As the COVID-19 pandemic took hold, media was flooded with images of produce left to rot in fields, people queuing up for hours at food pantries, and empty store shelves. It seemed everywhere we looked, there was too much food or not enough, with people on both sides of the equation suffering.
And as the pandemic continued to add challenges and shutdowns prohibited travel, farmers around the world lost access to workers鈥攁nd therefore their ability to harvest and process produce and livestock. Large farmers and subsistence farmers alike struggled to transport their goods to markets. Domestic food supplies developed kinks all along the pandemic food supply chain, and hunger quickly skyrocketed.
Experts such as the point out that hunger vulnerability also increased exponentially in areas affected by other crises, such as plagues, political conflict, and extreme weather events.
Farmers are, of course, exceptionally resourceful. As much as they are humanity鈥檚 source of nourishment, they are, by trade, problem solvers. Combine those traits, and the results were some of the most useful and important programs to come out of the pandemic.
It is hard to estimate how many programs were put together to help get food to the right places during the worst of the pandemic. We do know that farmers around the world persevered to get their goods to where they were most needed鈥攅specially into the hands of the hungry.
For every program put together by NGOs, governments, and farmers, there was an impact that went beyond the immediate quantitative goal of getting people fed. These programs were vital for what they did during the pandemic, and also to help feed our growing population in post pandemic times.
It was mid-March, the peak of harvest season in the Philippines, and the country was in total lockdown. 鈥淧roduce was rotting in the fields while 13 million people were panic buying. It was total chaos,鈥 said Cherrie Atilano, founder of the AGREA Foundation, whose mission is to promote fair-trade and sustainable agriculture. 鈥淭here were no trucks to transport the produce,鈥 she said, and no drivers even if there had been. The military enforced strict curfews, and travel was prohibited鈥攅ven to bring food where it was needed.
Atilano, who has dedicated her life to the welfare of her country鈥檚 farmers, was flooded with messages from panicked farmers: 鈥淭hree days after lockdown, a pineapple farmer told me he had borrowed money for his harvest and now had 15,000 pieces he couldn鈥檛 move.鈥 So she went into action. She made phone calls to get permission from the farmer鈥檚 village captain to harvest, borrowed a truck, and posted pictures to Facebook of the pineapples. They immediately sold out, and the farmer was able to take orders for the next day. It wasn鈥檛 long before she was moving 50 tons of produce by boat, finding warehouses, garnering permissions, and, importantly, helping farmers get their goods distributed. Her Move Food Initiative was able to transport more than 183,000 kilograms of produce鈥攚hich helped support in excess of 20,000 Filipino farmers and bring food to some 73,000+ families.
Atilano saw the Move Food Initiative continuing long after COVID-19. While the pandemic raised new obstacles, the need to support both farmers and those who are food insecure is neither new nor temporary. AGREA was able to bring healthy food packages, comprising more than 5000kg of rice and produce, to 1100 families at the Project Pearls Learning Center, while supporting smallholder farmers.
Much of Atilano鈥檚 work for farmers and the food insecure is accomplished through her tireless networking and endless determination. It is fueled by her belief that, 鈥渇armers are my teachers. They know how to live and survive. I believe it is a crime against humanity that the people who produce our food are the hungriest and poorest. At the end of the day, the pandemic is a reminder that feeding people is the most essential business there is.鈥
Like the pineapple farmer who reached out to Atilano in the Philippines, pork producers in Iowa found themselves with pigs they couldn鈥檛 get to market due to pandemic food supply chain issues. Joyce Hoppes, consumer information director at the Iowa Pork Producers Association, recalls that, 鈥渢he farmers reached out to us because they saw their neighbors struggling to put food on their tables. They wanted to donate pigs, but they asked us to help figure out how to get them processed.鈥 It was the end of April, and the lines at food banks were growing. As was the case around the world, the food and need were both there鈥攂ut matching the two in the midst of the pandemic took creativity, collaboration, hard work, and human kindness.
The Pass the Pork initiative was a collaboration among many organizations, including pork producers, the Department of Agriculture, the state government, and Iowan food banks. Not only was it a question of funding the processing of the pigs, there also had to be facilities available to actually do the work. In a true win-win-win, Hoppes explained, 鈥渨e had to be creative to find a few lockers who would open after hours to process, then we reached out to small processors. We lucked out and found one who had been doing roaster pigs. When restaurants closed down, their business had dried up, so they furloughed their workers. We worked with them and brought back workers. They jumped through a lot of hoops because their plant was geared for roaster [smaller] pigs. They had to change the plant to accommodate larger market pigs鈥攁nd they did it!鈥
With the help of a GoFundMe campaign set up with the Iowa food bank, the Iowa Pork Producers Association raised $137,000. They were able to process 50,000 pounds of pork into 200,000 meals for food-insecure Iowans.
Across the globe, there is a very real concern that food insecurity issues made worse by the pandemic and growing international conflict will result in many unnecessary deaths.
Innovative programs like these, by and with farmers, were essential during the worst of the pandemic and are still needed to solve food security problems today.