Madam Speaker, Honorable Guests, Members
of the Swedish Parliament, Members of the Right Livelihood
Award Jury.
The Organic Agriculture Group of the
Cuban Association of Agricultural and Forestry Technicians
was overjoyed to learn that it had been conceded the
distinction of the "Right Livelihood Award" for its
work to develop the country's organic agriculture movement.
The Group met immediately to communicate
the news and to reflect on its scope and national significance
in the desire to give fair recognition and ensure that
no involuntary omission dimmed the collective elation
that was by then being shared by many colleagues and
followers of this movement in our country.
Always present in these reflections
were the pioneers of the organic agriculture movement
in Cuba in the extraordinary work of such predecessors
as Juan Tomás Roig, Jesús Canizares, José
Luis Amargos and Julián Acuna, among other illustrious
figures of our agronomy, who trained many generations
of Cubans in an agrarian culture based on concepts and
knowledge very much in accord with what the present-day
organic movement advocates.
With the triumph of the Revolution
in Cuba, a process of change was initiated in our agriculture
and, in the decade of the '70s, the nation began to
introduce modifications leading to a more rational agriculture
of fewer inputs, more in consonance with our reality.
A strong policy of replacing imported inputs and raw
materials was introduced, monetary and material savings
were stimulated in all sectors, while emphasis was laid
on economic awareness and self-sufficiency. At the same
time, the country's research institutes reoriented their
goals and strategies toward new work programs.
During the decade of the '80s, research,
extension and development were increased with regard
to input-replacement techniques such as the biological
pest-control program, the use of leguminous plants in
protein banks for cattle-raising, the use of biofertilizers
for other crops, minimum cultivation, and the regionalization
of varieties adapted to existing input levels, etc.
At the beginning of the decade of
the '90s, in what became known as its "Special Period",
the country was confronted by the need to increase its
food production, reduce its inputs by more than one-half
and, at the same time, maintain its production of export
crops.
The basic agrarian policy aim of achieving
an agriculture capable of sustaining itself during this
Special Period with low petrochemical inputs and without
reducing crop sizes has required a reorganization of
the structure of agricultural research and extension
and of the flow of information in Cuba, with less emphasis
placed on technologies requiring a great deal of capital
and energy.
The cultural, political and technical
preparation of the Cuban people, accumulated throughout
the years of the revolutionary process, proved to be
a decisive factor during the brusque change that took
place at the beginning of the '90s and that could not
have been successfully faced by an uncultured people.
The search for a new paradigm was also aided by the
scientific-technical results and experiences that had
been accumulated by the country's farmers, technicians
and scientists throughout the years of the revolutionary
period.
Thus, the Ministry of Agriculture
was able to rapidly introduce the application en masse
of final results as well as others still in initial
processes of research or technological transference
in order to attenuate and in other cases satisfactorily
solve the effects of the crisis in our agriculture.
Soon, alternatives and solutions began
to appear and a new awareness was created little by
little in many basic producers, technicians, researchers,
professors and agricultural leaders, who gradually became
convinced of the feasibility of agriculture with another
approach, by means of which productive crops can be
obtained economically and in harmony with the environment
and nature, without the contamination of soil, water
and air, and healthy food can be produced without an
excessive expenditure of energy and with a reduced capital
investment.
It should not be forgotten that, during
the four decades of the Revolution, the country has
been submitted to a cruel blockade by the Government
of the United States of America that attempts to obstruct
the implementation of any measure in the economic field.
This blockade has been sharply intensified in the past
decade, not only increasing the costs of importing food
but also, on many occasions, making it difficult for
the country to acquire foodstuffs and medicaments.
At the beginning of the '90s, the
Urban Agriculture Movement was strengthened. It is a
participative, people's agriculture that uses water
economically and favors soil fertility.
This productive movement is by now
making an important impact on the nutrition of the population,
ensuring the availability throughout the entire year
of fresh produce uncontaminated by chemicals. From the
beginning, this urban agriculture has registered sustained
growth, from the four thousand tons produced in 1994
to four hundred and eighty thousand tons in 1998, while
1999 is expected to close with six hundred and ninety
thousand tons.
As may be judged from all of the aforementioned,
the rapid and total mobilization of the country's accumulated
intelligence and know-how, as well as the massive response
of the population to the emergency situation, avoided
what could have been a still deeper crisis in our agrarian
system and the proliferation of hunger in these difficult
years.
In a period of approximately four
years, the organic agriculture movement has surpassed
all expectations and been extended to all the agricultural
sector, involving individual producers, farm administrators,
extension workers, researchers, professors, religious
organizations and state functionaries concerned with
agriculture.
In November 1992, a committee, with
the participation of diverse organizations and institutions
that had been working until then on alternatives for
a change in conventional agriculture, was created for
the purpose of organizing the First National Meetingon
Organic Agriculture, held in May 1993. It was at that
meeting that the Promotional Group of Organic Agriculture
initiated its work.
The basic aim of our country's Organic
Agriculture Movement, in which this Group has worked
systematically, has been to educate producers, demonstrating
to them that integrally conceived systems of organic
agriculture, with a consequent control of all the elements
of sustainability, can produce yields equal or superior
to those obtained by high-input technologies.
In the last few years, a consciousness-raisingcampaign
has been carried out by means of workshops, field days,
lectures at universities and research centers, conferences,
scientific events and participative meetings with producers,
as well as by the rotation of mobile agro-ecological
libraries through diverse research and teaching centers,
agricultural cooperatives and other interested organizations.
The Group publishes a periodic specialized magazine
and has supported a prestigious course in Agro-ecology,
with an enrollment of over 500 students, at the Agricultural
University of Havana.
From its base in Havana, furthermore,
the Group has sections operating in a large part of
the national territory, and each member is active within
his own work center. The Group's members carry out constant
educational activity related to organic means of agricultural
production, promoting the idea that the common use of
organic methods must be considered a permanent transformation
in Cuban agriculture.
In developing its work, the Organic
Agriculture Group has had the support of the United
Nations Development Project (UNDP) and other non-government
organizations, that have helped it to carry out a Program
of Agro-ecological Lighthouses - model farms on which
the feasibility and efficiency of the methods and technologies
of ecological agriculture are demonstrated and where
crop-management is integrated with the concepts of organic
agriculture.
The Agro-ecological Lighthouses project
has received funds from the UNDP; from the German NGO,
"Bread for the World" ; from OXFAM America and from
Cuban institutions. The Group has maintained close ties
with the Food First Institute of the United States of
America, with which it organizes exchange visits between
farmers of the two countries.
At the same time, it has been working
hand-in-hand with several governmental agencies of the
country such as the Ministry of Agriculture and the
ministries of Sugar; Education and Higher Education;
Science, Technology and Environment. A strong link is
also maintained with the National Association of Small
Farmers for the purpose of ensuring that the aims of
this work are taken into account at the moment of projecting
the country's development policy.
Special mention should be made of
the self-sacrificing work of the Organic Agriculture
Group, which has carried on systematic and arduous labor
in favor of the development of agricultural sustainability
in these very difficult years for the Cuban nation,
in which, added to the loss of the commercial relations
that it had established and built up over many years,
it finds itself constantly more cruelly blockaded by
the strongest present-day world power.
The Organic Agriculture Group carries
on its activities within the Association of Agricultural
and Forestry Technicians, an NGO constituted in 1987
and strengthened in its Congress, held in October 1999.
This Association brings together more than 12,000 affiliates
and has branches in every province of the country, whose
missions include working intensively on behalf of an
ever more sustainable and ecological agriculture.
The organic world is facing constantly
greater challenges, but it is also receiving the encouraging
and welcome news that "cultivation in the world is constantly
more organic".
Seven years after the speech of our
President, Dr. Fidel Castro, before the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development of Rio de
Janeiro, his words maintain total validity. In that
speech, he called for: "No more transfers to the Third
World of life styles and consumption habits that ruin
the environment. Let us make human life more rational.
Let us apply a fair international economic order. Let
us use all the science necessary for sustainable development
without contamination. Let us pay the ecological debt
and not the foreign debt. Let hunger disappearand not
man".
The award that has been conferred
on us, in addition to being a high honor, fills us with
pleasure for what it represents as a recognition of
the efforts of all the men and women who, during these
very difficult years for our people, have made it possible,
with the backing of our government, to exhibit the reality
of our organic agriculture before the distinguished
personalities present here today and before the entire
world.
We are grateful for the unfailing
support of our Government, without which our work could
not have been carried out. We are also grateful to the
Right Livelihood Award Foundation for bestowing this
award on us and for the support from the Swedish Parliament.
We extend to you the testimony of our gratitude.
Thank you |