What role for local food?
Sunday, June 6th, 2010 by Philip LoringReprinted with permission from the May 2010 issue of the Ester Republic.
A question came up at a lecture I was giving with two of my colleagues recently, regarding whether or not agriculture in Alaska could meet the food needs of the entire state. The issue was raised as something of an indirect critique of local / alternative food movements; our talk was reporting on some research that we have been engaged in with participants and producers of local CSAs. The answer, suggested by the same audience member who introduced the topic was no, that Alaska could not feed itself, at least not in an affordable or sustainable manner. I must admit that I was caught off guard by the suggestion, and I chose not to confront it, in order to not spoil the mood of the evening by ending it on a tone of debate. And, after some thought on the issue and a couple of (local) beers, I am glad that I refrained. Because, while it seems an interesting question, it is in fact the most classic example of a red herring, a critique that I believe is responsible for perpetuating the comfortable-but-tired debate between local and industrial paradigms of food production. (more…)

