Industrial Agriculture
Humans have
been farming for 10,000 years. Sixty years ago, after World War II, we started
industrializing U.S.
farming operations through a mix of policy decisions and accidents of history. This method of farming is neither inevitable nor efficient.
More to the point, it can't be sustained.
Industrial
agriculture treats the farm as a factory, with "inputs" (pesticides,
fertilizers) and "outputs" (crops). The end-objective is increasing
yields while controlling costs — usually by exploiting economies of scale (i.e.
making a lot of one thing, or "monocropping"), and by replacing solar
energy and manual labor with machines and petro-chemicals like pesticides and
fertilizers.
In relying on
chemical "inputs," we have un-learned how to farm.
This model of
farming is inefficient and does not represent the cutting edge of modern
farming. In 1940, we produced 2.3 food calories
for every 1 fossil fuel calorie used. By industrializing our food and farming
systems, we now get 1 food calorie for every 10 fossil fuel calories used — a 23-fold reduction in efficiency. Following this path we have become dependent on cheap,
abundant oil, and on quick chemical "fixes" for agro-ecosystem
challenges that are complicated and require deep, local and hands-on knowledge.
In relying on chemical inputs, we have un-learned how to farm.
Hidden Costs of Chemical Dependence
In its narrow
pursuit of yield, industrial farming hides (or
"externalizes") a variety of costs stemming
from such chemical dependence:
·
Soil & Water :: We are
exhausting and polluting our soil and water. Industrial agriculture uses 70% of
the planet's fresh water. According to EPA,
U.S.
agriculture contributes to nearly 75% of all water-quality problems in the
nation’s rivers and streams.
·
Resilience & Food Security
:: Our food supply is more susceptible to shocks than ever before
because we have disassembled our grain reserves, let bankers into the business
of betting on commodity crops and put small-scale farmers around the world out
of business.
·
Climate Change :: The
current food system is responsible for 1/3 of global greenhouse gas emissions;
it is also fully dependent on oil both for transport and because pesticides and
fertilizers are petrochemically-derived.
·
Bees & Biodiversity
:: Industrial agriculture is the largest single threat to
biodiversity, and 7
in 10 biologists believe
that today's biodiversity
collapse poses an even
greater threat to humanity than climate change. Bees, bats, amphibians and
other beneficial species are dying off, and their declines are linked to
pesticide exposure.
·
Human Health :: While farmworkers and their families, rural communities and children are on the "frontlines" of
industrial agriculture, we all carry pesticides in our bodies. Pesticide exposure
undermines public health by increasing risks of cancer,
autoimmune disease (e.g. diabetes, lupus, rhuematoid arthritis, asthma),
non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Parkinson's disease and more.
Industrial
agriculture exhausts the natural resources on which we all depend. It makes us
sick and undermines the world's capacity to feed itself. It is the very
definition of unsustainable.
This
model of farming has persisted for 60 years, in the wake of one unhappy
accident of history. After WWII,
chemical companies needed a market for wartime inventions and pesticides were
put to work in U.S.
fields. In the decades that followed, trade and development policy coupled with
savvy marketing by chemical companies to effectively export an entire model of
agriculture. Before long, farmers around the world found themselves on a
"pesticide treadmill"— requiring ever more (and ever more expensive)
chemical inputs to stay afloat.
Changing the Game :: “Business as usual is not an option”
Proponents of
industrial agriculture have held farmers, politicians and consumers captive
with a myth: "Industrial farming is the only way to feed
the world." Independent science tells us this is simply not
true.
Organic and
other non-industrial farming systems are more than capable of feeding every person on earth using land under current cultivation
with far greater resource efficiency and reliability. In fact, the most
comprehensive analysis of world agriculture to date, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge,
Science and Technology for Development found that "business as usual is
not an option." We have to change the way we farm, quickly and on a large
scale if we expect to feed a growing and warming planet.
The good news
is that we know how to do this. Science-based solutions are at hand, though
they will require work and political will. The tougher news is that the
politics of agriculture are dominated by special interests. A handful of very big and very powerful corporations control food and farming policy with
an army of lobbyists and for-profit research agendas.
PAN works with
allies to advance a post-industrial vision of agriculture that puts us all on
surer footing, without the dependencies, health risks and myopic preoccupations
of the "pesticide treadmill." We believe that sound and fair food and
farming policy should:
·
Get the foxes out of the
henhouse. No more revolving door between industry and the government
agencies meant to regulate them.
·
Level the playing field. Restore
competition and fair pricing.
·
Pay farmers to steward the
earth. The
Conservation Title of the U.S. Farm Bill has $5.5 billion dollars per year with
which to build off-ramps for farmers wanting off the pesticide treadmill and
on-ramps for those wanting to go organic.
·
Protect people who put food on
our plates. Farm workers
are on the frontlines of the hardest, most dangerous work on earth, they
deserve basic worker protections and labor rights.
·
Grow healthy food at a fair
price. Shifting
market supports, re-instituting price floors and
restoring strategic grain reserves would go a long way towards making
community-scale farming possible and profitable again.
No comments:
Post a Comment