1 / 8

Changes in food demand Growing demand for high-value and seasonal products

Changes in food demand Growing demand for high-value and seasonal products. Starter: Key words. Food miles. The total amount of greenhouse emissions resulting from the activity of a person or persons.

sarah
Download Presentation

Changes in food demand Growing demand for high-value and seasonal products

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Changes in food demand Growing demand for high-value and seasonal products

  2. Starter: Key words Food miles The total amount of greenhouse emissions resulting from the activity of a person or persons. The excessive use of farm land, resulting in the soils nutrients being used up and the land becoming infertile. Marginal land The distance food is transported from the time of its production until it reaches the consumer. Subsistence farming Crops are grown to sell and make a profit. They may be distributed locally, nationally and/or globally. Over-cultivation This is self-sufficient farming, where farmers grow enough to feed their families. Crops are not grown to make a profit. Land degradation Commercial farming Land that is only just good enough to be worth farming. It may be dry, wet, cool, stony or steep. Soil productivity is reduced to the point where once productive land is turned into wasteland. Carbon footprint

  3. Learning objectives • To find out the impacts of the growing demand from for high-valuefood exports from poorer countries and our all-year demand for seasonal food.

  4. Changes in demand In the last decade there has been a major growth of imports of high-value agricultural products to richer countries from the developing world. Can you think of any examples? Red spring onions Mange tout Asparagus Pak Choi Blueberries

  5. Changes in demand Seasonal goods are now available all year round thanks to sources in tropical countries. However, in order to maintain contracts, these products are still imported when they are in season in the UK. In the UK this has been driven by the major supermarkets. They bring produce thousands of miles onto their shelves. E.g. Peruvian asparagus travels 10,000 km to get to the UK!

  6. Activity: Food miles The table below shows agricultural exports to a UK supermarket. Describe the information, remember to use figures!

  7. Activity: How reliant is the UK on imported foods? Study the article that you have been given. Summarise the argument FOR food imports to the UK. You may wish to use detailed bullet points. • Experts claim it would be difficult for us to become self-sufficient. • We have always imported food, since Roman times. • Our climate isn’t suited to growing certain foods that we demand – out of season, exotic, tea, rice, coffee. • Farming certain products is unlikely to be successful and are often cheaper to source from overseas. • We would have to use environmentally degrading practices to meet demand if we don’t import – intensive farming and increased pesticides. • It would also involve more GM food and would require a change in consumer understanding – we are fussy eaters though!

  8. Prep: The impacts of our increasing demand Read the bullet points on pg 228 and figure 6.16 on the hand out. Your task is to write a letter to the produce department Senior Buyer at Morrisons, Mr Andrew Garton, outlining the negative impacts of the supermarket sourcing its fruit and vegetables from poorer countries. The aim of your letter is to bring his attention to the issues and to suggest ways in which Morrisons may help improve them.

More Related