After the Plantations: The Past and Future of Agriculture in Hawaii

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Kessler, L.H. (2017). After the Plantations: The Past and Future of Agriculture in Hawaii. Solutions 8(1): 85-90. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/after-plantations-past-future-agriculture-hawaii/

Solutions in History

After the Plantations: The Past and Future of Agriculture in Hawai i by Lawrence H. Kessler

Anissa Wood

Sugarcane growing on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.

I

n the early morning of Monday,  September 9, 2013, a leak in a shipping pipeline spilled 233,000 gallons of molasses into the blue waters of Honolulu Harbor, about five miles from the beaches and resort hotels of Waikı¯ kı¯ . Unlike oil, which floats on the water’s surface and can be cleaned with dispersants and skimmers, molasses sinks, sucking oxygen from the water as it dissolves. Officials could

only watch helplessly as the dark, gooey mass descended to the harbor’s bottom, suffocating everything in its path. Within 48 hours, more than 26,000 fish and other marine animals were dead. Gary Gill, deputy director for the Environmental Health Division of the Health Department, told journalists it was, “the worst environmental damage to sea life that I have come across.” Gill went on, “this

is a biggie, if not the biggest [environmental problem] that we’ve had to confront in the state of Hawai‘i.”1,2 The molasses spill, devastating enough on its own, points to an even bigger and more vexing problem: why was all that molasses at the harbor in the first place? The molasses originated from the Hawaiian Commercial & Sugar Company plantation on Maui, and was on its way to California, where it was to be used as an additive to cattle feed. It is one of the absurdities of the modern economy that Hawai‘i, which, according to the USDA, maintains at any given time only a seven-day food supply for its inhabitants, was dedicating arable land to the production of molasses for export to California’s cattle ranches.3 Typical of many regions with a history of plantation agriculture, Hawai‘i’s agricultural economy has been oriented for more than a century and a half towards outside markets rather than domestic consumption. Native Hawaiians grew sugarcane for at least a millennium before European contact, but an export-based plantation system only developed in the mid-19th century. From the Hawaiian sugar industry’s height in the early 20th century, when the archipelago was a world leader in the production of sugar per acre of cane and per worker, U.S. production quotas and competition from other sources of sugar caused the industry to contract. By the time of the 2013 spill, only a single plantation remained: Maui’s HC&S, whose inability to compete with table sugar production on the world market meant that its operations were almost entirely devoted to producing molasses for cattle feed, transported through an aging infrastructure at Honolulu Harbor. To contemplate a future for agriculture in Hawai‘i after the decline of the sugar industry, we might do

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  January-February 2017  |  Solutions  |  85


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