Permaculture Projects

World Localization Day – Inspiring Examples from Around the World

Denmark, India, South Korea, Mexico, UK, USA, Thailand, Zimbabwe, Portugal

Samsø  – Denmark

On Samsø, the world’s first island powered by 100% local, renewable energy, success rests on a high level of community ownership and buy-in: more than half of the island’s 21 wind turbines are owned by local farmers, and the entire community collectively decided on the placement of the turbines. Three of the island’s four heating plants run on leftover barley straw purchased from the island’s farmers, and the fourth uses local woodchips and a solar hot water system.

 

Sambhavna Clinic  – Bhopal, India

In 1984, thousands died when a plant owned by US multinational Union Carbide released a vast cloud of lethal gas into the city of Bhopal. Hundreds of thousands were left permanently injured and still today suffer an ongoing health catastrophe, as a handful of pharmaceutical corporations pounced on this new “market” for their products.
5 years ago, a small local trust chose to break the cycle of poison by using ancient plant remedies to treat the modern industrial diseases engulfing Bhopal. In time, they created a model of effective community health intervention. Sambhavna Clinic, ecologically constructed and nestled in a 1-acre medicinal herb garden, offers free medical care to the survivors through a combination of Western medicine, traditional Ayurvedic medicine, and yoga.

 

Seongmisan Ecovillage –  Seoul, South Korea

At the foot of a small, wooded hill in northwest Seoul, lies an ecovillage called Seongmisan.  Seongmisan began with a community-run childcare centre, and grew with the struggle to protect the Seongmi hill from an industrial development. Since its beginnings, this urban village has organically expanded outwards, adopting more and more households, and quietly contributing to a transformation of values and economic structures. By 2014, Seongmisan had grown to involve an impressive 700 households and 20,000 people, as well as 70 businesses such as organic food cooperatives and restaurants, a small theatre, an ecological soap producer, two alternative schools, and even a dental practice. All these institutions embody a radical departure from modern consumerism, instead prioritising collaboration, mutual responsibility, short and accountable supply-chains, sustainability, and face-to-face connection.

In a megacity like Seoul, Seongmisan is an oasis of calm, bringing to life a more beautiful future. It is just one of over 10,000 ecovillages across the world that, together, form the Global Ecovillage Network.

 

Unión de Cooperativas Tosepan – From food to buildings, medicine to finance – Cuetzalan, Mexico

Tosepan
Image from bilaterals.org

Tosepan is a network of cooperatives with 35,000 members spread across 430 villages in the lush, cloud-forested Sierra Norte mountains of Puebla, Mexico. Tosepan is dedicated to constructing a holistic, sustainable, locally- and democratically-controlled economy rooted in indigenous culture and knowledge.

Tosepan’s three civil associations and eight cooperatives cover a wide spectrum of basic needs. Organic staples like corn, beans and vegetables, as well as crops like coffee, pepper, and sugarcane, are grown on agroecological farms for community needs and local markets. Natural building – using local resources like bamboo and adobe – incorporates features like water harvesting, solar dehydrators, ecological cookstoves, and renewable energy. Local healthcare focuses on prevention and traditional herbal remedies. Decentralised renewable energy aims for total energy sovereignty. A local cooperative bank supports the functioning of the entire ecosystem of cooperatives.

 

Bhoomi College – An education in interconnection – Bangalore, India

Just outside Bangalore, known as the information technology capital of India, lies an oasis inviting people to explore a different way of life. Bhoomi College brings together thinkers and practitioners in fields like local food and farming, holistic and place-based education, green energy, trade policy, sustainable water systems, and more, to teach year-long graduate degree programs in Sustainable Living and Holistic Education as well as a large number of shorter courses.  Bhoomi also hosts a repair café – a meeting space where people come together to mend broken household objects, resisting throwaway culture – as well as a farmer’s market, a small farm, and an array of events, from talks about the climate crisis to tree plantings and monsoon celebrations.

 

Growing Communities – London, UK

Photo by Shelley Pauls on Unsplash.

Growing Communities’, based in Hackney, London, take a whole-systems approach. They operate a much-loved, 100% organic and biodynamic farmers’ market, as well as urban farms, agriculture education programs, and a box scheme. They focus on shortening supply-chains, supporting climate- and nature-friendly food production, boosting profits for farmers, and making fresh, local food more affordable and accessible. They have been going strong for 25 years, and – aside from all the social and ecological benefits – studies have found their model to be much more efficient than industrial agriculture.

“Research shows that … people who buy food from us do eat more seasonally, eat more portions of fruit and veg and less meat, waste less food and appreciate and understand where food comes from.” – Julie Brown, Director, Growing Communities

 

Mountain Roots Food Project – Gunnison (Colorado), USA

In the high-altitude meadows of Gunnison Valley, Colorado, Mountain Roots Food Project runs an array of projects to strengthen resilient food systems, including:

  • A small farm
  • A multi-farm Community-Supported Agriculture (CSA) program, featuring farmers from around the region
  • Community gardens where members work together and share the harvest
  • School garden and nutrition education programs in public schools
  • A “food rescue” program, connecting food-insecure families with excess produce from backyard gardens and farms.

 

Deccan Development Society – Andhra Pradesh, India

Working across 70 villages in Central India, the Deccan Development Society (DDS) has supported tribal women in forming groups to establish sovereignty over their seeds, food, farming, health, markets, and media.

DDS has created its own seed banks, millet processing units, local food outlets, and restaurants, providing a powerful network of support for women entrepreneurs. They have even taken control of the market, by pushing the state government to redirect public subsidies away from mass-produced rice and wheat, and towards their indigenous, climate-adapted, nutrient-rich, organic crops. Women treasure these crops more than monetary wealth. Consequently, seeds are neither bought nor sold, but always exchanged. By taking back control of their seeds, lands, and markets, they have escaped the volatility of corporate-run markets and maintained vibrant communities and agrarian cultures, and reclaimed self-reliance and self-respect.

Today, more than 5,000 women have adopted millet-based agro-biodiverse farming approaches and conserved almost 100 indigenous seed varieties, which have proven much more resilient to drought. The women also operate their own radio station, produce many documentaries to raise awareness about food security issues and to celebrate their own culture, and they have even started their own school – which they built out of local, natural materials.

“Every month you get your salaries and fill your pockets with currency notes. But come to my home.

I have filled it with seeds. Can you match me.”

Paramma, from Khasimput village

 

Cooperativa Integral Minga -Montemor-O-Novo, Portugal

Located in the small rural town of in Portugal, this cooperative was founded to reverse the fate of many rural towns: population loss, the abandonment of agriculture and the decline of local commerce.

Minga makes life easier for micro-businesses, by acting as a fiscal umbrella for multiple small local businesses, ranging from food producers to graphic designers. The Coop facilitates the distributing of local products through its shop – food, clothes, all-natural cosmetics and more – and manages a community space for local gatherings & events. It has developed an internal currency, and takes part in a broader local currency initiative as well. The cooperative offers micro-credits to new local entrepreneurs and encourages principles and practices of slowing down, consuming less, sourcing local and seasonal food, ecological production and reintegrating people with nature.

“Our cooperative includes a very wide range of local businesses…gradually, we’ll have more and more local products and more local jobs”.

Alexandre Castro, Director of Minga

 

 

 

ZIMSOFF – Zimbabwe Smallholders Organic Farmers’ Forum

ZIMSOFF, a network of 19,000 organic smallholder in Zimbabwe, is bringing life to the land and healthy affordable food on the table of local people. Co-founded in 2002 by organic farmer, writer and activist Elizabeth Mpofu, this growing network with its focus on food sovereignty, agroecology, biodiversity, seed saving and gender parity, is changing the rural landscape in Zimbabwe. It has empowered farmers, women and men, strengthened food security and revitalised degraded land.

ZIMSOFF advocates and lobbies for climate change resilient food-policies, with emphasis on local production for local consumption. ZIMSOFF is also a member of La Via Campesina – the biggest peasant movement in the world, with its 182 members-organizations from 80+ countries that together represent over 200 million people.

“We are calling for food sovereignty.…we want and we need local food – and not industrialised and standardised food: we need a good quality food produced through indigenous agroecological farming systems, that respect life and the environment. Agroecological farming is the solution to climate change…”

Elizabeth Mpofu, co-founder of ZIMSOFF and General Coordinator of La Via Campesina

 

“I wish for my community to be food sovereign. I want a state that is actually founded on sovereign households. If households are dependent on external entities like chemical corporations, then the state cannot be said to be sovereign”.

Nelson Mudzingwa, National Coordinator ZIMSOFF


https://thousandcurrents.org/partners/zimsoff/

 

Pun Pun Centre for Self-Reliance Returning to a life of abundance – Chiang Mai, Thailand.

We were taught how to make life complicated and hard all the time…we were taught to disconnect ourselves, to be independent, so that we can rely on money only, and don’t need to rely on each other. But now, to be happy, we need to connect to ourselves again, to connect to other people, to connect our minds and bodies together again.”

Jon Jandai, co-founder, Pun Pun Center for Self-reliance

After working for seven, dreary, stressful years in crowded Bangkok, Jon Jandai returned to his childhood village. With his family of six, he grew rice and vegetables, and raised fish, working far fewer hours than he had in the city. They sold their surplus food, and he built an earthen house – totally debt-free. He stopped worrying about fashionable clothing and other status symbols. “Life became easy and fun again”, he says.

In 2003, Jon and his American partner decided to create a learning centre to share these insights. The Pun Pun Centre for Self-Reliance – an organic farm, ecological building school, intentional community, and a centre for seed-saving and sustainable living – was born. The land they bought was seriously degraded, as it had previously been used for mono-cropping corn. They managed to turn the land into an abundant, self-sufficient farm and home.

Roughly 15 people live on the farm, and hundreds of guests and workshop attendees – from every corner of the globe – pass through every year to learn about organic gardening, natural building, and the use of appropriate technologies – like simple solar systems for heating water, and homemade charcoal for water filtration.  Members of the Pun Pun community also run two restaurants in Chiang Mai city, where they serve local, organic, GMO- free food – much of it grown at the farm. The mission of both restaurants is to highlight the value of the diverse traditional seed varieties grown and saved at Pun Pun.

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