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In a 2006 documentary titled 'The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil', the Cuban people have been shown as being positive about the turnaround. They now have a great understanding of the land and a respect for the environment. Communities are tight-knit, and there is an overwhelming emphasis on environmental awareness, and land protection and conservation. Cuba addressed the problem of fossil fuel depletion in a number of ways, tackling the need for food, transport, and energy for a population of 11 people. The initial change was to land use, with many unused blocks of land within the city to be turned into urban gardens for food production. Another initiative involved the innovation to create a change to organic farming using low energy agricultural techniques. Preceding the depletion of fossil fuels, Cuba was dependent on petrochemicals to create pesticides, fertilisers and other chemicals used in the agriculture sectors for pest control. Research was undertaken to find an effective bio-solution that would be able to produce healthy crops, and cover soil regeneration. The resulting strategy created a scenario which subdivided monocultured (single type of plant grown in mass amounts) plots into smaller farming plot. These smaller plots had a variety of different crops, and were rotated and tilled according to the monitoring of farmers and scientists. |
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