Community-Supported Agriculture Networks in Wales and Central Germany: Scaling Up, Out, and Deep through Local Collaboration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptualisation
2.1. Community-Supported Agriculture
2.2. Food Movement Networks
2.2.1. Scaling Practices
2.2.2. Challenges
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Local CSA Networks
People that we have actually collaborated with in a practical day-to-day way have been the farms that started here locally.(R7)
4.2. Shared Supply Chains, Community Engagement, and Institutional Consolidation: Scaling Out, Scaling Deep, Scaling Up
4.2.1. Scaling Out
We profit from the fact that there are multiple larger CSAs in the area so we can join their deliveries. Now we can always do our own deliveries with them and every few weeks we do the driving. That’s the deal at the moment.(R4, translation by author)
We try to be very socially minded and we’re always looking to collaborate if we could with other socially minded businesses.(R6)
4.2.2. Scaling Deep
There is the ‘Farm as Classroom’ project, which two of our members are running, where every week a school class is visiting and doing their own little project. […] They have their own patch and learn a bit about growing. And whenever they can squeeze it in, they also do things about environmental protection and land conservation.(R14, translation by author)
We have got someone employed two days a week who just goes into local schools talking about CSA and local food and inspiring children so when they come out of school, they might think about training up.(R2)
4.2.3. Scaling Up
This success with the Saxon Ministry clearly shows that. I mean none of this would have happened if it had been a single CSA doing it. They are not allowed to just support a single CSA anyhow; it has to be all of them. And so, it was beneficial for them too that we could engage as a whole network.(R4, translation by author)
We use CSAs as a good example of how you can bring environmental and social benefits to food production and get more of the value for the farm because of the shorter supply chains.(R4)
4.3. Challenges
Our waiting list has obviously become drastically shorter now that there are many other enterprises. Which is good of course, since we do not live to have long waiting lists. But I think it is obvious we do not attract wildly different clienteles to avoid overlap in potential members.(R5, translation by author)
Partly there are structural reasons for this that have nothing to do with what the people may want but with how their businesses are conceived. If, according to its business plan, KoLa has to gain 3000 new members in two years, then they simply have to advertise more aggressively than how others can afford to.(R5, translation by author)
I’m not saying the whole world needs to be vegan, but there seems to be a common understanding that the whole world needs to eat less meat. So, from my understanding of this situation, we need to be finding ways to keep land fertile without animal inputs. [Therefore] the last place I want to go and spend my weekend is at a dairy farm.(R6)
The utility [of collaboration] is not always immediately apparent for people. And when there are limited capacities, which is normal for such a small project, this is not what people spend their time on.(R4)
4.4. Outlook
None of this would have made sense to do alone as a single CSA. This coming together is very important, also to develop a certain political force in the long run.(R4, translation by author)
I would welcome collaboration just from the solidarity point of view. It’s quite a lonely job that involves a lot of stress and a lot of hard work and long hours. So, to just feel like there are other people in the same position, that means a lot.(R6)
I hope we will collaborate even closer. All sides agree on this. We just have to make sure to not lose sight of it because it tends to be an extra add-on during our day-to-day business. So, we need to keep reminding ourselves how valuable it is. And if we manage to launch our two larger projects, the bakery and the website, our cooperation will necessarily grow closer since we will see each other more frequently. And I think that is an exciting and great outlook for the future.(R10, translation by author)
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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# | Organisation | Function | Date |
---|---|---|---|
R1 | CSA Network (UK) | Former board member | 5 May 2021 |
R2 | Cae Tan (UK) | CSA Grower | 18 May 2021 |
R3 | Landworkers Alliance Wales (UK) | Policy Coordinator | 11 June 2021 |
R4 | Kleine Beete e.V. (DE) | CSA member | 18 November 2021 |
R5 | Rote Beete (DE) | CSA member | 3 December 2021 |
R6 | Coed Organic (UK) | CSA grower | 25 February 2022 |
R7 | Orchard Acre Market Garden (UK) | CSA growers | 3 March 2022 |
R8 | Gemueseinsel (DE) | CSA growers | 21 March 2022 |
R9 | Streuobstwiese (DE) | CSA grower | 22 March 2022 |
R10 | Solawi Marburg (DE) | CSA administrator | 23 March 2022 |
R11 | Solawi Kassel (DE) | CSA grower | 25 March 2022 |
R12 | Solawiese (DE) | CSA grower | 29 March 2022 |
R13 | Gemuesebau Heckenbeck (DE) | CSA administrator | 30 March 2022 |
R14 | Solawi PeterSilie (DE) | CSA grower | 6 April 2022 |
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Bonfert, B. Community-Supported Agriculture Networks in Wales and Central Germany: Scaling Up, Out, and Deep through Local Collaboration. Sustainability 2022, 14, 7419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127419
Bonfert B. Community-Supported Agriculture Networks in Wales and Central Germany: Scaling Up, Out, and Deep through Local Collaboration. Sustainability. 2022; 14(12):7419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127419
Chicago/Turabian StyleBonfert, Bernd. 2022. "Community-Supported Agriculture Networks in Wales and Central Germany: Scaling Up, Out, and Deep through Local Collaboration" Sustainability 14, no. 12: 7419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127419
APA StyleBonfert, B. (2022). Community-Supported Agriculture Networks in Wales and Central Germany: Scaling Up, Out, and Deep through Local Collaboration. Sustainability, 14(12), 7419. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127419