Title: Center for Environmental Farming Systems
1 2Center for Environmental Farming Systems
Mission To develop and promote agricultural
systems that protect the environment, enhance
rural and urban communities, and provide economic
opportunities in North Carolina and beyond
- Partnership initiated in 1994
- 2000 acre facility in Goldsboro plus
3Our approach
- Provide a research base to facilitate transition
to more economically viable systems of
production. Short and long-term studies. - Large-scale research serves as a demonstration
and training site for farmers, extension agents,
educators, and students. - Training young people through farm apprentice
program, internship program, and other venues. - Community-based food systems Farm-to-Fork
4Structure of CEFS
- Farming Systems Research Unit
- Organic Unit
- Small Farm Unit
- Alternative swine Unit
- Pasture-based dairy Unit
- Pasture-based beef Unit
- Energy
- Community based food systems
- Academic Programming
5Core Guiding Principles of CEFS
- Integration of research/extension/teaching
- Interdisciplinary stakeholder inclusive
- Large-scale
- Long-term
- Sustainability
- Partnership
6Farming Systems Research Unit
81 hectare long-term study Comparison of 5 systems
7(No Transcript)
8Example publications
- Bell, M., C. Razckowski, S. Hu, and G.B. Reddy.
Soil property Indices for assessing short-term
changes in soil quality. 2008. Renewable
Agriculture and Food Systems. 23(1) 70-79. - Casteel, M. J., M D. Sobsey, andJ. P. Mueller.
2006. Fecal Contamination of Agricultural Soils
Before and After Hurricane-Associated Flooding in
North Carolina. Journal of Environmental Science
and Health Part A. 41173184. - Tu, C., F.J. Louws, N.G. Creamer, J.P. Mueller,
C. Brownie, K. Fager, M. Bell, and S. Hu. 2006.
Responses of soil microbial biomass and N
availability to transition strategies
fromconventional to organic farming systems.
Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Environment.
113206-215. - Zhang W.J., W.Y. Rui, C. Tu, H.G. Diab, F.J.
Louws, J.P. Mueller, N. Creamer, M. Bell, M.G.
Wagger, S. Hu. 2005. Responses of soil microbial
community structure and diversity to agricultural
deintensification. Pedosphere 15, 440-447.
9Small Farm Unit
10Small Farm Unit
- Demonstrations and research applicable to
small-scale farmers - Training for extension agents, farmers, other
agriculture professionals - Range of other educational programming including
school children - Integrated crops/animals
- High tunnels
- Energy conservation and use
- Market development
11Organic Research Unit
- Agronomic and horticulture
- Cover crop integration (summer and winter)
- Organic reduced-till
- Critical weed free periods
- Beneficial insect habitat
- Allelopathy
- Systemic induced resistance
- Statewide Organic Grain Program
12Pasture-based Dairy and Beef Units
- Examine seasonal dairy management and rotational
grazing (stocking rates, etc). - Breeds that tolerate summer heat and flies.
- Alternative pest management strategies.
- Alternative wormers and alternatives to
antibiotics. - Conduct pasture management research, training
schools, and internships.
13Alternative Swine Unit
- Hoop houses
- Antibiotic-free herd
- Integrating with outdoor production
- Outdoor farrowing
- Outdoor pig production
- Pasture management
14Energy
- Cooperative grants with the National Center for
Appropriate Technology - Focus on conservation, on-farm energy savings,
energy audits - Educational component
- Innovative ways for using energy crops
- SARE PDP training
15Internship and Apprenticeship Programs
- Summer internships
- 3-month plus apprenticeships
16Extension Taking results to growers
- Farmer field days
- Extension agent training
- Farm conferences
17Seasons of Sustainable Agriculture36 workshops
this Season
- Small Fruit Production
- Making the Web Work for your Farm business
- Maintaining Breeding Flocks for Pasture Poultry
- Twilight Tours
- Organic Grain Production
- Gardening with Kids
- Community-Based Food Systems
- Fueling the Farm
- Bugs in the Garden
- Why Buy Local
- Gastrointestinal Parasite Control
Reaching out to broader constituents
18Reaching Broader Constituents
- Fall Festival
- 1000 participants
- Educational displays
- Kids activities
- Farmers market
- Food
- Annual Lecture
- Farm-to-Fork Picnic
19Reaching Broader Constituents
- New Partners
- Economic development
- Health and Nutrition
- Land Preservation
- Environmental Organizations
- Consumer Groups
- Educators
20Changing Agricultural Landscape
- Changes and trends in agriculture
- Volatile and higher energy prices
- Labor issues
- Natural resource issues (climate change, water,
soil) - Rising age of farmers
- Rural community decline
- Farm subsidy shifts (current and future)
- Consumer interest local, sustainable, organic
- Public health interest fresh and local
- Opportunities to utilize sustainable agriculture
to meet the needs of growers, businesses, the
environment, and communities
21Loss of Farms
- Farms/communities In the last 20 years we have
lost 300,000 farms in the US. Two percent of the
farms grow greater than 50 of the food. Average
farmer earns only14 of his/her income from the
farm (USDA Commission on Small Farms, 1998). - There are now more people in prison than on
farms. - Implications of less viable rural communities?
22North Carolina Farms
- 100,000 farms in 1976
- 73,000 farms in 1986
- 55,000 farms in 2001
- 83 of counties lost farms between 1997 and 2002
- Tied for first in farm loss nationally
23Food Security
- Four firms control 87 of beef slaughter, 66 of
pork slaughter, 55 of poultry, 62 of milling.
Less than 4 of the farms produce 66 of the
vegetables (Heffernan et al) . - Agriculture is going the same trend as most
industries consolidation and then moving
overseas - Agriculture is unique (daily requirement for the
entire population) and should be protected. - Should not become dependent on Foreign Food as we
are on foreign oil.
24Changing Consumer Landscape
- Consumer interest local, sustainable, organic,
fresh - 70 percent of consumers want to know where their
food comes from and would pay more for locally
grown food if they could find it (packaged facts,
2007) - Local food is now a 5 billion industry. Many new
retailers. - Farmers markets increased 18 percent between
1994-2006 - Resurgence of home gardening
-
25Changing Consumer Landscape
- Public Health Interest obesity, diabetes,
nutrition - Increasingly, trends in obesity and diabetes are
being tied to the current food system. - Convergence of interest, funding agencies
sustainable agriculture, health, nutrition
26Changing Consumer Landscape
- Recognizing the concept of food deserts and
unequal access to healthy and nutritious foods. -
- 21 percent of children in North Carolina are
living in poverty. - Over 13 percent of households in NC are
considered food insecure (36 percent of children - Eleven percent of NCs children do not have
health insurance and 16 percent of NCs youth are
overweight. - Average grocery store is 2.5 times smaller in
poor neighborhoods (with higher prices).
We dont want two food systems.
27Definitions.. Food System
- The Food System covers everything from farming
and agricultural practices to the manufacture and
packaging of food and food products. It also
includes the transportation, sale, distribution,
and consumption of food as well as the waste
that it generates.
28Community-Based Food Systems
- Sustainable food production, processing,
distribution, and consumption are integrated to
enhance the economic, environmental, social, and
nutritional health of a particular place
(Feenstra, 2006)
29Building a Local Food Economy
- Average household spends 3600 per year per
person on food (USDA ARS) half spent in the
home. - If just 5 of the 1800 was spent on Local
(.25/person/day) - With 8,8000,000 people in the state (US Census,
2006), local food sales would total 792.00
million. - To meet this demand, we need enhanced local
processing, distribution, transportation
infrastructure, more farmers growing diverse
products - This all translates to economic development and
jobs.
30Community-Based Food Systems
- Money circulates in a locale, rather than leaving
the locale. There is a multiplier - Create a more secure food supply in the face of
homeland security and natural disaster concerns. - Can work to encourage consumption of healthy,
fresh, and un-processed foods
31Community-Based Food Systems
- Decrease the use of fossil fuels for transporting
food, reducing agricultures dependence on finite
oil reserves. - Takes advantage of growing consumer interest in
buying local, farmland preservation, and
protection of natural resources.
32Sustainable community-based food systems include
- New market development (direct, institutional,
retail, wholesale options) - Targeted consumer education making connections to
nutrition, health, environment, energy
conservation, land preservation, social
responsibility - New business development
- Inter-institutional and inter-agency support for
beginning farmers - New agriculture policies
- Education for next generation of leaders
(including school-age children)
33Wayne County Local Food Initiative
- Cooperative Project with many partners
- Hippie Dippie included..
- Gillings- After school assessment
- Community Food Assessment
- Community Gardens
- Youth engagement
- Consumer campaign
- Heifer International
34OpportunitiesFarm to School
35Farm-to-School
- Serve healthy meals in school cafeterias
- Improving student nutrition
- Provide health and nutrition education
opportunities - Support local small farmers
- Sometimes incorporate gardening
36Farm-to-School Barriers
- Schools have roughly 1.00/student to spend on a
nutritious lunch -- less than the cost of a
single Farmers Market tomato. - Schools have removed kitchens and replaced them
with rewarming centers (and knives arent allowed
at schools!) - Seasonal availability (and scale issues),
- Liability insurance requirements
- Lack of processing equipment and distribution
networks for farmers to deliver what schools want
37Farm-to-School Barriers
- Procurement policies mandate buying from lowest
bidder. - Regional preferences for procurement is
prohibited. But not anymore.. - Dealing with multiple supplies
38Farm to School Resources
- http//www.farmtoschool.org/
- National farm-to-school network with everything
you need to know to connect to others in your
state, funding sources, policy ideas, working
models, etc.
39Farm-to-Institution
- Small-scale farmers gain new and reliable
markets. - Farm-to- Hospital
- Farm-to College
- Consumers gain access to high-quality, healthy
foods. - More food dollars invested in local economy.
40Farm-to-Hospital
- Duke Medical Center Farmers Market
- Kaiser Permanente hosts 25 organic farmers
markets at hospitals in 5 states - Waterloo, Iowa farmers market at Allen Memorial
Hospital - Munson Medical Center, Traverse City, Michigan
41Farm-to-Workplace
Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) at Research
Triangle Institute
42Farm-to-Workplace
- http//www.cefs.ncsu.edu/rticsa.htm
- http//www.localharvest.org/csa/
43Farmers Markets
- About 2800 farmers' markets and
- 20,000 farmers were operating in
- the United States in 2000 a 63
- increase from 1994.
- For more information, Departments of Agriculture
and Cooperative Extension, NGOs.
44Farmers Markets
Wayne County Health Department
45Community Gardens
- Providing a catalyst for neighborhood development
- Stimulating social interaction
- Encouraging self-reliance
- Producing nutritious food
- Reducing family food budgets
- Demonstrating sustainable gardening practices
- Creating opportunities for recreation, exercise,
and education.
46Food Security
- Food Justice
- Food Access
- http//foodsecurity.org/
47Farm to Fork Building a Local Food Economy in
North Carolina
- Statewide initiative
- Numerous partners
- Regional Meetings
- Issues Working Groups
- Summit (March 2 and 3)
- State Action Plan