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Kenya Screw Me Now?

African farmers fear impact of U.K. supermarkets buying local

Last month, British supermarket giant Tesco announced a few changes it's making with the climate in mind, including limiting flown-in food. Which is all well and good, unless you're a farmer in Africa wondering what the hell is going on. Some fear that moves in the industrial world meant to reduce the carbon footprint -- and eco-guilt -- of rich shoppers will endanger the livelihood of farmers in developing countries. In Kenya, for instance, 65 percent of exports to the European Union are fresh fruits, veggies, and flowers, and some farmers have replaced their staple crops with European-fancied novelties like baby corn. While Tesco says it will protect African producers, farmers and their advocates are not convinced and say they haven't had talks with the chain. "This announcement from Tesco is devastating," says Stephen Mbithi Mwikya, who heads a Kenyan export association. He fears the green-minded move and others like it, considered progressive in far-off lands, could cripple Kenya's economy.

straight to the source: BBC News, Victoria Averill, 21 Feb 2007
see also, in Gristmill: British supermarkets are going green


Comments: (3 comments)

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Kenyan Markets.

How lopsided can this world get. Tesco must do what is right for the world and Kenya will have to adapt to evolving cycles of the economy. This will neither be the first nor last world upheavel for Kenya or many other countries. Welcome to the latest version of the "GREEN" market.

Local Economies

To drastically oversimplify an admittedly complex and layered issue: When African farmers grow food for export to Europe and America, that's a lot of food that they're NOT growing for their fellow Africans. When Tesco and others choose to support their local growers (a more sustainable solution), growers in Africa will have more incentives to contribute to their own local economies instead (also a more sustainable solution).

Strengthening local, diversified, stable economies does far more good than furthering the globalization agenda. Encouraging small, locally-owned businesses will create more jobs and improve the quality of life of more African people -- it raises equality and lessens poverty, while the "free trade" currently practiced by the developed world does the reverse.

(Incidentally, the above is true not only for Africans, but for people on other continents as well.)

WHEN?

 When Tesco and others choose to support their local growers (a more sustainable solution), growers in Africa will have more incentives to contribute to their own local economies instead (also a more sustainable solution).

Exactly when?
I'm still waiting ....

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