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    - The use of waste water for irrigation without careful treatment and  monitoring can result in the spread of diseases among the population.
 
    - Cultivation on contaminated land also represents a health hazard for the consumers.
 
    - The practice of cultivating along roadsides facilitates the  distribution of products to local markets, but it is also a risky  practice since it exposes food to car pollution.
 
    - Agriculture and urbanization are considered to be incompatible  activities, competing for the access and use of limited land. In  reality, in urban areas there is important available space for  agriculture use such as public and private vacant lots, and areas not  suited for built-up uses (steep slopes and flood plains).
 
    - Legal restrictions and economic impediments to accessing land and  resources (such as reasonably priced water) are among the most common  problems confronted by urban agriculture.
 
    - Lack of security of tenure also acts as a preventive for farming due to the uncertainty in the use length of the land.
 
    - Urban agriculture has been criticized by those who believe that  industrial farm production can produce food at larger volumes more  efficiently.
 
    - A major argument is whether urban farming alone - farming very  intensively on small land areas - could replace land extensive  production in rural areas which produce the bulk of our food products.  Yet hunger persists in both urban and rural areas (see more on food security),  despite a subsidized industrial agriculture. The degree to which urban  agriculture can address these food needs systemically is undetermined,  though there are indications in some communities that it is an  important source of food.
 
    - Other opponents argue that localized food production and the  introduction of common resources and common lands into the urban areas  would produce a tragedy of the commons. Though, as referenced earlier, many urban farms and community gardens are managed privately or through other civil society organizations.