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Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals (...

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Page 1: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 2: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 3: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 4: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 5: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 6: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 7: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 8: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 9: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special

period)

Page 10: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Agroecological strategies

Animalintegration

Green manures

Organicamendments

Rotations

Polycultures

Page 11: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 12: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)
Page 13: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Finca “Del Medio” – José A. Casimiro

Sancti Spíritus

Page 14: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Area (ha)

Energy (GJ/ha/año)

Proteín (kg/ha)/año People fed by produced energy(Pers/ha/año)

People fed by produced protein(Pers/ha/año)

10

50.6

867

11

34

Energy efficiency 30

Page 15: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Agroecological principles underlying productivity, sustainablity and viability of agroecoystems

1. Spatial and temporal genetic and species diversity at farm and landcape level

2.Crop and animal integration

3. Biologically active soils and high biomass recyling rates

4. Optimization of the use of space (Agroecological design)

Page 16: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Urban Agriculture

Page 17: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Urban Agriculture• Approximately 50,000 hectares under urban

agriculture• In 1996, Urban farms provided 8,500 tons of

agricultural produce, 7.5 millions eggs and 3,650 tons of meat

• Urban gardens produce about 60% of all vegetables consumed in Cuba (215 grams of vegetables per day/person)

• Productivity ranges between 10-20 kg/m2 in intensive gardens systems

Page 18: Contribution of cuban peasant agriculture to national production of various crops and animals ( before and after the special period)

Global population: rural versus urban

• By 2050, two-thirds of the planet’s projected 9.2 billion people will be living in cities and that all of this increase (2.6 billion) will be not only in the global South but also in the South’s urban areas.

• Between now and 2050 at least 1.3 billion people will migrate – be migrated – from country to city in the largest land grab (or enclosure) ever.

• Left behind will only be those too old to move and the indigenous peoples determined to stay.

• The best that can be done for the world’s 1.5 billion peasant farmers (again, policymakers are being told) is to buy them one-way bus tickets to the city so that the land can be cleared for a “carbohydrate economy” that churns out “biomass” – food, fodder or fuel and, especially, carbon credits – where and as needed.


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