Japanese Food Self-Sufficiency and Local Initiatives to Improve It
Written by Hiroyo Hasegawa (Japan for Sustainability).
Have
you ever wondered what the level of food self-sufficiency is in your
country? If you live in a place where food is abundant and
agriculture is thriving, you may not have even thought about it
before.
The circumstances surrounding food issues and agriculture
are dramatically changing, however, especially with an increasing
number of natural disasters like droughts and floods caused by
extreme climate phenomena having a direct impact. In addition,
depending on the kind of food being produced, formerly major
food-exporting countries such as India and China have become food
importers, spurred on by their increasing populations and changing
eating habits. Then there is the issue of increasing "food
miles," the overuse of energy eaten up by long-distance food
transportation, along with the corresponding growth in greenhouse
gas emissions. Under the circumstances, it is important to
pay
attention to the rate of food self-sufficiency, which indicates
how well a country can feed its citizens without relying on
imported food.
As this issue is closely related to any nation's
security, it is drawing public attention in Japan, too.
Current
Status of Japan's Food Self-Sufficiency Rate
The
food self-sufficiency rate is an indicator that shows how much
daily food per capita is produced within a country. In Japan, it
is based on calories and is calculated as daily domestically
supplied calories per capita divided by daily totally supplied
calories per capita. Self-sufficiency in grains is also often
used to compare between countries, as almost complete data from
industrial and developing
countries are available.
The food
self-sufficiency rate in Japan was 78 percent in 1961, but it has
since been in a long decline. Within a decade, it had dropped to
58 percent in 1971, down 20 percent. In 1989, it actually fell
below the 50-percent level. Since 1998, the figure has been
hovering around 40 percent. In fiscal 2006, it broke the
40-percent level, declining to 39 percent, which made media
headlines and the topic frequently comes up in discussions. The
figure is the lowest among major industrialized countries. In
Switzerland, whose food self-sufficiency is comparatively lower
than other countries, the rate varies between 50 and 60
percent, while in Korea, Japan's next-door neighbor, it is a
little lower than
50 percent.
Almost 100 percent of
Japan's own staple food rice is produced in Japan. Self-sufficiency
in grains as a whole, however, was only 28 percent in fiscal 2008,
well below the overall food self-sufficiency rate. This is because
grains used for livestock feed, such as corn, come mostly
from imports. Moreover, Japan is only 10 to 20 percent
self-sufficient in the production of the wheat and buckwheat
needed to make bread and noodles.
From among the various
factors involved in the rate's decline to 40 percent -- down by
nearly half from the previous 78 percent -- is a general trend of
moving away from local agricultural production and depending more
heavily on imports, but one of the biggest factors is changing
eating habits. As the country grew richer, people became
more westernized in their food choices. For example, the
consumption of meat and food oils has trebled or even quadrupled
since 1960, while the
consumption of rice has been almost halved.
This means that the consumption of domestically produced food has
decreased, while the appetite for imported food has grown. This
trend is largely what has spurred on the dwindling food
self-sufficiency rate in Japan.
Improving
the Food Self-Sufficiency Rate
Japan's
food self-sufficiency can now be said to be at a critical
level. Against this backdrop, the government is working to
increase the rate to 45 percent by fiscal 2015, from the current
40 percent. To do so, it is conducting an initiative dubbed "Food
Action Nippon" to promote homegrown produce and raise
awareness among people so they can take concrete actions.
FOOD
ACTION NIPPON (Only in Japanese)
http://syokuryo.jp/index.html
One
of the projects that the government is particularly putting
effort into is promoting the use of rice flour (ground rice
powder). As the consumption of rice as a staple has been
decreasing, the government is seeking ways to encourage its
consumption, such as promoting its use as a powder like wheat
flour. Rice flour is attracting much attention in Europe and the
United States as an alternative for people with an allergy to
wheat gluten. Here in Japan, it has long been used as an ingredient
in traditional sweets and other foods.
In addition to
exploring the potential for rice flour for such uses, the government
is taking the lead in conducting public relations activities to
boost rice flour consumption. For example, it established a
special website to introduce a wide range of recipes and products
using rice flour, not only for traditional sweets but also main
dishes and western cakes and desserts, as well as supporting a
variety of events held by local communities and food-related
companies.
Japanese Industries Promote Rice Flour for Increase
in Food
Self-Sufficiency
http://www.japanfs.org/en/pages/029645.html
The
government calls these companies and organizations that
promote domestic products like rice flour and hold events to raise
awareness its "Promotion Partners." It has been
interacting with food-related
companies and those supporting
domestic products in order to increase the number of Partners from
2,000 and more, as of October 2009, to 5,000 within fiscal
2010.
Another example of the government's initiatives is the
Marche Japon project ("Japan Market" in French), which
was launched in the fall of 2009. There are 17 locations across
the country that recreate the atmosphere of the farmers markets in
the streets and squares of Europe and the United States, marketed
with the message: "Delicious food, direct from producer,
lively market." Domestically produced vegetables are sold at
these markets, together with dairy products and processed foods.
While some have gained popularity with regular customers, others come
to shop because they find these weekly farmers markets fun.
Marche
Japon (Only in Japanese)
http://www.marche-japon.org/
In
contrast to just picking out food at the supermarket and putting
it into a shopping cart, the farmers markets attract people who
want to learn about seasonally available foods and get ideas on
how to serve and cook them, find rare foods, and above all, enjoy
talking with food producers and sellers. For producers, it is
attractive too because they can talk face to face with their
customers and find out more about what they really want, which is
not just helpful but greatly encourages them to keep growing food.
Therefore, the Marche Japon project is beneficial for both
producers and consumers.
In addition to conducting public
relations activities targeted at consumers, the government also
introduced a new subsidy program in 2010 for food-producing
farmers. The model measurement for compensating individuals with
income for farming, launched in April, is an initiative to
increase the food self-sufficiency rate by conducting the
following two projects: (1) one focused on enhancing the
utilization of rice paddies to improve the food self-sufficiency
rate, and (2) a model project for compensating individuals with
income for rice production. The former is a simple and easily
understandable subsidy system aimed at encouraging the production
of crops for which self-sufficiency rates are low by more fully
utilizing rice paddies across the country. The latter is to
finance rice production to stabilize rice-farming
management.
Specifically, under the first project, the
government provides support to commercial farming households and
village farmers who produce crops such as wheat, soybeans, rice
for rice flour, and feedstock in rice paddies. Increasing
production of these food products should lead to improving Japan's
self-sufficiency rate and ensure that farmers can achieve an
equivalent level of income to that generated solely by producing
rice as a staple. Payments are made based on a unit price per 100
square meters for each crop. The idea is to control the surplus
of rice production and increase the production of crops that are
key to increasing the self-sufficiency rate.
Under the
second initiative -- the model project for compensating farmers
for producing rice -- the government is trying to eliminate
the chronic problem of cost pressures by providing a flat sum of
15,000 yen (about U.S.$161) per 100 square meters of cultivated
land for rice as a staple to farmers who produce according to a
quantified production target. Even so, the level of direct
compensation for Japanese farmers is still less than one-third of
that in Europe and the United States pricewise, which means
measures to increase domestic production are still lagging. With
these new systems introduced, it is hoped that the burden on
farmers will be reduced and the number of new farm successors
will
grow.
In response to the call by the government, citizens are
starting many initiatives, too. While shopping, more and more
people are checking food product labels and buying domestically
produced vegetables even if the price is higher than imported
ones, due in part to recent incidents in which an illegal
pesticide was detected in imported vegetables. Restaurants,
however, are not obligated to show the origin of the ingredients
they use, so diners have no idea where the food they are served
comes from.
Against this backdrop, the Midori Chochin Movement
(meaning "green Japanese paper lanterns"), which started
in Hokkaido in northern Japan to encourage restaurants to show
they use local food ingredients, has gradually spread across
Japan. The paper lantern is made of "washi" (Japanese
paper) covering a thin bamboo frame in a spiral shape with a candle
inside (nowadays an electric bulb is used instead of a
candle). Traditionally, it is used as a flashlight and as an
outdoor light hung from the eaves of buildings. The idea was
sparked by the use of aka chochin (red paper lanterns), also a
nickname for bars where working fathers will typically stop for a
drink on their way home from work.
The Midori Chochin Movement
picked up on this. Restaurants are eligible to put up a green
lantern if more than 50 percent of the ingredients they use are
domestically produced. The lantern has a one-to-five star rating,
with one star being the lowest rating of more than 50
percent domestically produced ingredients. The number of stars
goes up for each 10 percent increase, so restaurants using
domestic ingredients in 90 percent or more of its food ingredients
have a five-star green lantern.
The lantern is easy to recognize
and is said to be a useful tool to appeal to those who are
concerned about the food self-sufficiency rate.
Japanese Pubs
and Restaurants Display Green Lanterns to Promote Local
Produce
http://www.japanfs.org/en/pages/027032.html
Besides
these efforts, a network is being built among farming successors --
the new generation of young farmers across Japan -- and highly
conscious consumers, and various organizations are working to
connect agriculture with regular people. For example, some
non-profit organizations (NPOs) are working to create a system
that supports twenty-first-century agriculture. Another NPO
started a program to cultivate idle and abandoned farmland,
inviting the participation of city dwellers and providing weekend
programs to bring them to rural areas to work in cultivation as
part of the corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities of
companies. Municipalities and companies are also increasingly
promoting support for citizens to directly engage in farming and
providing community gardens.
'Agrizm' Quarterly Agriculture
Magazine for Young People Launched in
Japan
http://www.japanfs.org/en/pages/029961.html
It
is also important for citizens to rethink their own dietary
habits, the current situation of Japanese agriculture, as well as
global agricultural and food trends, by looking into the food
self-sufficiency rate and asking, "Where does the food we eat
everyday come from? And will it be possible to grow and get food
in the future?" Now is a time of important milestones in
moving toward a more ideal future by searching out accurate
information, selecting things based on it, thinking about what we
can do, and then taking action.
Written
by Hiroyo Hasegawa (Japan for Sustainability)


