The growing global demand for quinoa by
health food enthusiasts isn't just raising prices for the Andean super grain quinoa by health food enthusiasts
grain" and living standards among Bolivian farmers. Quinoa fever is
running up against physical limits.
The scramble to grow more is prompting Bolivian farmers to abandon
traditional land management practices, endangering the fragile ecosystem
of the arid highlands, agronomists say.
Quinoa currently fetches as much as $3,200 a ton, up nearly threefold
from five years ago — a surge fed by "foodies" making quinoa a hot
health-food product based on its high content of protein and amino
acids. It's also gluten free. Though used like a grain, quinoa is
actually an edible seed.
The United Nations has designated 2013 as the International Year of
Quinoa, and Bolivian President Evo Morales planned to be at a special
session of the world body in New York on Wednesday along with Peru's
first lady, Nadine Heredia, to celebrate. Their countries are the
world's two biggest producers.
Quinoa has been cultivated in the Andean highlands since at least
3000 B.C., growing natively from Chile north to Colombia. It grows best
at high altitudes in climates with cool days and even cooler nights.
In December, Morales mounted a tractor and plowed furrows into the
soil of his highlands hometown, Orinoca, to promote quinoa as sowing
season got under way. Townspeople sacrificed a llama to ask Pachamama,
or Mother Earth, for a good harvest.
But last week, Morales was out chastising farmers for having planted
quinoa in pastures where llamas traditionally graze. Without the llamas'
manure, little would grow in the arid highlands more than two miles
(three kilometers) high where the most prized variety of quinoa
originates.
"Quinoa goes hand in hand with the natural fertilizer that llamas
produce and there must be a nutritional crossing between the two," said
Rossmary Jaldin, an expert in the crop.
Bolivia's deputy minister of rural development, Victor Hugo Vasquez,
said 30 percent of his country's 70,000 quinoa producers are now
children of peasants who left the farm but have been drawn back by high
quinoa prices.
He and the president of Bolivia's National Association of Quinoa
Producers, Juan Crispin, say many of the growers don't follow
traditional farming methods and are depleting soils because they don't
rotate crops.
"We're not going to work with them," said Vasquez. "We are not going to help them."
Morales' government declared quinoa a strategic priority two years
ago and has since disbursed $10 million in credits for increasing yields
to cash in on the boom.
The country's quinoa crop expanded from 240 square miles (63,000
hectares) in 2009 to 400 square miles (104,000 hectares) last year, when
it produced a total of 58,000 metric tons, according to the Rural
Development Ministry. That is more than 40 times the production in 2000.
The United States imports 52 percent of Bolivian quinoa while 24
percent goes to Europe, where France and the Netherlands are big buyers.
Peru, meantime, raised its production to 43,640 metric tons last year
from 29,640 tons in 2009 and exported $30 million worth, up 20 percent
from the previous year.
Their gains have caught the attention of potential competitors.
Farmers are beginning to plant quinoa in other countries, including
Canada, Australia, China, India and Paraguay. A few thousand acres are
harvested in a highland valley of the U.S. state of Colorado and also in
Minnesota.
Bolivian farmers are complaining to their government that they need
harvesting machinery since most of their quinoa is harvested by hand.
Morales' administration has invited South Korean engineers to design the
desired machines.
Duane Johnson, a former Colorado state agronomist who helped
introduce quinoa to the United States three decades ago, said quinoa can
be commercially planted and harvested just like grain.
"It's just the size of millet," said Johnson, who now lives in
Bigfork, Montana. "I think the problem you get into in South America is
getting enough land to justify a combine."
When he was growing quinoa in the late 1980s, the United States
accounted for 37 percent of the world's quinoa crop, Johnson said.
Today, it has about 2 percent, he said.
Environmental concerns about the expansion of quinoa in Bolivia aren't the only problems that experts see.
Near Lake Titicaca, in some of the highlands' most fertile soils,
quinoa is now showing up where it hadn't before been planted, replacing
potatoes, beans and oats in some fields.
Experts fear that trend could harm food stocks in this poor nation where one in five children suffers from chronic malnutrition.
And with quinoa now costing three times as much as rice in La Paz
markets, it isn't eaten much by Bolivians. Its consumption averages a
little more than a kilogram, (2.2 pounds) per year for each Bolivian.
The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization hopes to promote more use
of quinoa at home by promoting the serving of quinoa in subsidized
school breakfasts.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
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