Bridges Trade BioResVolume 7Number 8 • 27th April 2007

Resources


If you have a relevant resource (books, papers, bulletins, etc.) you would like to see announced in this section, please forward a copy for review by the BRIDGES staff to Malena Sell.

ETHICAL SOURCING IN THE GLOBAL FOOD SYSTEM. Edited by Stephanie Barrientos and Catherine Dolan. Earthscan, 2006. Ethical sourcing, both through fair trade and ethical trade, is increasingly entering the mainstream of food retailing. Large supermarkets have come under pressure to improve the returns to small producers and conditions of employment within their supply chains. But how effective is ethical sourcing? Can it genuinely address the problems facing workers and producers in the global food system? This book brings together a range of academics and practitioners working on issues of ethical sourcing in the global food system. It critically explores the opportunities and challenges in the ethical sourcing of food by combining analysis and case studies that examine a range of approaches. It explores whether ethical sourcingis a cosmetic northern initiative, or can genuinely help to improve the conditions of small producers and workers in the current global food system. Order the book online at http://www.earthscan.co.uk.

A FAIR FARM BILL FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, April 2007. The third instalment of a series of papers on the 2007 US Farm Bill, this paper address the challenges posed by the growth in farm-based renewable energy production and their implications for the 2007 US Farm Bill. It encourages diversification of biofuels production from corn and soybeans to more sustainable biomass crops. It also offers predictions on how food prices could be affected by dedicating more land to biofuel production and what can be done to ensure that farmers and rural communities benefit from the new bioeconomy. The brief suggests that a renewable-fuels system based on perennial crops and local ownership will ensure the success of the 2007 Farm Bill and offers concrete policy steps that should be taken to that end. Download the report online at http://www.iatp.org/iatp/publications.cfm?showall=false.

SHOULD THE GREEN BOX BE MODIFIED? By David Blandford and Timothy Josling, International Food and Agriculture Trade Policy Council, March 2007. Agriculture is at the heart of the current Doha "Development" Round of trade negotiations, with increased market access for agriculture playing an important role in furthering economic development and poverty reduction in developing countries. Progress in reducing trade-distorting subsidies has been helped through the introduction of the "Green Box" category in the WTO, which identifies minimally trade-distorting support, including financial support for research and development, food aid, decoupled income support, disaster relief, and environmental programs. In this discussion paper, the authors raise salient questions regarding the Green Box and how it can best be utilised to meet the needs of both rich and poor countries. Download the full report, or the shorter policy focus, online at http://www.agritrade.org/Publications/green_box.html.

THE EMISSION GAME: HOW MARKETS CAN HELP SAVE THE PLANET. By Christine Loh and Roger Raufer, CLSA Asia Pacific Markets, January 2007. This report explores both the environmental and financial aspects of emissions trading. The authors first explain the environmental arguments for carbon emissions reduction and how emissions trading works, including a case study of proposed emissions trading schemes in China and Hong Kong. Putting a "price" on carbon will lead individuals and businesses to move away from high-carbon good and services to their low-carbon alternatives. The development of carbon-trading markets is also an important opportunity for the financial sector, already worth more than USD10 billion annually worldwide. The authors envision a world where businesses, nations, and even individuals transition to a carbon constrained world. Download the report online at http://www.civic-exchange.org/index.php?cat=99.

IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON THE EUROPEAN MARINE AND COASTAL ENVIRONMENT. (March 2007). Published by the European Science Foundation, this report is based on a two-year study led by marine ecologist Katja Philippart from the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, who chairs the European working group on Climate Change Impacts on the European Marine and Coastal Environment. This position paper reveals that European marine species are feeling the effects of global warming. The study provides details about the impact of climate change at a European Seas level - in the Arctic, the Barents Sea, the Nordic Seas, the Baltic, the North Sea, the Northeast Atlantic, in the Celtic-Biscay Shelf, the Iberia upwelling margin, the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. It finds that the decline in sea ice cover in the northern Arctic and Barents Seas has triggered the most obvious temperature changes for marine life. The open systems structure of these seas demonstrates how climate changes are causing further northward movement of marine organisms. To read the paper visit http://www.vliz.be/docs/Events/JCD/MB_Climate_Change_VLIZ_05031.pdf.