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Commercial Agriculture

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Title: Commercial Agriculture


1
Chapter 16
  • Commercial Agriculture

2
Where it from
  • Colonial powers commercialized the agriculture
    products and sold it even back to the colonized
    countries
  • With transportation evolved, new market scenarios
    exist. But the influence of the colonial powers
    still prevails in several countries. Such as,
    Ghanaians grow cacas, Mozambiquans raise cotton
    and Sri Lankans produce tea

3
Economic embargo
  • Wealthy importing countries can threaten the very
    survival of the economics of the producers (such
    as Cuba, Iraq, N. Korea)
  • Vice Versa, OPEC in 1970, but difficult.

4
Cotton and Rubber
  • Expansion cotton plantation due to the colonial
    powers in 19th century. Now, the developing
    countries still grow cotton and exported to
    developed countries.
  • Rubber grows in Amazon Basin and Congo Basin,
    later seedlings were planted, especially in
    Southeast Asia. Now 90 of rubber from Malaya and
    Indonesia. With the booming auto-industry, the
    rubber demand increases. In WWII, Japan
    controlled the Southeast stimulated the
    development of synthetic rubber, now more than
    60 are synthetic and the remaining 20 are from
    Southeast Asia. (For environmental and labor
    reasons, Southeast Asia was chosen for the
    development of rubber plantation)

5
Luxury Crops
  • Similar Environmental and labor reason led the
    colonist establish huge plantation in various
    regions for various luxury crops such as tea,
    cacao, coffee and tobacco.
  • Coffee was first planted in Ethiopia.
  • Now, Middle and South America produce 70 of the
    coffee of the world and US imports more than half
    of all the coffee sold on world markets annually
    and Western Europe takes most of the rest.

6
Coffee Story
  • Ninth Century--First record of coffee drinking by
    the Mufti people of Aden (Legend has it that the
    ubiquitous bean made its way to Yemen from
    Ethiopia by traveling merchants through trade
    routes across the Gulf of Aden)15th
    Century--Extensive planting of coffee in
    YemenLate 16th Century--Priests petition Pope
    Clement VIII to ban the evil drinking of coffee
    (he refuses--probably a closet coffee lover)17th
    Century--First coffee house opened in London
    (Trivia--coffeehouses became known as "penny
    universities" because a person could buy a cup of
    joe for 1 cent and learn more at the coffee house
    than in class! London Stock Exchange grew from a
    coffee house)
  • 1656--Coffee drinking prohibited coffeehouses
    closed in Turkey by the Grand Vizir of the
    Ottoman Empire (penalty for drinking coffee a
    dunk in the Bosphorus in a leather satchel!)

7
  • 1669--Coffee becomes popular in Europe after
    Turkish ambassador to France introduces Louis XIV
    to the magic brew1674--Women's Petition Against
    Coffee established in London1686--First cafe
    serving coffee is opened in Paris (Le
    Procope--it's still in business!)1690--Coffee
    introduced in Java (pardon the pun!)18th
    Century--More coffeehouses in London than there
    are today1714--Coffee takes root in the Americas
    (seedlings shipped to Martinique in the West
    Indies)1822--First espresso machine made in
    France1908--Melitta Bentz, a housewife from
    Dresden, invents the first coffee
    filter1909--Instant coffee first
    marketed1940--Coffee production quotas
    established by an Inter-American Coffee
    Board1962--Coffee export quotas established
    worldwide by the UN1970s--Coffee hits the big
    leagues as Joe DiMaggio endorses "Mr.
    Coffee"1989--World coffee prices
    plunge1991--The origin of Java (The programming
    language developed by Sun)

8
Luxury Crops - 2
  • Tea was grown in China perhaps 2000 years ago.
    It became popular in Europe in 19th century.
  • The British established enormous tea plantations
    in Asia and sold in European market.

9
Tea Story
  • Believed to have been discovered by Shen Nong
    (Divine Farmer), 2500 BC. boiling fresh leaves
    directly in water
  • Tang Dynasty (620-907 AD)- Tea comes of age - due
    to 1) strong Tang Economy 2) promotion by tea
    master Lu Yu 3) Promotion and lifestyle of
    Buddhist monks and Taoist priests, Brick Tea -
    tea leaves were steamed, powered, and then formed
    into cake. Tea was introduced to Japan with the
    philosophy of Tao (the Way) later Japan developed
    a elaborate tea ceremony cha-no-yu or the way of
    tea

10
Tea too
  • Song Dynasty (908-1276AD) - Loose tea was
    accepted and became popular
  • Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 AD) - Loose tea replaced
    powered tea and oolong and black tea planted in
    Fujian. Best teapot - Yixing purple clay, when
    fired forms micropores and chain-shaped pores
    which allows for better brews because they absorb
    the flavor and keep the water hot
  • England - seventeenth century, The East India
    Company brought back teas from China. In 19th
    century, with promotion from Queens Anne, tea
    drinking became a high-class social enjoyment.

11
Tea - 3
  • With the English domination of the sea trade and
    the Chinese Close Door policy, tea trade became
    the world's largest trade monopoly. The secret of
    growing tea was kept such a secret that no one in
    Europe knew that all variety of teas come from
    the same species of plant. The Chinese monopoly
    also created the largest trade imbalance which
    lead to the tragic Opium Wars in 1840 and
    1857-1860 between England and China, in which the
    English sought to legalize opium trade to
    counterbalance the trade deficit. As a result
    China lost control of its trading outpost, Hong
    Kong.

12
The Reign of English Tea Empire
  • Tea and India -- With the interest in tea growing
    in Europe, and China keeping a close door policy,
    English botanist sand entrepeneurs fervously look
    for alternative sites to grow tea. And when there
    is a will there is a way. Two major breakthroughs
    occured. Firstly, the Assam variety, native to
    India was discovered in 1824. Secondly, a
    botanist successfully stole a tea plant from
    China.
  • These breakthroughs created tea giants like Sir
    Thomas Lipton, and Twining and was the beginning
    of the world black tea trade.

13
Green Tea and Human Health
  • prevents cancer
  • restricts the increase of blood cholesterol
  • controls high blood pressure
  • lowers the blood sugar level
  • Green tea suppresses aging
  • Green tea refreshes the body
  • Green tea deters food poisoning
  • stops cavities and
  • fights virus

14
Tea Ceremony
  • The Japanese custom of drinking green tea came
    from China about 800 AD. The use of tea started
    when Buddhist monks, who had gone to China for
    study, returned to Japan bringing tea with them
    as a medicinal beverage.

15
Chinese Tea Ceremony
  • "The Chinese tea ceremony, unlike the Japanese
    tea ceremony, emphasizes the tea, rather than the
    ceremony," What the tea tastes like, smells like,
    and how one tea tastes compared to the previous
    tea, or in successive rounds of drinking -- that
    is what participants of the Chinese tea ceremony
    are most concerned with.

16
Plantation Agriculture (7 in figure 16-1)
  • Middle and South America - bananas, sugar,
    coffee, and cocoa
  • West and East Africa-rubber, cocoa, and tea
  • South Asia - tea
  • Southeast Asia - rubber
  • They still grow these plantation after the
    colonization period. Its an important source of
    income for the government who took over the
    control

17
Commercial Agriculture
  • The largest areas of commercial agr. -outside the
    tropics
  • US -the largest rice exporter followed by
    Thailand and Vietnam

18
Impact of Changing Agr. Practice
  • Shifts from Subsistence to commercial
    agriculture, impacts in industrialized regions -
    a) increased mechanization b)consolidation of
    smaller farms to larger corporate units
    c)increased crop specialization
  • Impacts in other regions a) Latin America
    -increase in the production of cash crops (fruit
    or coffee) at the expense of local consumption,
    and subsistence farming being pushed to the
    marginal lands b) Asia, with Green Revolution,
    increase in domestic and foreign market
    production of rice and wheat, c) In Africa,
    commercialized agr, increased but exports
    decreased,. Both Asia and Africa, small scale
    units and labor intensive farming.

19
Green Revolution-3rd Agr. Rev.
  • Started in 1960s, Philippino research crossed a
    Chinese rice with Indonesian variety and
    produced IR8 rice with bigger head of grain and
    stronger stem. In 1982, they produced IR36, the
    most widely grown crop on Earth
  • IR36-mixed from 13 parents genetic resistance
    against 15 pests and growing cycle of 110 days
    which makes three crops per year possible.
  • Charting of genome (12 chromosomes) is ongoing,
    it will eventually increase the production and
    develop the resistance to diseases and pests

20
World Distribution of Ag. (fig. 16-1)
  • History, Tradition, Environment and Technology
    shape the world of Ag.
  • Move out of subsistence Agr. Control family size
    in many countries
  • Soviet Union and China - collective farms and
    agriculture communes. A disaster in human
    history
  • Farm production oriented to 1/5 of wealthy,
    powerful and urbanized population.
  • Fertilizer Consumption

21
The Silk Road - major channel between China and
Europe - map link
  • 1 North - westward to Black Sea
  • 2 Central - Westward to Persia, Mediterranean
    Sea, Rome
  • 3 Southern route - Westward to Afghanistan,
    Iran, India
  • 4 Eastward to Xian

22
The greatest East-West trade rout for
cross-cultural exchange - named in the mid-19th
century by German Scholar - Baron Ferdinand von
Richthonfen
  • General Zhang Qian traveled from Xian to recruit
    the Yueh-chih who were looking for ally to combat
    Xiongnu (200 BC)
  • Chinese poem

23
DunHunag - the Thousand Buddha Cave
  • On 22 June 1900, when the Taoist priest Wang
    Yuanlu was removing sand from cave 16, he
    discovered the world famous Dunhuang Library Cave
    (now cave 17) on the northern wall of the
    corridor. It contained a great number of the
    scrolls of Buddhist writings, old administrative
    papers, embroidered work and paintings. All these
    relics amounted to over 45 000 pieces dating from
    the 3rd to the 11th century. They provide
    invaluable background for the study of politics,
    economics, military affairs, culture, religion,
    literature, music, dance, calligraphy,
    architecture and medical science in the old
    times.
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