Guest guest Posted March 12, 2006 Report Share Posted March 12, 2006 > > Editor's Note: FAO Agricultural Engineer, Theodor > Friedrich, offers further clarification on the > distinction between unsustainable low-till > approaches to agriculture and the much more > sustainable conservation agriculture. FAO work in > Africa as mentioned in the initial press release > which sparked this discussion should correctly be > labelled conservation agriculture. Please see this > discussion reproduced in its entirety below. > > Dear Editor, > > With interest and dismay we have taken notice of the > reaction of your readers on FAO's work on > conservation agriculture in Africa, which you have > entitled low-till. In fact, although the FAO press > release tries to simplify the language, the FAO > article clearly refers to " Conservation Agriculture " > and not to no-till or low-till as the kind of > agriculture FAO is promoting, not only in Africa. > > FAO is fully aware about the existence of > unsustainable no-till systems with heavy reliance on > herbicides. Such systems are in fact not understood > with Conservation Agriculture. Even in the US, where > this kind of no-till agriculture is rather popular, > there is now a new movement of " never till " , which > comes much closer to Conservation Agriculture. The > three principles of conservation agriculture have > indeed been clearly mentioned in the FAO press > release: > > - minimum soil disturbance > > - permanent soil cover > > - diversified crop rotations. > > I am very glad that one of your readers at least > mentioned Masanobu Fukuoka's one Straw Revolution, > which together with Edward Faulkners Ploughmen's > folly resembles very well the thinking behind > Conservation Agriculture. Your readers obviously > would have benefited from attending the III World > Congress on Conservation Agriculture in Kenya, which > was the event for which the FAO press release was > launched. During that congress 100 participating > farmers from several African countries provided an > impressive testimony about their appreciation of > Conservation Agriculture. And they were all small > scale farmers. > > By the way: the German's did not receive any > benefits from funding a development project in > Africa, because there is no German equipment > available for small farmer's doing conservation > agriculture. > > I would like to invite your readers to familiarize > themselves more with the Conservation Agriculture > Programme of FAO and of the other involved > organizations, such as the African Conservation > Tillage Network. It might be interesting for them to > find out, that it is not only the NGOs doing the > good things and the public organizations doing the > bad things. Even UN organizations can eventually > have programmes for the actual benefit of poor > people and the environment. > > For further information > http://www.fao.org/ag/agl/agll/prtcons.stm > > Best regards, > > Theodor Friedrich > > Senior Agricultural Engineer > > FAO Agricultural and Food Engineering Technologies > Service > > Viale delle Terme di Caracalla > > 00100 Rome, Italy > > Tel: +39-065705-5694; Fax: +39-065705-6798 > > e-mail: Theodor.Friedrich > > URL: http://www.fao.org/ag/ags/home/en/agst.html > > > Food News [foodnews] > 12 October 2005 06:43 > Food News > Another Perspective on Low-Till Farming > > Editor's Note: Last week Foodnews posted an article > by the FAO on the advantages of low-till agriculture > in Africa > (http://allafrica.com/stories/200510040254.html). A > number of readers responded to this posting, > pointing out that there is a distinction between > commercial and other forms of no and low-till > agriculture. Low-tillfarming often involves the > heavy use of chemical inputs and is advocated by > large-scale, capital intensive agriculture. > > > > According to Foodnews reader and organic farmer John > Wise: " The majority of North American farmers use > low-till or no-till farming to reduce erosion, > reduce trips over the field (saving time, machine > wear, and fuel), and to improve soil structure. The > downside: weeds do grow, despite the mulch layer, > and are sprayed with herbicide, usually glyphosate > (Roundup). Roundup is the no-till farmer's plough. " > > > > In the African context, with the exception of > industrial-scale agriculture, most farming in Africa > is already low-till, typically involving a > " home-made hoe and (usually) an exhausted woman > trying to scrape enough soil together to perhaps > provide sustenance for one more day for herself and > her babies, " according to another reader. At the > commercial level, low till refers to farming that is > capital intensive and involves extremely costly > cultivation equipment that is of little benefit to > poor farmers of the south. This same reader > concludes with the following comment: > > > > " Maybe check to see if this German " benefit " is > about selling German equipment before suggesting > that it might help the 3rd world's billions of > people with their ¼ hectare farms and life and death > struggles. These would be the same families who had > ½ hectare farms before the " green revolution " of the > 1960's and 1970's came along and devastated much of > the wisdom of sustainable practices - making the > rich richer, the poor poorer and accelerating the > desperate move to urban slums of the newly landless > rural poor that continues today. " > > > > Cathy Holtslander writes " No Till is also herbicide > dependent, and often uses GMO herbicide-resistant > crops. Because it is so capital and input intensive > it results in the big farmers getting bigger and the > small farmers getting pushed out. FAO is trying to > promote GMOs in Africa, and this looks like a Trojan > horse to me. > > > > Another r brought to our attention a paper > prepared for the UN FAO that sought to understand > the adoption of conservation agriculture (CA). > http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/004/Y2781E/Y2781E00.HTM > > > > A key conclusion emphasizes the need to be attentive > to local conditions and to resist one size fits all > approaches to agriculture: > > " The above analysis contains implications for > policy-makers. On the one hand, an assumption that > CA will spread on its own in some desirable fashion > is not appropriate. On the other hand, a uniform > policy prescription to fit many locations is not > realistic either, whether it consists of direct > interventions or more indirect incentives stemming > from research and development, or some mix of both. > Designing successful policies to promote CA is > likely to start with a thorough understanding of > farm-level conditions. This understanding needs to > include management objectives, attitudes to risk, > willingness to make trade-offs between stewardship > and profits. The next step is the careful design of > location-sensitive programmes that draw on a range > of policy tools. Flexibility is liable to be a key > element in policy design to promote CA. > > > > Finally, Foodnews rs have also brought to > light that there are versions of low or no-till > farming that do not rely on heavy chemical inputs > and do pay attention to varied ecosystems. These > include permaculture and the Japanese " One Straw > Revolution " which advocates no chemical inputs and > the incorporation rather then extermination of > useful weeds. Another approach is Natural Systems > Agriculture (NSA). Below is an article from The Land > Institute, describing this approach. > > > > Many thanks to readers for contributions. > > > > This story was printed from The Land Institute > (http://www.landinstitute.org). > > Natural Systems Agriculture at The Land Institute > > Jacob Gatschet > > Released September 1997 > > > Shortly after The Land Institute began in 1976 near > Salina, Kansas, its founder and current president, > Wes Jackson, published a paper which became the > cornerstone of the institute's programs and vision. > That paper, later expanded into New Roots for > Agriculture, argues that we have a problem of > agriculture, not just problems in agriculture. And > the core problem is soil erosion, a problem nearly > as old as agriculture itself. > > > > The transition made by our ancestors 8-10,000 years > ago from hunting and gathering to agriculture > represented a significant shift in terms of > ecological impact. Initially they probably did not > notice the destructive power of their farming, for > in the great valley civilizations they could > assemble monocultures of annuals for centuries on > end and get away with it. Their high-yielding annual > grains, planted in monocultures in the expansive > fields of the Tigris, Euphrates, Nile, Indus and > Ganges valleys, were fertilized by periodic flooding > - a sort of extractive economy, more or less > acceptable, for nutrients were being chipped from > the mountain highlands and sent to fields below. As > populations grew, the agriculture of the valley was > carried to the hills. The consequences of farming > then became more devastating and apparent because > only the flattest of lands can escape problems of > soil erosion. (About seven-eighths of the tillable > land in the US slopes enough that rain washes away > the topsoil. The effects of wind erosion, of course, > are more independent of slope.) > > > > Soil loss and soil degradation have historically > been " offset " by overdraft of water resources and by > appropriating lands which are either ill-suited for > agricultural production or which have been serving > vital ecological functions. As agricultural land is > spoiled, wilderness lands are converted to > agricultural uses. Jackson sums up this > oft-overlooked causal relationship, " If we don't > save agriculture, we won't save wilderness. " > > > > Because we have continued to ignore the basic > dilemma faced by our ancestral farmers millennia > ago, we have had to employ ever more drastic means > of compensation. Most recently in historical terms, > this compensation has taken the form of massive > inputs of " ancient sunlight " (fossil fuel) for > traction purposes, for control of pests and > pathogens and for fertility (natural gas being the > stock for anhydrous ammonia). Compensation has also > meant the adoption of genetically narrow, > high-yielding strains of seeds. As the situation > becomes more critical, increasingly technological > fixes are being pursued, such as " precision [or > satellite] farming " and the engineering of > herbicide-resistant seeds. None of these responses, > however, addresses the fundamental problem of soil > erosion; indeed, they might very well exacerbate it. > Even no- and low-till practices, because of their > heavy reliance on herbicides, pesticides and > fertilizers, amount to poisoning our soil in order > to save it. " Anyone aware of Darwin and modern > molecular studies, " Jackson says, " knows it's not > very smart to put into our food system any chemicals > which our human tissues have no evolutionary > experience with. These chemicals ought to be assumed > guilty until proven innocent, not the other way > around. " > > > > Many ecologically-minded persons consider > industrialization the culprit and see a potential > solution in the widespread adoption of more > sustainable methods of agriculture. Jackson > vehemently disagrees at the same time that he > supports such efforts. According to Jackson, > industrialization has served mainly to accelerate > and intensify destructive farming processes that > have been in place for millennia, but the > sustainable agriculture movement has made important > improvements. " We depend upon their increasing > success to save as much soil as possible, " he notes, > " but their practices are truly sustainable only on > very flat land, which is about one-eighth of the > tillable land in the US. I'm worried about the other > seven-eighths. " > > > > The severity of the problem is enormous, as borne > out by some rather grim statistics. A major recent > study published in Science pegged the cost of soil > erosion at $44 billion per year in the US alone. > Reliable estimates contend that up to half of > America's topsoil has run to the rivers and seas > since the white settlement of this continent. > Meanwhile, the average rate of topsoil erosion in > the US continues at five tons per acre per year; for > croplands it is nine tons per acre per year. > > > > But can soil erosion be such a dangerous problem if > it has been going on for thousands of years? First, > contrary to the thinking implicit in this question, > the damaging and widespread effects of soil erosion > have already appeared numerous times. History bears > out a disturbing pattern: worn out and eroded soils > cause civilizations to crash, and if they do rebound > it is to a reduced level. Vernon Gill Carter and Tom > Dale point out in Topsoil and Civilization, " All > across the continent of Asia and into Europe and > North Africa, you find the seats of former leading > civilizations that are now among the backward areas > of the world. ... > > These are the lands from whence our western > civilization arose. " Secondly, the question itself > reflects the seriousness of the problem. Food > depends on soil. Agricultural use of fossil fuel > inputs cannot mask the true costs of soil loss > forever, and the confidence in a future high-tech > soil alternative is sorely misplaced. According to > Donald Worster, chair of The Land Institute's board > and the Hall Distinguished Professor in history at > the University of Kansas who authored the 1980 > Bancroft Prize-winning Dust Bowl, " the common > American confidence in technological remedies for > erosion must appear dangerously naive. We can no > more manufacture a soil with a tank of chemicals > than we can invent a rainforest or produce a single > bird. " In short, soil is the only medium in which > enough plants will grow to capture and convert > sunlight into the food we need. > > > > The Land Institute's major program, Natural Systems > Agriculture (NSA), seeks to meld conservation with > agricultural production. Jackson is quick to point > out that Natural Systems Agriculture is an entirely > new paradigm of food production rather than a type > of sustainable agriculture. NSA begins by looking at > what nature produces in an area when left > unmolested. Because nature has built up over the > millennia a great wisdom in fitting flora and fauna > to the particular soils, weather, and geology of any > given locale, NSA attempts to understand and mimic > the complexities of these relations and their > interactions. > > > > For The Land Institute, that means looking to the > prairie that once blanketed the plains. There is > another reason for The Land Institute to look to the > prairie; it is the home of the grasses, the plant > family which provides most of the important food for > humanity. Grains such as wheat, corn and rice - all > of which are annual grasses - comprise almost 80 > percent of the human calorie intake worldwide. > > > > Compared to agricultural systems of annuals which > have historically eroded and degraded ecological > capital as they provide for human needs, the prairie > shows a remarkable " wisdom. " Prairies don't lose > soil beyond replacement levels; in fact they build > soil over time. Their perennial grasses grow from > the same roots each spring, avoiding the tilling > which lays the soil bare to erosion. Furthermore, > prairies run on contemporary sunlight, recycle their > materials, and sponsor their own nitrogen fertility. > The prairie's biodiversity, a product of > evolutionary processes over many millennia, provides > the ecosystem with built-in resilience to > environmental and other disturbances, such as pests > and pathogens. Natural Systems Agriculture attempts > to mimic the structures of a native ecosystem like > the prairie in order to obtain these attendant > benefits. > > > > Jackson realizes the boldness of the claim that for > the first time in history, an agriculture that is > resilient (and therefore productive over the > long-term), economical (the need for costly inputs > would be significantly diminished), and > environmentally responsible is well within reach. > " Although I hesitate to employ an industrial > metaphor, " Jackson says, " we've had our 'Kitty Hawk' > - we've shown the feasibility of Natural Systems > Agriculture - and now comes the 'wind tunnel' > phase. " The " wind tunnel " phase has meant working to > put NSA into a position where it can take on a life > of its own and become a national effort. > > > > Not surprisingly, NSA requires a different type of > scientist, one who appreciates the importance of > context, evolution, ecology and therefore restraint. > There is necessary scientific work to be done (for > example, in the attempt to perennialize our current > major crops and domesticate wild perennials), but > Jackson argues it must take place in a framework > that favors nature's wisdom over human cleverness. > Science done in the service of NSA will therefore > have to be done in a different way. The traditional, > reductive approach is inadequate. For example, > individual candidate species cannot be selected > without at the same time designing for the larger > " whole " of the domestic prairie. Yet the " whole " > influences which species will " work " in the mix. As > Jackson puts it, " Parts affect wholes, and wholes > affect parts. " > > > > The Land Institute has several other programs which > complement and support its research, education, and > public policy efforts in NSA. The Sunshine Farm > Project, which is in year 5 of a 10-year term, is an > exploration of the potential of conventional annual > crops and livestock without fossil fuels, chemicals, > or irrigation to determine a more accurate > ecological cost for food production. Detailed > records are kept for the energy, materials, and > labor for each operation. Each year the Intern > Program welcomes eight to ten post-baccalaureate > students who engage in a 43-week " head and hands " > experience, learning more about sustainable > agriculture and its integration into a sustainable > society. Their time goes to research assistance, > classroom discussions and lectures, seminars with > visiting scholars, public events, and farm labor. > And finally, the Rural Community Studies program, > located in the small community of Matfield Green in > the Flint Hills of Kansas, focuses on such issues as > why small rural communities are losing their young > people to cities, how this depopulation is related > to land use, and how rural schools can be catalysts > for change. The program aims to develop conceptual > tools which will help communities minimize > dependence upon non-renewable resources and maximize > possibilities for cultural innovation and > adaptation. > > > > Original Posting October 4, 2005 > > > > Editor's Note: At the Third World Congress on > Conservation Agriculture, running October 3-7th in > Kenya, the FAO is advocating low-till agriculture as > an important part of efforts to reduce hunger and > poverty on the continent. Low-till agriculture saves > on time, labour, fuel, chemical inputs and also can > reverse land and soil degradation. > > > > http://allafrica.com/stories/200510040254.html > > Disturbing the Soil As Little As Possible -- > Conservation Agriculture Holds Promise for Food > Production in Africa > > Food and Agriculture Organization of the United > Nations (Rome) > PRESS RELEASE > October 3, 2005 > Posted to the web October 4, 2005 > Rome > > Conservation agriculture holds considerable promise > for farmers in sub-Saharan Africa because it can > control soil erosion, reverse land degradation, give > more stable yields and reduce labour and fuel needs, > FAO said today on the eve of the Third World > Congress on Conservation Agriculture in Nairobi (3-7 > October 2005). > > The meeting aims to examine evidence of recent > experience in Africa and other parts of the globe > and to promote discussion of it among > decision-makers in governments, farmers, civil > society, international agencies and donor countries. > > > Unlike conventional farming methods, conservation > agriculture disturbs the soil as little as possible. > Instead of ploughing, farmers plant their seed > directly into the soil and the soil is kept covered. > > > " With conservation agriculture, farmers can produce > more food on a sustainable basis, they spend less > time and labour on land preparation, fuel > consumption for machinery is lower and there is a > reduced need for chemicals, " said Shivaji Pandey, > Director of FAO's Agricultural Support Systems > Division. " The concept contributes directly to the > fight against hunger and poverty. " > > Traditional farming in Africa often impoverishes the > soil: intensive digging with hand hoes or ploughing > has often damaged the soil structure, reduced its > ability to hold moisture and has caused wind and > water erosion. Water cannot soak into the soil and > runs off, carrying topsoil and nutrients with it. > Furthermore, many families living with HIV/AIDS and > malaria can no longer farm enough land to grow the > food they need. > > Conservation agriculture offers help: > > Instead of labour-intensive ploughing, farmers can > plant their seed directly into the soil. They can > use a simple hoe, inexpensive jab-planters or > animal-drawn direct seeders. > > Crop residues or a special cover crop keep the soil > covered. This protects the soil from erosion, adds > organic matter, fixes nitrogen and most importantly, > conserves soil moisture. The soil cover also > suppresses weeds - so less work is needed to remove > them. > > Instead of planting a single crop time after time, > farmers should sow several crops in rotation. This > raises fertility and prevents pest and disease > outbreaks. The system has also been adapted for > vegetables and root crops. > > Conservation agriculture is especially attractive > for women because it reduces the amount of work they > traditionally do in land preparation and weeding. > For families living with HIV/AIDS, conservation > agriculture offers a way to grow a diversified diet > using less labour. > > Conservation agriculture is already practised > successfully on around 90 million hectares worldwide > but particularly in North and South America and the > rice-wheat system of South Asia. > > Spreading in Africa > > Conservation agriculture has started to spread in > Africa and is being adopted in Burkina Faso, > Cameroon, Chad, Eritrea, Ghana, Kenya, Lesotho, > Madagascar, Mali, Mozambique, South Africa, > Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia. Some farmers > have doubled or even tripled their grain yields. > > In Kenya and Tanzania, FAO is implementing a > conservation agriculture project with small-scale > farmers in eight districts. The project is financed > by Germany. > > In Zambia, conservation agriculture has helped > vulnerable households pull through drought and > livestock epidemics. Over 200 000 farmers are now > practising this technique. In the 2000-2001 drought, > farmers who used conservation agriculture managed to > harvest one crop, others farming with conventional > methods faced total crop failure. > > In Ghana, more than 350 000 farmers now use > conservation agriculture. > > WHO WE ARE: This e-mail service shares information > to help more people discuss crucial policy issues > affecting global food security. The service is > managed by Amber McNair of the University of Toronto > in partnership with the Centre for Urban Health > Initiatives (CUHI) and Wayne Roberts of the Toronto > Food Policy Council, in partnership with the > Community Food Security Coalition, World Hunger > Year, and International Partners for Sustainable > Agriculture. > Please help by sending information or names and > e-mail addresses of co-workers who'd like to receive > this service, to foodnews I have decided to do the CN Tower Climb for World Wildlife Fund. this link should take you to the 'sponsor a climber' page, where you can search by name for someone. search for my name (alison syer) and you should be able to find it. https://wwfcentral.ca/NetCommunity/SSLPage.aspx? & pid=232 & srcid=232 & tab=1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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