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The Rural Voice, 1979-08, Page 11Keith Roulston Should efficiency be re -defined? There's probably no industry that hears the word "efficiency" bandied about more often than the food industry. Farmers talk about how much the efficiency of their operations 'have increased in the last three decades. Consumers argue that marketing boards protect the inefficient farmers at the expense of the efficient ones and the consumers. Food retail moguls talk about how efficient the big food chains are. But in a time when petroleum prices are doubling and tripling, the term "efficiency" may be in for a re -definition. Our idea of efficiency has always been based solely on the dollars involved. Someone a while back suggested we needed a new system of accounting in such things, one that not only took in the cost in dollars but also the use of non-renewable energy. With the latest round of price rises by the O.P.E.C. countries and warnings of more to come we may no longer need a separate accounting. Efficiency in energy and dollars may mean the same things soon. What is efficient, for instance, about importing lettuce trom California to make salads in Ontario especially when we could be having cabbages instead that are grown right in our own back yard and stored for winter use. Why on earth do we need corn on the cob on our supermarket shelves even in mid winter? Would it hurt us to do without cucumbers in January instead of either importing them from a warmer climate or growing them in expensively - operated greenhouse operations? According to a U.S. government agriculture spokesman. we may soon not have to make the choice. Rising fuel prices will make it impossible for truck drivers to charge enough to make any money trucking fruit and vegetables on long hauls. Then too there's the question of what is really efficient right on the farm. In a magazine recently I saw a photo of the latest sensation at farm machinery exhibitions out West. It was called Big Roy, a $200,000 monster with closed circuit television so you could see what was going on out behind eight -wheel drive and boasting 600 horse power How many of those horsepower one wonders, was used up pulling around the weight of the fuel tank the machine would need to keep going for a day in the field. Much of the bragged -about efficiency on the farm in the years since World War Two has been accomplished by shifting from muscle power to petroleum power. Today with huge tractors, huge combines, large poultry and hog operations gobbling up electricity at enormous rates, chemical fertilizers and herbicides and pesticides with high energy inputs, agriculture has become one of the biggest users of energy. H. Gordon Green a year or so ago talked about this "efficiency" of the modern farmer. If a proper accounting of energy inputs and outputs was taken, he wondered, who would really be the most efficient, that farmer of the turn of the century or the farmer of today? He pointed out that the farmer of the turn of the century was virtually self sufficient in terms of energy. About all the energy that was bought off the farm was a little kerosene for lamps and lanterns. Farm work was powered by horses, horses that got their energy from hay and grain grown on their own farm. They in turn not only helped harvest that energy but contributed to it with their own manure. So when a farmer sold meat or eggs or grain, he was selling real energy. energy we would call renevable since it came from the sun and the soil and was not transferred trom an artificial source. In those terms. how much real energy comes off our farmer today. Of course nobody wants to leave today's way completely and return to the days of horses and long hours of back breaking work (or at least very few do.) But I think it's time we took a look at just where we've come in the name of efficiency. We've got to take a look at what is true efficiency and what is just an excuse to sell farmers another piece of machinery or another chemical. We got completely away from using manures for fertilization for a while for instance and only in recent years have rediscovered how valuable it is. Farmers have been led down a path that has been a major boon for industry and banking. Today's high technology, high financing farm operation means that farming may not be profitable but farming is a profitable par', of industry. Farmers are hooked into a certain kind of farming. Their hope for the last 30 years has always been: "Well, if I just get a little bit bigger, maybe I can make some money." With farmers so energy dependent the immediate future does not look bright. There are going to be a lot of people hurt by the escalating costs of energy. It may be that it is impossible to go on farming in the way farmers have in the 1970's. It may be that farmers will be reverting to some of the yvactices of their fathers: that the efficiency of tomorrow will the_ the inefficiency of yesterday. H. GERRITS BARN EQUIPMENT LTD. Manufacturers -- Dealers Specializing in Complete Hog and Dairy Equipment uldbirm— FARROWING CRATE Size: Length — 7'3", Width — 22", Height — 40". Frame: 1" pipe. Front Feeder, Front and Rear Door. Adjustable bumper bar or bumper door. 7112111—k \, R. R. 5, Clinton 519-482-7296 "Practical confining system for less" \�R LES/ THE RURAL VOICE/ AUGUST 1979 PG. 9