Archive for the 'Environment' Category



- Sargent launches campaign to “Get Ireland Growing”

29 March 2009

Get Ireland Growing: Food Minister launches campaign to encourage food production at home

-More home grown food is one recipe that can take Ireland forward

Green Party Food Minister Trevor Sargent today launched a campaign to encourage home grown food and told those interested in community gardens and allotments to ‘take advantage of the long evenings and get gardening’.

Speaking at the launch of Get Ireland Growing in the National Botanic Gardens Minister Sargent said: “Over the last number of years Irish people have got increasingly interested in good food, cooking, and in living green lifestyles and we have witnessed a similar growth in people wanting to grow their own food. Our Councillors and candidates have been getting hundreds of enquiries about allotments and community gardens and we have launched this campaign to help encourage those interested in domestic food production.”

Minister Sargent, who has his own organic garden at home in Balbriggan said: “Our aim is to get as many people as possible to start growing food and vegetables in allotments, community gardens, window boxes and their own back gardens. Growing your own food saves money, gets people out and about, can improve public health and cuts carbon emissions and food miles. It can also enhance community spirit.

“Currently, some local authorities provide allotments, but in other places demand is high and there are long waiting lists. The Green Party will be working with communities to help them find suitable public or private land that can be rented at low costs and turned into allotments.

“Nowadays more people are living in apartments and other urban accommodation, and may feel like they have lost touch with nature. Getting flat dwellers interested in gardening can help them to reconnect with the world around them.

“Allotments are incredibly popular around the world and have very good potential in Ireland. In the UK River Cottage Chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall has been very successfully promoting a campaign to bring disused or derelict land back into productive use for growing fresh fruit and vegetables by householders. I hope something similar can be done here and I know that TV Chef Richard Corrigan is very interested in promoting home grown food.

“I am working with the Office of Public works to see what can be done with existing public land, and I know that my party colleague Environment Minister John Gormley will be writing to local authorities urging them to consider the provision of allotments, which falls under the Local Government Act,” Minister Sargent concluded.

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More information:

  • The Green Party is holding a public meeting on growing food locally at 8pm on Tuesday 31 March 2009 at Cultivate Centre, Temple Bar. Minister Trevor Sargent will address the meeting alongside guest speakers Seamus Sheridan from Sheridans’ Cheesemongers, Suzie Cahn from the Wicklow Community Garden, Bruce Darrel from Dublin Food Growing and Michael Fox from the South Dublin Allotments Association.
  • The website www.getgrowing.ie went live today. As well as featuring gardening advice, allotment success stories, and links to community facilities and gardening supplies centres, Minister Sargent will be providing regular YouTube clips with growing tips.
  • Green representatives have begun to distribute leaflets, posters and postcards to promote the campaign and will be writing to City and County Managers to request that land be made available for allotments or community gardens where demand exists.
  • Energy Minister Eamon Ryan grows vegetables in an allotment patch in Mount Anville in South Dublin.
  • Green Councillors including Malcolm Noonan in Kilkenny and David Healy in Fingal, Dublin, have already helped their constituents to find allotment patches in their own areas.

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- Sargent addresses Green Party Annual Conference

7 March 2009

Address by Trevor Sargent T.D. Minister for Food and Horticulture at the Comhaontas Glas / Green Party Ard Fheis / Convention on 7th March 2009

Trevor Sargent addresses the Green Party

Trevor Sargent addresses the Green Party

Travelling around Wexford and indeed Ireland, I meet people worried about their jobs, their children, their community services. Their plea is very often, ‘you’ve got to do something’. The first thing we need to do is focus our minds on what we NEED to live, which may not be the same as what we WANT.

The next task is to see how many of our needs can be met, without burning fossil fuel. Less burning of oil and gas would  improve our balance of payments as a country, as well as prevent runaway climate change and create many new jobs. As I said at the Ard Fheis in Dundalk last year, our challenge as a country is to learn how to live well without the oil well.

Our current pre-occupation as a country is the global financial credit crunch. The lessons of this crisis are hard to stomach. But we are not just living beyond our means financially. We are also squandering the Earth’s resources too. I hope that the way we solve the fiscal credit crunch will help us also to solve the far more unforgiving ecological credit crunch. As you know, Nature does not do compromise, only consequences.

One major difference between the banking crisis and a potential food crisis is that while we can print more money, we cannot print more food.

So how can we protect ourselves? Let us apply some of the lessons we can learn from recent events.

Banks cannot be independent of government. This also applies to food.

The state will need to take a more direct role in the distribution of food. We must see an end to predatory pricing where large, commercially motivated supermarket chains dictate the price the producer is paid, whatever it may have cost them to produce that food. We have seen the ultimate reward for allowing greed to dominate in financial matters. Let us not allow the same thing to happen to our most critical resource, food.

Food producers also will need to exploit new routes to market, not just selling to the supermarket but selling through various channels including

o       Direct to consumer

o       Farmers markets

o       Farm Shops

o       Co-operatives

o       Distribution systems independent of supermarkets’ control

Farming needs to become more diversified – producing more varieties of food but also producing fuel, building materials and clothing materials.

In 2002, the World Bank initiated what they called an International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology. 580 experts were commissioned to write a report called ‘Agriculture at a Crossroads. It has been endorsed be the WHO, the FAO, large corporations and to date 58 countries including Ireland.

Like our party this World Bank report thinks globally and recommends actions locally. Like our party, this report does not see organic farming as a niche, it sees the organic way as the future.

Of the 525 million farmers worldwide, most have holdings below 2 hectares. I met many such farmers when I visited Ethiopia with Irish Aid last November. Dr Tewolde, a senior government agricultural advisor met me to discuss ways of increasing sustainable food production in Africa. The best way, he believed, was the organic way. Researchers from the University of Michigan in the USA believe the same. Their research shows that organic farming can yield up to three times as much food as conventional methods on the same land in poor countries. And in developed countries research showed that yields were almost equal on organic and conventional farms.

In short, we must prepare for a green agriculture revolution where food sovereignty is the ultimate aim. Good food safety standards are not enough.

A move to more organic production will see employment numbers rise.  When I visited another farm in Ethiopia I met with a farm family who ran a restaurant, a farm-shop and a tree nursery as well as producing a range of vegetables and prepared foods for their local market, all on less than a hectare. Many successful businesses in Ireland have also begun as on-farm enterprises.

Looking abroad, the UK Organic food market of €2.1bn is hardly being exploited by Irish producers. If you are a farmer apply before 15 May and you can become organic. We must do more as a people to get Ireland growing.

Part of maintaining our clean green GM free image includes a commitment to animal welfare in farming. This is one reason why we are bringing forward the Animal Health and Welfare Bill. I want to thank all here who made submissions during the recent consultation period on the Bill.

Another priority for Government is for country of origin labelling to be in place. The pigmeat crisis illustrated again, the need for this. And as this matter depends on the EU Council of Ministers, the only other country in the EU supporting Ireland’s call for country of origin labelling is Italy. Therefore I am calling on Labour to persuade their socialist colleagues elsewhere to stop preventing country of origin labelling in the EU and the same with Fine Gael and their Christian Democrat colleagues in other member states.

The pigmeat crisis at the end of last year also reminded us how much this country depends being able to export – Irish pork and bacon is exported to over 40 countries.

In many countries already however, the alternative to growing their own food is colonisation. A massive land-grab is underway. Middle-eastern countries have been actively acquiring land in many countries. China has acquired 1.24 million hectares of land in the Philippines.

So what is it to be, colonisation or cultivation? Cultivation means more jobs and new hope. If we are to get Ireland growing again, more of us need to grow good food.

This is why I have worked with Agri-aware, Bord Bia, An Post and a host of other generous sponsors to raise over quarter of a million euro to send vegetable and fruit growing kits to every primary and a number of secondary schools in this state. As a result two out of every three primary schools are now growing food. Those not registered on www.incredibleedibles.ie have until St Patrick’s Day to ‘get Ireland growing’ in their own schools.

‘Get Ireland Growing’ is the name also of our Green Party / Comhaontas Glas campaign to develop allotments and community gardens. We want healthy food security. We want to cut the cost of living in these recessionary times. Let us become the change we want to see happen!

The Government Report on Obesity says obesity related problems costs Ireland over four billion euro per annum. Doesn’t that figure sound familiar? Are we not now seeking to cut €4bn from Government spending? Could it be that the solution to all of our problems, the financial crisis, food security and climate change are all to be found in a more serious focus on food?

Now there’s food for thought.

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* Minister Sargent in Ethiopia

27 November 2008

This week, Minister Sargent is in Ethiopia. Here are some of the latest photographs.

School

For more information on the Minister’s visit see the previous entry “Sargent visits Ethiopia”.

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- Battery Recycling Arrives

25 September 2008

EU BATTERY RECYCLING RULES IN FORCE FROM TOMORROW

Photo courtesy of Moria

Trevor Sargent, Minister for Food and Horticulture and local TD, has welcomed an EU Directive whereby users of waste batteries will be entitled to return them free of charge for recycling. 50,000 drop-off boxes have been delivered to various shops, supermarkets and garages nationwide to facilitate customers and no purchase is necessary. This comes into effect across the European Union tomorrow, 26 September 2008. Ireland is to the forefront of EU member states that will have the Directive fully transposed & operational from the commencement date.

Launching the new recycling scheme today, the Minister for the Environment John Gormley called on businesses, schools and the public service to take a lead in providing space for boxes storing waste batteries, as the achievement by Ireland of mandatory collection targets for portable batteries will be dependant on the number and accessibility of collection points. Producers will be responsible for the financing of the collection, treatment, and recycling and environmentally sound management of waste batteries.

Mobile phones, laptops and car batteries are covered by the scheme that aims to ensure that ¼ of all batteries are recycled by 2012 and nearly a half by 2016. However, leaking batteries can only be deposited at a local authority recycling centre.

Did you know? Over 2,000 tonnes of batteries are sold annually which equates to 80 million AA batteries.

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– €271,600 recycling boost for Fingal

5 November 2007

Dublin North TD and Minister for Food and Horticulture, Trevor Sargent TD, today welcomed additional funding being provided through the Environment Fund to offset the operational costs associated with bring banks and civic amenity facilities.

Minister Sargent said, “Irish waste policy needs to be guided in the direction of recycling, reduction and reuse. I welcome this funding as a step towards a more modern and green way of dealing with waste.

“Of the €4m package that Minister Gormley is providing, Fingal County Council is receiving €271,600, on the basis of the past costs and levels of recycling and recovery. The Minister is basing the grant allocations on a combination of weighted tonnage and net operating costs.

“I am pleased that this is an area in which the Green Party in Government is making progress. I would like to see Fingal lead the country on waste management issues, rather than opt for outdated methods such as landfill and incineration.”

Note
The Environment Fund was established with the revenues obtained from the Plastic Bag Levy introduced in March 2002 and the Landfill Levy introduced in July 2002. The Fund is used to provide assistance or support in respect of a range of waste management, litter and other environmental initiatives and since November 2002, almost €100m has been allocated in direct grant assistance towards the capital costs of providing a range of local authority recycling projects.

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