Ashok Vasudevan
It is sometimes comforting to know that you have struck a balance
in an argument and are able to see the other 2 extremes dispassionately, even
though you disagree with both positions to some measure. And when informed
public opinion is supportive of your position, your sense of wellbeing is
further enhanced. You feel “balanced” at this center of gravity.
But in the real world this is easier said than done. Imagine trying
to stay balanced in the center of a seesaw. This exercise may be good to
strengthen your core but it is not a position you can sustain. Just try it. Now,
repeat the exercise by placing 2 “extremists” at the ends of the seesaw. A new
balance of power emerges and you feel steadier. In a philosophical sense it is
almost as if you need these extremes just to stay centered.
That is exactly the balance the new exhibition “Our Global Kitchen: Food, Nature, Culture” currently running at
the American Museum of Natural History in New York is trying to achieve. It takes us on a fascinating and disturbing
journey of the world’s oldest and largest industry (agriculture) through a light
prism of history, geography, economics, evolution, science, technology and cuisinology.
No easy feat. While its grasp may be less than its reach, it highlights issues
that are being debated in the public domain across the disciplines mentioned.
In so doing, it does not opine or attempt to compromise. Nor does
it try to find common ground. But it presents facts and perspectives that make
you appreciate the extremes and hopefully carve out your own positions on
issues ranging from cultivation, vegetarianism, food preservation, processing,
biotechnology and perhaps even GMO. Given the serious social debate on these
issues, the timing of this exhibition is uncanny.
Here are a few interesting nuggets from the exhibition that will
make you wonder, but may or may not change your mind.
- About 870 million people (one in eight humans) in the world were hungry last year and yet 35% of all crops grown are for animal feeds and not for human consumption.
- To make it worse, 30% of what is grown for humans does not get eaten due to wastage. What we throw out in the garbage at home is only the last stop in a long global assembly line of value addition from farming, harvesting, transporting, processing, retailing, cooking and finally garbaging. This cumulative waste is a staggering 1.4 billion tons annually.
- Now lets talk about animal feeds. The story is worse. It takes 29 calories of feed to produce 1 calorie of beef and 20 times as much water to grow beef as growing cereal grains for human food. This is like saying it costs the US treasury $29 to print one dollar? Does that even make sense?
- In 1895, it is believed the Atlantic Cod was 1.8 metes or “man-sized”. Selective harvesting of these larger fish reduced the size of the cod to 2 feet in 1970s and only 18 inches today or baby sized.
- A few hundred years ago the jungle fowl used to produce 12 eggs a year. We intervened and today the record production is 364 eggs a day!
- 7000-10,000 years ago natives in the Andes transformed a poisonous plant into Potato through selective breeding. Potatoes are today the 4th most important staple food in the world. (And of course we know that the other 3, viz. Rice, Wheat and Corn each came from wild inedible grasses through massive human intervention and selective breeding.)
So who is judging? Monsanto? Pepsi? Stonyfield Farms or Tasty Bite?
Or voters for Prop 37 in California for
labeling GMOs in foods or New Yorkers for opining on selling oversized sugary
drinks in schools?
It is true that sometimes a mind is made up and you cannot confuse
it with facts however compelling. Your center is often very different from the
center of gravity. For now it does not matter what you believe in for it will
change and it will evolve.
We live in interesting times. Lets hope we don't allow decisiveness
to trump facts.
Lets strive to magically balance public health, planet health and
corporate health.
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