burns in air with a characteristic blue flame, producing carbon dioxide;  and lead. At the Bolivar I, a technician comes every 15 days to take a reading from the small pollution meter in the middle of the garden. Verenzuela was not able to say what the acceptable levels were, but indicated no cause for alarm had yet been found.

Now, according to Verenzuela, the garden has become an accepted part of the cityscape (company) CityScape - A re-seller of Internet connections to the PIPEX backbone.

E-Mail: <sales@cityscape.co.uk>.

Address: CityScape Internet Services, 59 Wycliffe Rd., Cambridge, CB1 3JE, England. Telephone: +44 (1223) 566 950.
. In fact, some of its most faithful customers are opposed to Chavez. "We are making food, and food is not political," she says. "Besides, they know our food is better." Still, as environmentalists know, food is a highly political issue in the modern world, and it remains to be seen how and if Venezuela's urban gardens will grow and change, especially should they lose Chavez and oil revenue. CONTACT: PESA PESA Petroleum Exploration Society of Australia
PESA Petroleum Equipment Suppliers Association
PESA Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia
PESA Persins Enterprise System Architecture
PESA Provisioning Engineering Support Agency
PESA Per-Cutaneous Epididymal Sperm Aspiration
, (011)58212-5782918, www.pesa.org.ve.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Howard, April
Publication:E
Geographic Code:3VENE
Date:Jul 1, 2006
Words:1003
Previous Article:Silent spring: what's happening to honey bees?
Next Article:Flashing lights: danger: polluting school bus ahead.
Topics:



Related Articles
ORGANIC GOLD RUSH.(organic farming boom)(Industry Overview)(Statistical Data Included)
Taking back control of our food sources.(Buy Local)
Pesticides and organic agriculture.(Perspectives / Correspondence)
Using the force ... the biodynamic way.(going organic)
Beyond organic: discovering the secrets of biodynamic foods.(Eating Right)
Growing farmers: young professionals go back to the land.
Can organic farming feed us all?
Ripe for change: agriculture's tipping point.
Tax relief for organic growers.(Department of Agriculture)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles