Saturday, 29 October 2011

Brazil Amazon campaigners occupy Belo Monte dam

Brazil Amazon campaigners occupy Belo Monte dam

Caiapo indigenous men demonstrating on the road leading to the construction site of the Belo Monte hydroelectric dam Indigenous groups have been protesting against the project for years

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Hundreds of campaigners occupied the construction site of the Belo Monte dam project in the Brazilian Amazon.
The protesters want work on the multi-billion dollar dam stopped, arguing that it will displace thousands of indigenous people and damage the environment.
The protesters, many from indigenous groups, left the site after several hours following a judge's order.
The government says the project is crucial to meeting energy needs.
The Indian Missionary Council (Cimi), an organisation backed by the Catholic Church, said more than 600 Indians, fishermen and locals occupied the site and the road leading to it.
Cimi called on the government to send representatives to negotiate with the indigenous groups, who they say would suffer from the building of the dam.
"In the face of the government's intransigence and its insistence on disrespecting us, we now occupy the Belo Monte construction site and block access to it from the Transamazon highway," Cimi said on its website.
A judge subsequently issued an order for the demonstrators to leave, which they agreed to respect.
"We left as peacefully as we entered. It was a peaceful protest to draw attention to this project that spells death for the Amazon," Cimi spokesman Eden Magalhaes told the AFP news agency.
Legal battle
Building work on the dam was halted last month after a judge ruled against it on environmental grounds, but the construction of accommodation blocks for the project's workers was allowed to continue.
Judge Carlos Castro Martins barred any work that would interfere with the natural flow of the Xingu river.
He ruled in favour of a fisheries group which argued that the Belo Monte dam would affect local fish stocks and could harm indigenous families who make a living from fishing.
Judge Martins barred the Norte Energia company behind the project from "building a port, using explosives, installing dikes, building canals and any other infrastructure work that would interfere with the natural flow of the Xingu river, thereby affecting local fish stocks".
He said the building of canals and dykes could have negative repercussions for river communities living off small-scale fishing.
The consortium behind the project is expected to appeal against the decision.
In June, the Brazilian environment agency backed the construction, dismissing concerns by environmentalists and indigenous groups who argue that it will harm the world's largest tropical rainforest and displace tens of thousands of people.
The agency, Ibama, said the dam had been subjected to "robust analysis" of its impact on the environment.
The 11,000-megawatt dam would be the third biggest in the world - after the Three Gorges in China, and Itaipu, which is jointly run by Brazil and Paraguay.
Map showing Belo Monte dam proposals

Friday, 28 October 2011

Climate study raises 'heated debate'

Climate study raises 'heated debate'

  1. The headline conclusion - that the Earth's surface is indeed getting warmer and that the 20th Century did indeed see a pattern of warming, slight cooling and warming again - is hardly a surprise.

Water from Three Gorges Dam Hydro is China's dominant low-carbon technologyThe Berkeley Earth Project's new analysis of the global temperature record, which I covered on Thursday, raises a number of questions concerning the science and the politics of climate change, and the ways in which science should be conducted.

But in the febrile atmosphere of "the climate debate", its significance lies not only in its conclusions, but in who's done it and what they've found.

At the heart of the "Climate Gate" issue lay the allegation that researchers at the University of East Anglia (UEA) and their peers elsewhere had basically cooked the books.

They'd twisted, hidden, manipulated and otherwise distorted their record of the Earth's temperature, it was said, for whatever reason - to save their careers, promote their green ideology or further the cause of world government.

It was also said that the climate crowd were not "proper" scientists. Get physicists or geologists on the case, it was argued, and some proper conclusions might emerge.

Into this arena rode the Berkeley group - seven of the 10 physicists, two of them statisticians, just one a climatologist - with a new approach.

Richard Muller, the project's founder, told me that one of the things he looked for in choosing his team was a proven ability to take on new areas of science and bring some original thought to them.

Within climate science, one of the interesting questions now is whether the three major existing temperature record teams - Nasa, Noaa and the UK Met Office/UEA collaboration - learn anything from the Berkeley effort.

When I spoke to Phil Jones, leader of the UEA team, he told me he thought there might be ways in which the Berkeley approach could feed into existing programmes.

Equally, you can be sure that Prof Jones, James Hansen and everyone else in the established teams will be scrutinising the Berkeley methodology to see if they think it's made any mistakes.

GraphThe Berkeley group's record of global land temperature mirrors existing ones closely

And this leads on to the second way in which Prof Muller's team may re-shape the mould.

In the years leading up to 2009, climate researchers were subjected to an ever-increasing stream of critical bloggery, innuendo and Freedom of Information (FoI) requests.

While some of the FoI requests may have been entirely legitimate, the cumulative impact was that researchers battened down the hatches against the storms raging outside - creating something of a bunker mentality that has been criticised by official enquiries, even though they found the wider concerns about manipulation were unfounded.

Prof Muller does not come across as the sort of chap to be fazed by criticism. The project aims for openness and inclusion - not just between scientists, but involving the general public.

Perhaps it can take the big three temperature programmes back into open waters along with it. And perhaps, if it is entirely open with everything from the beginning, some of the sound and fury will abate.

Berkeley Group's animation of the change in land temperature since 1800

The Berkeley project poses a scientific challenge with its contention that water temperature changes in the north Atlantic - perhaps related to the Gulf Stream, as it's commonly known - are driving year-to-year changes in global temperature.

Even more so, when the authors suggest that a greater part of the warming-cooling-warming history of the 20th Century could be down to the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) than is recognised.

(Clarification for putative cherry-pickers; the scientific work behind the papers doesn't examine this idea or even back it, but the authors suggest it as an avenue for further research.)

I had a chat with Michael Schlesinger, the University of Illinois professor who discovered the AMO along with Navin Ramankutty in 1994.

Research he and others have done since shows clearly, he said, that "while the AMO was the dominant influence on global mean temperature during 1904-1944 and 1944-1976, it is not the dominant influence over the entire observational record, 1850 to 2010.

"Over this time period, it is the increase in the concentrations of greenhouse gases caused by humanity's burning of fossil fuels that is the dominant cause of the observed warming."

That, I think, is the conclusion that the majority of climate scientists is likely to make, although the whole issue is made more complex by the fact that greenhouse warming can perturb natural cycles such as the AMO.

But there is scope for some real investigation.

Quality assured

In some ways, the real battle on climate change is fought not within the scientific arena but in the court of public opinion.

Mt Washington weather stationClaims that US weather station quality affected diagnosis of global warming was rejected

So it's interesting to see what those who would shape opinion are making of the Berkeley results.

The sceptical blogosphere has been unusually quiet - disappointingly quiet, you might say.

James Delingpole, Jo Nova, ClimateAudit... nothing.

One who has waded into the fray, inevitably, is Anthony Watts of Watts Up With That.

I say "inevitably", because his criticisms of weather station quality were among the factors that persuaded Prof Muller to get his project off the ground.

The Berkeley group concluded that although a high proportion of weather stations in the US might not be high quality - for example, if they're situated in the middle of an expanding city - it doesn't matter.

High-quality stations show the same warming trend as low-quality ones; so this issue can be taken off the table.

Mr Watts, in his recent postings, isn't impressed.

He argues that the Berkeley team used too long a time period for its analysis. He says it made a few other basic errors.

These things may or may not turn out to be true or important. But Mr Watts is on shaky ground, as he recognises, given that back in March he wrote a warm post on the Berkeley project's methods, concluding: "I'm prepared to accept whatever result they produce, even if it proves my premise wrong".

Pressing the point

He is on much, much, much shakier ground in his request that because the Berkeley papers have not gone through formal peer-review, the team should not be looking for any media coverage.

Pots and kettles are everywhere.

The entire modus operandi of blogging - and in the climate field, Watts Up With That is one of the most successful - is that stuff is chucked into the public domain for discussion with no review at all.

All those posts on Climate Audit and Bishop Hill over the years finding "problems" with historical climate data - how many of them were peer-reviewed?

Exactly. And Anthony Watts is in any case happy to put non-peer-reviewed science onto his pages.

On 6 October, for example, Erl Happ pens a guest post on high-level clouds and surface temperature with claims that this is new work - "The 'natural' dynamics described in this post are currently unrecognized in climate science". This wasn't peer-reviewed.

Conceptual image of Big Ben under waterThe science of climate change has been drowning in an ocean of politics

On 5 August, we find there is apparently "quite a bit of buzz surrounding a talk and pending paper" on the temporal relationship between temperature rise and CO2 - and apparently it's fine to talk about it, even though the paper's not published.

There are many other examples; and Watts Up With That is far from being alone.

Yet the Berkeley group is beyond the pale in posting and talking about science that has not been peer-reviewed?

A number of journalists in the mainstream media appear to regard Watts Up With That and other blogs of the same ilk as a gushing tap of stories - and if Mr Watts believes journalists should not report science that's not peer-reviewed, perhaps he could pick up the phone and have a word with them.

There's a fair bit of revisionism going on too, some of it visible in the comments on my news story.

"Sceptics don't say the world isn't warming," this narrative goes - "we just debate how much of it is caused by greenhouse gases."

There are some "sceptics" who do take this line, it's true. But if the Earth's temperature record wasn't an issue, why has so much energy been expended in attempting to discredit it and the scientists behind it?

Over on the other side of the divide, Joe Romm of Climate Progress, who has on several occasions written critically of the Berkeley team (Richard Muller "doesn't have a great grasp of basic climate science", Judith Curry is "the most debunked person on the science blogosphere"),is now apparently happy with their conclusions, reserving his trademark bucket of vitriol for Anthony Watts.

There is actually a more serious and interesting question surrounding peer-review, with Richard Muller describing his approach as a return to much better practices of a previous era - but that's for another time.

In the meantime, I'll leave you with the words of Elizabeth Muller, executive director of the Berkeley project, who hopes their work will "cool the debate over global warming"

The Berkeley group hopes to banish some of the clouds over climate change - but will they?

China 'won't follow US' on carbon emissions

China 'won't follow US' on carbon emissions

Water from Three Gorges Dam Hydro is China's dominant low-carbon technology

China will not allow its carbon dioxide emissions per person to reach levels seen in the US, according to the minister in charge of climate policy.

Xie Zhenhua, vice chair of the National Development and Reform Commission, said that to let emissions rise that high would be a "disaster for the world".

Chinese per-capita emissions may reach US levels by 2017, a recent study said.

Mr Xie was speaking during a visit to the UK that explored co-operation on clean energy and climate issues.

It included signing a Memorandum of Understanding with UK Energy and Climate Secretary Chris Huhne on areas for joint research.

Early peak

Start Quote

Since we have declared a low-carbon and green development path, China will follow this path”

End Quote Xie Zhenhua

China's emissions have risen sharply in recent years due to rapid industrialisation, fuelled mainly by coal burning. In terms of national emissions, it has overtaken the US.

But because its population is so much bigger, its per-capita emissions are currently much lower - but rising fast.

An analysis released last month by the European Commission's Joint Research Centre (JRC) put China's annual emissions at 6.8 tonnes of carbon dioxide per person, compared to the US figure of 16.9 tonnes - although other analyses put the US figure higher, around 20 tonnes.

But the Chinese number has tripled since 1990, says the JRC - and could rise to US levels within six years.

However, Mr Xie, speaking to a group of UK parliamentarians, said China would not "follow the path of the US" and allow per-capita emissions to rise that high.

"We are making efforts to control greenhouse gas emissions and our carbon intensity is decreasing," he said.

"We want to reach the peak as soon as possible."

Targets overtaken

China's current five-year plan projects economic growth of about 40% from 2010 to 2015, but a 17% fall in carbon intensity - the CO2 output for each unit of GDP growth.

Children playing Chinese children play in algae, while Chinese scientists explore its potential in fuel

A longer-term goal is to boost energy efficiency by 40-45% from 2005 levels by 2020.

The minister emphasised that in a domestic context, these targets are legally binding.

If China does develop along these lines, its per-capita emissions will soon overtake those in several EU nations.

In fact the JRC analysis says it has already overtaken France, which uses nuclear reactors to generate 80% of its electricity, and Spain.

At some point, it will come under pressure internationally to begin to cut its emissions rather than just restraining their rise.

Asked whether that could happen soon after 2020, Mr Xie said it would depend on what level of economic development had been reached.

"China will make commitments that are appropriate for its development stage," he said.

"Since we have declared a low-carbon and green development path, China will follow this path."

Whether a Chinese peak after 2020 would be able to help constrain climate change within limits often regarded as "safe" is another question.

A study published over the weekend in the journal Nature Climate Change showed that if global emissions do not peak and begin to fall by 2020, keeping the global average temperature rise since pre-industrial times below 2C will be difficult.

Joint projects

Since the UN climate summit in Copenhagen two years ago, the political scene on climate change has shifted markedly, with members of established negotiating blocs reaching out to countries that have not traditionally been allies but which now share common interests.

Climate change glossary

Select a term to learn more:
Glossary

This is one of the reasons why China and European countries are exploring the potential for collaboration in areas such as novel fuels.

Another is that western engineering expertise allied to Chinese manufacturing could result in "green" products at low price.

For the UK, part of the idea is to rebuild bridges that were singed, if not burned, after Copenhagen when Ed Miliband - then climate secretary and now leader of the opposition - blamed Chinese negotiators for scuppering the talks.

Mr Xie's visit was facilitated by Global Legislators Organisation for a Balanced Environment (Globe) International, the worldwide association of parliamentarians.

Lord (Michael) Jay, Globe's vice president, suggested it was vital to make progress at this year's UN summit in Durban, South Africa.

"We hold the planet in trust for future generations," he said.

"And that puts a lot of responsibility on our shoulders before and after Durban."

And Mr Xie suggested that Europe and China could work together to push things forward.

"Let's join hands to push the US to take action," he said.

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Stores limit supplies as Thai flood crisis deepens


Stores limit supplies as Thai flood crisis deepens


A man wades through water as soldiers arrive with aid to the isolated and flooded village of Kajee Nush in Pathum Thani province, in the outskirts of Bangkok, October 21, 2011.  REUTERS-Damir Sagolj

As panic mounts, shoppers at a central Bangkok hypermarket run by Big C Supercenter Pcl were being restricted to one packet of rice and one tray of eggs. Toilet paper was also being rationed.

Bottled water had run out at the hypermarket, except for expensive brands, compounding fears that residents would have access to adequate supplies during the crisis.

In some areas, people are already complaining about a deterioration in the quality of normally drinkable tap water.

The Metropolitan Waterworks Authority said floodwater had got into raw canal water used for its supply. Chemicals were being used to purify it.

Shares in Thai beverage firm Haad Thip Pcl surged more than 6 percent on Wednesday on expectations the company would benefit from the huge demand for drinking water.

The floods in the north, northeast and center of Thailand have killed at least 373 people since mid-July and disrupted the lives of nearly 2.5 million, with more than 113,000 in shelters and 720,000 people seeking medical attention.

Authorities have called a holiday from Thursday until Monday to allow people to get out of Bangkok as a record high tide approaches in the Gulf of Thailand, although financial markets will remain open.

With the high tide approaching, Seri Supharatid, director of Rangsit University's Center on Climate Change and Disaster, said the city's fate rested with dikes along the river.

"In the worst-case scenario, if all the dikes break, all parts of Bangkok would be more or less flooded," Seri said.

The rising tide could complicate efforts to drive water from the swelling Chao Phraya river out to the sea, putting central Bangkok under more pressure. Heavy rain could also deepen the crisis and thunderstorms were forecast for Wednesday.

Authorities are scrambling to pump water around the east and west of Bangkok into the sea.

TOURISM HIT

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra warned parts of the city could face inundation for up to a month.

"After assessing the situation, we expect floodwater to remain in Bangkok for around two weeks to one month before going into the sea," Yingluck told reporters on Wednesday.

"The situation shouldn't be as serious as in other provinces. We shouldn't face water as high as two or three meters staying for two or three months as we've seen in other provinces."

She had said in a televised address late on Tuesday that central Bangkok could be swamped by up to 1.5 meters (nearly five feet) of water in some places if barriers broke.

The authorities would guard important places such as the royal palace and power stations, she said.

TV footage on Wednesday showed people wading knee-high alongside the river by the Grand Palace, one of the main tourist attractions in Bangkok.

Tourism Minister Chumphol Silpa-archa said tourist arrivals could be 500,000 to 1 million below the government's target of 19 million this year because of the floods.

Don Muang airport, used by budget airlines for domestic flights and by private planes, had to close on Tuesday due to flooding that was making access to the area difficult.

By Wednesday, floodwater had reached the runway, Thai media said. Don Muang plans to reopen on November 1.

The government has its flood crisis center at the airport and has decided to stay put for now.

Shares in Thai Airways International Pcl slid 2 percent and Airports of Thailand Pcl dropped 1.3 percent on Wednesday due to the Don Muang closure and the possible reduction of Thai Air flights from the main Suvarnabhumi airport, which remained open.

As water levels climbed in Bangkok, some people were being evacuated for a second time, with 4,000 sheltering in Don Muang moving to the province of Chon Buri. Evacuees at a university in Pathum Thani province also had to move on as floodwater engulfed the campus.

Seven industrial estates in Ayutthaya, Nonthaburi and Pathum Thani provinces bordering Bangkok have been closed, causing billions of dollars of damage, disrupting international supply chains for industry and putting about 650,000 people temporarily out of work.

The cabinet has approved a $325 billion baht ($10.6 billion) package to help firms and individuals recover

The most effective ways to reduce emissions are

What You Can Do

In the Home or Office

The most effective ways to reduce emissions are to:

  • Fit insulation – A quarter of a houses heat is lost through the roof
  • Install Draught Excluders
  • Install Double Glazing
  • Upgrade your Boiler

Simple steps you can take are to:

  • Switch off appliances – Leaving unused appliances on costs approximately £800 million every year in the UK alone
  • Only boil as much water as you need
  • Walk short journeys instead of driving
  • Cut down on food wastage
  • Get a home energy check

Extra steps you can take are to:

  • Switch to energy saving light bulbs
  • Recycle everything your local council will collect
  • Buy energy saving appliances
  • Eat more local food – Cuts down on air miles, you can even grow your own fruit and vegetables
  • When doing home improvements, you could install renewable technologies such as wind turbines or solar panels. Choose low energy lighting options, use sustainable wood, or buy recycled furniture and flooring

On the Move

When out and about, emissions can be reduced by;

Out shopping

  • Plan meals to avoid wastage
  • Buy seasonal food to reduce air miles
  • Buy energy efficient electrical appliances
  • Take your own bags out with you rather than using plastic supermarket bags

Remember the three R's. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Virus warning over animal organ transplants

Health

Virus warning over animal organ transplants
undefined
Genetically modified pigs have been used for transplants

An international group of doctors and lawyers are calling for a ban on the use of genetically modified animal organs in human transplants amid fears over deadly new viruses.


At a London conference on Thursday, Doctors and Lawyers for Responsible Medicine (DLRM) will argue that more research into the possibility of transmitting new viruses into the human population should be carried out before any such transplants could take place. There are concerns that previously unknown viruses, as deadly as Aids, could pass from genetically-modified animal organs into their human hosts.
The Council of Europe voted in January for a moratorium on clinical tests of animal organ transplants into human beings until more is known about the potential hazards.
The DLRM will tell the Thursday's London conference that there should be a global ban on such techniques.
The alliance describes the concept of animal-to-human transplants, known as xenotransplantation, as "a transplant surgeon's dream, but a virologist's nightmare".
DLRM President Dr Andre Menache, who works for the Israeli Ministry of Health, warned that pigs carry many viruses that are potentially lethal.
Malaysia deaths
Dr Menache highlighted the recent deaths of 100 people in Malaysia after being bitten by mosquitoes carrying a virus thought to come from pigs.
He said: "The transplantation of organs from pigs into humans is extremely dangerous because nobody knows what these viruses will do when they enter the human body.
"Xenotransplantation is a public health risk. We are a long, long way from solving the problem of viral transmission, and it would not be fair to expose the entire population to risk even if Joe Soap is prepared to take the risk himself and undergo such a transplant."
DLRM says laboratory-bred pig organs differ from human organs in their longevity, their metabolism and their resistance to disease.
They also carry a whole range of known and unknown viral and even sub-viral particles, some of which cannot be picked up, however careful the screening procedures.
Over the past 20 years there have been about 40 animal-to-human organ transplants, mostly in the US and India.
DLRM says all the patients died shortly after surgery.
The alliance is holding a press conference on Thursday to publicise its campaign.
Donor shortage

[ image: Surgeons are concerned about a shortage of donor organs]
Surgeons are concerned about a shortage of donor organs
Currently, there is a severe shortage of donor organs in the UK, but DLRM will argue that xenotransplantation is not the answer. It will call for a new system to be introduced in the UK under which the organs of all patients would be considered for transplantation unless they had recorded an official objection.
Dr Menache said such an opt out scheme could only be introduced if the public was given a guarantee that organs would only be taken from patients who were officially brain stem dead.
He said the medical profession should also make more use of DNA matching techniques to reduce the chances that organs would be rejected, and should more regularly split donor organs so they could benefit more than one recipient.
Dr Menache said there was also a need for public health education campaigns to improve the health of the nation, and reduce the need for organ transplantation.
Advances in diagnosis and treatment should also reduce the need for such surgery in the future, he said.
Dr Mark Matfield, director of the European Bio-Medical Research Association, defended research into xenotransplantation.
He said: "The simple fact is that 150,000 people are waiting for an organ transplant and 30 plus die every day simply because there are not enough organs.
"There is a desperate need to find some way of treating these people otherwise they will just die."

Monday, 24 October 2011

Why were arctic char released into Llyn Padarn to protect stocks


Arctic char released into Llyn Padarn to protect stocks

Llyn Padarn 800 Arctic char were released into Llyn Padarn, Llanberis, on Monday

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More than 2,000 young fish have been released into two lakes to protect a species whose numbers are declining.
An assessment of Arctic char in Llyn Padarn in Llanberis, Gwynedd, first prompted fears for their future in 2009.
Now, 800 fish which have been hatched and reared have just been released into the lake to reverse the trend.
And a further 1,600 have also been added into Llyn Crafnant, near Trefriw, in the Conwy Valley, to help stocks.
That is on top of the 5,000 fish already stocked there this year.
Back-up
Environment Agency Wales (EAW) and the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) have been working for three years to preserve numbers of the fish, also known as the torgoch.

“Start Quote

...we are determined to find a way to improve the conditions at Llyn Padarn so they can continue to inhabit the lake”
End Quote David Edwell Environment Agency Wales
They can only be found in a few cold, deep lakes in north Wales where they have developed into distinct populations.
It is the second year in a row that char have been added to Llyn Crafnant after an assessment by the EAW and CCW found the Llyn Padarn population was under threat.
It was recommended that a back up population should be established, and landowners at Llyn Crafnant allowed the lake to be used.
Last year, 800 fish were released into Llyn Crafnant after being hatched at Mawddach Hatchery, near Dolgellau, from eggs taken from 25 Llyn Padarn char.
This year, after making changes to the way they are reared, 7,500 fish were hatched and raised to a length of 15cm, to increase the EAW's restocking programme.
'Safety net'
Fisheries experts advised that only 800 should be re-introduced into Llyn Padarn to reduce the risk of in-breeding among the population.
Young Arctic char A total of 7,500 fish have been hatched and raised by officials from the Environment Agency Wales
The fish released in Llyn Padarn have been clipped to enable anglers to identify their catch as a stocked fish.
"The Arctic char need a good habitat to thrive," said EAW area manager David Edwell.
"Setting up the secondary population is a safety net - but we are determined to find a way to improve the conditions at Llyn Padarn so they can continue to inhabit the lake."
He said char were a "unique and threatened species" in north Wales and the agency was determined to protect them.

More on This Story

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can industrialised farming make Africa feed the world?

Monday, October 24, 2011


can industrialised farming make Africa feed the world?

Combine harvester in field
British-owned Chayton Atlas manages a 25,000 acre farm in Mkushi

The vision unfolding across the Mkushi plain in Zambia is at odds with the doleful imagery of modern Africa to which we have become accustomed.

Three hours from the capital Lusaka the wheat crop glows under the tropical sun. A combine harvester moves methodically across one portion of a vast field. Nearby a giant sprinkler irrigates the soya bean crop.

One might as easily be standing on the plains of the American Mid-West or among the grain fields of the Ukraine.

These are fields of plenty, a productive Africa that challenges the narrative of conflict and hunger that so dominates our idea of the continent.

"If we just increased the yields to 80% of world averages, Africa would become a net exporter of food. We believe that Africa can feed itself and the rest of the world too," Dabney Tonelli of Chayton Atlas, the British-owned company that manages the 25,000 acre farm at Mkushi, says.

Dabney Tonelli
Dabney Tonelli says Africa can become a net exporter of food

Chayton acquired a 14-year lease on the land from the Zambian government with the promise of hugely increasing yields, providing jobs for locals and passing on skills to the small farmers who live on subsistence plots nearby.

After years of misrule and corruption Zambia, which recently elected a new government, is seen as a beacon of stability on the continent.

"The political environment is stable, excellent conditions for agriculture in terms of climate and the quality of soil. For the agricultural investor Zambia is where you want to be," says Ms Tonelli.

Zimbabwean expertise

White farmers who were driven off their land in Zimbabwe have been hired to run the Chayton operation, bringing with them the intensive farming skills they have honed over decades.

The farm manager at Mkushi, Stuart Kearns, became a full-time farmer as a teenager after his father was killed in the Bush War in what was then Rhodesia. Despite his experiences in Zimbabwe he is optimistic about the future of farming in Zambia:

"There is huge potential here and I think the thing with Africa is that you have to keep trying again and again. That is something you learn when you grow up here."

Chayton promises to "create jobs, introduce sustainable farming methods… provide support and training to small-scale farmers".

Dr Guy Scott
Zambia's vice-president Dr Guy Scott voiced concern about job losses

But there are considerable obstacles - poor infrastructure and bureaucracy stand in the way of Zambia becoming a major exporter of food to the continent. At the moment Chayton is only producing for the local market.

And in an interview with Newsnight, the country's new vice-president, Dr Guy Scott, a farmer himself, was sceptical of some of the claims made by the company:

"I am very sceptical because I've been around a lot and I know what proposals look like and what justifications look like in the investment game and I would say that 90% of what is promised turns out not to be true… not necessarily because of any venality or any deliberate fraud.

"I mean people hope for the best. They hope it is going to work. And the government hopes it is going to work. And we all get each others hopes up. And then you find 'oh dear we didn't actually succeed in having the social impact or economic impact we'd hoped for'."

Displacement fears

Dr Scott worries about the social impact of job losses due to more intensive farming where machines take the place of people:

Brighton Marcokatebe
Local small-scale farmers complain about problems securing capital

"I think the main problem is that the population for Zambia is that the population is about four times too big for the economy. And I think that is the danger with large scale intensive farming; it tends to be capital intensive, it tends not to create jobs and at the same time tends to displace people who are unemployed from their fallback position which is to be subsistence farmers."

Chayton acknowledge that their modernised farming methods have already led to job losses, but insist that as the business grows it will create employment in spin-off businesses:

"Yes, over time some of the less skilled work goes as a result of mechanisation, but we are building a large scale business so over time we are creating other jobs," Ms Tonelli says.

"What we are able to do is train people to do highly skilled jobs which they can continue to use in a career in agriculture of transfer to other sectors as well."

Local feeling

The local subsistence farmers I meet say they welcome the principle of commercial farming, but have yet to see it bring any benefit to them.

Chayton has only been operating in the area for a year but Brighton Marcokatebe, a farmer in the nearby village of Asa, says other commercial farmers have failed to help their smaller neighbours.

Farmer in Zambia
Most of Zambia's farmers are small-scale subsistence farmers

"If they come with help then I will accept it, but so far they don't help," he says.

The villagers also complain that they cannot access capital. Most land in Zambia is owned by the state and administered by village chiefs. Without any legal title to the land small farmers cannot get bank loans to buy machinery and expand their production.

But according to Dr Guy Scott, Zambia's small farmers can look forward to a better deal:

"We're elected by Zambians and their interests have to come first. If their interests can be made to coincide with those of the international markets or whatever then great, but at the end of the day we are responsible for their protection, their social protection."

Matching that commitment with the agreements already made with foreign investors will require considerable political skill.

Fergal Keane's Zambia film on Newsnight on Monday 24 October kicks off a week of special reports about food security and a rising global population on Newsnight.

You can watch Newsnight every week night at 10.30pm and afterwards on the BBC iPlayer. Fergal Keane's film will also be available internationally on the Newsnight website from Tuesday 25 October.