Yes, Mike, that was a funny one
Cooking and running dishwashers, freezers and second or third refrigerators (more than 25 percent of American households have more than one) all add major hits. Indeed, households make up for 22 percent of all the energy expenditures in the United States.
Only locavores cook! Run dishwashers! Have refrigerators...and freezers!!
Some of the standard replies to this kinda op-ed can be found here:
http://www.grist.org/article/food-fight ... ssons/PALLJust a few things I love to point out:
- I love the trope about the energy eating greenhouse tomatoes. Does it not come up in every freakin' one of these pieces. For one thing, the majority of greenhouse tomatoes are factory driven from labs in Canada or Holland and no one of the Local Beet ilk are advocating those. For another, the vast majority of indoor grown produce is enhanced simply with heavy plastic not high energy heaters. That one just gets me all the time.
- Another one that gets me is this: "The best way to make the most of these truly precious resources of land, favorable climates and human labor is to grow lettuce, oranges, wheat, peppers, bananas, whatever, in the places where they grow best and with the most efficient technologies." Sure, on one hand that makes sense. No one believes Nichol's Farm should grow oranges even if I know Lloyd Nichols has managed to try a couple of lemon trees in his hoop-houses. But on the other hand, really, when product is grown in Florida or California or where ever, the only advantages may be government subsidies, cheap labor, tilted water policies and free sunshine. I mean the same people who rage against the mystery green house tomato have no problem with growing ton after ton of food in the vast deserts of California and Arizona.
- Finally, the efficient train argument - God that one irks me. Of course something transported via rail gets better mileage but does that still mean that less fuel was actually used. And as I've said many a time, who buys their food at the rail yard. (Or as it has been pointed out to me, who grows their food at the rail yard).
OK, I got to get back to the Local Beet and address whether farmer's markets are in fact, Bulls$%&
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.