Have you been to the market recently and scratched your heads at the rising prices of vegetables and fruit. What do you do?

Vegetable and fruit prices have almost doubled over the last six months or so. And there is nothing to suggest that it won’t rise even further.

At one time, we had quite a few vegetable farms in Penang. Now most of our vegetables and fruit have to be brought in from Camerons, Australia, China and the United States.

This is not an ideal situation on three counts:

  • Transporting food from great distances increases the carbon foot-print of these items.
  • We become more dependent on external sources for our food, i.e. we move away from self-sufficiency and food security. What happens when these places don’t have enough to supply us? Prices will rocket, as we are gradually finding out now.
  • We get hooked on the pesticide/chemical model of agrobusiness. By right each state in Malaysia should be looking into what it can do to promote self-sufficiency in organic food. Perhaps we could become a hub for organic food in the region.

Now along comes an initiative to show what ordinary people like you and me can do.

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More people are now talking about the need to reduce our carbon footprint. But the discussion is largely focused on improving public transport, avoiding plastic bags (a commendable move which the Penang government is now implementing) or recycling and re-using.

But that is not enough. A study of the population in Cardiff, Wales has shown that the biggest impact on the environment comes from the choices we make in the following areas (in this order):

  • the food and products we buy
  • the energy we use
  • our mode of travel
  • the infrastructure which surrounds us
  • the waste we produce

Of course, underlying all this is our oil-guzzling profit-driven corporate economy, which does not factor in environmental losses.

The Natural News website insists that “you are not green unless your food is green”. It says our philosophy on food should be: “Eat LOCAL food. Not too much. Mostly plants.”

This is why it is absolutely vital for each state in Malaysia to grow as much of its food requirements locally, preferably organically. We don’t have to wait for the government to see the light. We can do what we can locally by exerting pressure through the choices we make.

Natural News suggests five ways we can go about this:

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